To anyone looking to acquire commercial radio programming software:
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To obtain Motorola software see the Sticky in the Motorola forum.
The various other vendors often permit their dealers to sell the software online (i.e., Kenwood). Please use Google or some other search engine to find a dealer that sells the software. Typically each series or individual radio requires its own software package. Often the Kenwood software is less than $100 so don't be a cheapskate; just purchase it.
For M/A Com/Harris/GE, etc: there are two software packages that program all current and past radios. One package is for conventional programming and the other for trunked programming. The trunked package is in upwards of $2,500. The conventional package is more reasonable though is still several hundred dollars. The benefit is you do not need multiple versions for each radio (unlike Motorola).
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I verified in the manuals of the radios that the frequencies are indeed the same on all the radios, both for Tx and Rx (why transmit might be different from receive, I don't know)......
Subcode? I don't know what that is, unless it is a encrypt type feature.
The T7200, being a better radio, has an "Interference Eliminator Code". Default is one, but setting it to zero will enable other, cheaper radios to hear you.
Setting the code to zero turns off the feature and your T7200s are listening in carrier squelch mode (CSQ) and they won't be encoding a tone on transmit. Also, cheaper radios will still hear you, whether or not you're using the "interference eliminator code" feature. Using the tone-coded squelch system in your radios does not make your transmissions "private". Everybody else can still hear your transmissions. It simply relieves you of having to listen to all the other chatter on the channel that you're sharing with others. Your T7200 is actually still receiving those other transmissions, the difference is the radio will stay muted on those transmissions that aren't transmitting the same subaudible tone your radio is set to decode. Your radio will only unmute the speaker audio when it hears transmission(s) transmitting the correct tone. A more accurate name for this feature should be "Inteference IGNORING codes".
True...as posted above. Although I've met 2 other people with the T7200 and neither were aware of the inversion scrambling feature,or the microphone sensitivity feature. Fyi.
N9ZAS.