On the San Bernardino County page, at "Countywide Search and Rescue", the "West End Repeater" and "Portable Repeater 1" both show an input of 155.775, but I'm wondering if this is a typo of 150.775. The license WPQD622 (to an independent entity, West Valley Search & Rescue, Inc.) shows three 155 MHz channels, including 155.160, in fixed base and temp base locations. Temp repeaters are licensed only on the 155.160 frequency. Mobiles are licensed for all three 155 MHz channels and 150.775. No other station classes are licensed for 150.775. 155.775 is not on the license at all.
However, as you can see, 155.775 is licensed to San Bernardino County as base and repeater at a few high-level sites, which would likely clobber lower-power mobiles trying to talk through the S&R repeaters in much of the county.
It also strikes me as unusual that a temp repeater would intentionally use such a narrow split (requiring a pretty big duplexer) when they had licensed a nice 4.385 MHz split that could work with a "flat-pack" or two antennas (plus maybe a single pass or notch cavity, depending ...) IIRC.
So, is anyone familiar with this system? Is the input supposed to be 150.775?
However, as you can see, 155.775 is licensed to San Bernardino County as base and repeater at a few high-level sites, which would likely clobber lower-power mobiles trying to talk through the S&R repeaters in much of the county.
It also strikes me as unusual that a temp repeater would intentionally use such a narrow split (requiring a pretty big duplexer) when they had licensed a nice 4.385 MHz split that could work with a "flat-pack" or two antennas (plus maybe a single pass or notch cavity, depending ...) IIRC.
So, is anyone familiar with this system? Is the input supposed to be 150.775?