I guess the bold sums it up for meThe true way would be just regularly bench testing it with the same service monitor you would likely use for tuning anyway. But there's a whole slew of ways you can tell, and I am sure I will miss most of them. Hopefully some other people can add to the list. Some examples are:
99% of the time, I think most radio shops won't even test for the need to tune until they get a report of reception issues (or in the case of a trunked system, a lot of denials compared to other users). Really it's worth checking annually if you have access to the equipment and the time (in my opinion).
- Reception issues - seemingly on the fringe of reception a lot sooner than expected. Including no reception when you would otherwise expect it.
- High digital voice error rate
- Bad voice modulation (all audio settings being as expected, audio sounds rough, particularly in analog FM) when reported by others
The problem is when you align/tune there's a lot of variables you are messing with and they all have different impacts. Typically local oscillator drift would have the biggest impact on most of the items above, but depending on radio brand, you may have different values based on power and operating band that can be messed with - that's why you see most shops quick to drop the 10's of thousands of dollars on devices like an Aeroflex or Freedom that come with software to automatically tune/align. If you have a lot of radios it's a LOT easier than trying to hook up to a service monitor and handle manually following along in the appropriate service manual for your radio.
Definitely worth becoming friends with someone in a radio shop who has access to a way to auto-tune an 8K if you can and visit them regularly - opens doors to other things too.
Poor performance on digital (high BER on RX and TX), poor sensitivity, etc.For instance, I have an APX8k that I use for hobby. What indicators am I likely to notice, or should I be on the lookout for, that would indicate a tune or alignment might be needed?
Bought 2 900 XTS2500’s to use on 902/927 from a large commercial seller. I was told there would be a delay of a day, or two so they could align them which they do for all radios they sell. I get the radios, and they don’t always bring up the repeater, but they work perfectly in T/A. I bring them to a friend who throws them on an Aeroflex 3920. Everything was perfect, except for the DEV/BAL at 902 MHz. It was correct at all other freq’s. After the tune, it was perfect. I never called the seller to tell him, but I have to wonder, did they actually align the radio, or was the “we’ll need a day to align it” just an excuse for slow shipping? I don’t use the radios much, and I’ve had them three years now, & they still work great. The auto tune took 5 minutes, & a printout showed the failure at 902 MHz.
Except the seller was told the radios were for ham use, & he told me he had an Aeroflex 3920. Everything was spot on, except the DEV/BAL @ 902 MHz. DEV/BAL is not the same thing as transmit deviation. My radios did not have low transmit deviation. It couldn’t bring up the repeater at all in P25, but it did in analog.I also got a 900MHz XTS-2500, a friend was blowing them out for $80 tested and working. I find the dev is ok in the ham bands and its possible your dealer only checked it within the specified commercial band.
As for the OPs original question, I've had a lot of radios over the years and have never found one to need alignment if it was working properly when I got it. Pushing the radio out of its band limits or dropping it onto concrete, etc, might warrant having it tested for spec.
Except the seller was told the radios were for ham use, & he told me he had an Aeroflex 3920. Everything was spot on, except the DEV/BAL @ 902 MHz. DEV/BAL is not the same thing as transmit deviation. My radios did not have low transmit deviation. It couldn’t bring up the repeater at all in P25, but it did in analog.
It was no big deal. I had to see my friend anyways for a FC “adjustment”.Sounds like the seller is not living up to what he promised. My 900 XTS seems to work fine at 902 and 927 in P25.
It's actually standard procedure at where I work. A firmware upgrade and a tuning will resolve most reported issues that aren't hardware errors or environmental factors. If it's a mobile, we will look at the vehicle wiring also because some shops do a screw job when it comes to wiring vehicles.The true way would be just regularly bench testing it with the same service monitor you would likely use for tuning anyway. But there's a whole slew of ways you can tell, and I am sure I will miss most of them. Hopefully some other people can add to the list. Some examples are:
99% of the time, I think most radio shops won't even test for the need to tune until they get a report of reception issues (or in the case of a trunked system, a lot of denials compared to other users). Really it's worth checking annually if you have access to the equipment and the time (in my opinion).
- Reception issues - seemingly on the fringe of reception a lot sooner than expected. Including no reception when you would otherwise expect it.
- High digital voice error rate
- Bad voice modulation (all audio settings being as expected, audio sounds rough, particularly in analog FM) when reported by others
The problem is when you align/tune there's a lot of variables you are messing with and they all have different impacts. Typically local oscillator drift would have the biggest impact on most of the items above, but depending on radio brand, you may have different values based on power and operating band that can be messed with - that's why you see most shops quick to drop the 10's of thousands of dollars on devices like an Aeroflex or Freedom that come with software to automatically tune/align. If you have a lot of radios it's a LOT easier than trying to hook up to a service monitor and handle manually following along in the appropriate service manual for your radio.
Definitely worth becoming friends with someone in a radio shop who has access to a way to auto-tune an 8K if you can and visit them regularly - opens doors to other things too.