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#1
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Just thought I would pass this experience along to the group:
I had been able to accomplish this a couple of times by throttling back to about 2000 RPM and slipping off my headphones. This weekend I discovered that the reception and transmission is quite good if you use a hands free headset with a dangling microphone. With the ear bud in your ear and the microphone inside the ear cup, the sidetone drives the phone's mike just fine. -- Regards, Mike http://mywebpage.netscape.com/amountainaero/fspic1.html |
#2
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Thanks for the note. I spent about $100 for a dingus that connects the
cell to an intercom, it sounds like this works just as well for about $75 less! (Legal wrangling aside, of course... I'm sure you only call using 1.9GHz frequencies anyway) Mike Noel wrote: Just thought I would pass this experience along to the group: I had been able to accomplish this a couple of times by throttling back to about 2000 RPM and slipping off my headphones. This weekend I discovered that the reception and transmission is quite good if you use a hands free headset with a dangling microphone. With the ear bud in your ear and the microphone inside the ear cup, the sidetone drives the phone's mike just fine. |
#3
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![]() The LightSpeed 30-3G has a built-in jack to plug the cellphone interconnect cord into. |
#4
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Edr,
The LightSpeed 30-3G has a built-in jack to plug the cellphone interconnect cord into. In fact, all new Lightspeed models have that now. Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#5
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I bought that 100 dollar dingus a year ago and it works great.. it also
doesnt involve having to remove your headset to USE the HF cell speaker/mike. Using that 100 dollar dingus also allows me to use the ANR feature of my headset to overcome airplane noise.. I also can use that dingus to (so ive been told) record intercom traffic on tape/dvr/videocam. And.. to address legalities.. I've been told the letter of the law applies to airborne use of ANALOG cellular phones? Does anyone know specific chapter and verse of the FCC regs that spell this out, and does it INCLUDE or EXCLUDE digital/later generation phones such as PCS which do not confuse/saturate the cell towers when they are used up at altitude Dave Elwood Dowd wrote: Thanks for the note. I spent about $100 for a dingus that connects the cell to an intercom, it sounds like this works just as well for about $75 less! (Legal wrangling aside, of course... I'm sure you only call using 1.9GHz frequencies anyway) Mike Noel wrote: Just thought I would pass this experience along to the group: I had been able to accomplish this a couple of times by throttling back to about 2000 RPM and slipping off my headphones. This weekend I discovered that the reception and transmission is quite good if you use a hands free headset with a dangling microphone. With the ear bud in your ear and the microphone inside the ear cup, the sidetone drives the phone's mike just fine. |
#6
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The FCC regs apply to "Cellular Telephones". The description of cellphones
in the licensing rules don't include the frequency bands or the modes of operation that digital phones use. So, technically, digital phones are not "cellphones", though marketing types call them cell phones to keep the average consumer from getting confused. Steve "Dave S" wrote in message nk.net... I bought that 100 dollar dingus a year ago and it works great.. it also doesnt involve having to remove your headset to USE the HF cell speaker/mike. Using that 100 dollar dingus also allows me to use the ANR feature of my headset to overcome airplane noise.. I also can use that dingus to (so ive been told) record intercom traffic on tape/dvr/videocam. And.. to address legalities.. I've been told the letter of the law applies to airborne use of ANALOG cellular phones? Does anyone know specific chapter and verse of the FCC regs that spell this out, and does it INCLUDE or EXCLUDE digital/later generation phones such as PCS which do not confuse/saturate the cell towers when they are used up at altitude |
#7
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"Steve" wrote in message
. com... The FCC regs apply to "Cellular Telephones". The description of cellphones in the licensing rules don't include the frequency bands or the modes of operation that digital phones use. So, technically, digital phones are not "cellphones", though marketing types call them cell phones to keep the average consumer from getting confused. If you want to get technical, first generation aka 1G (analog), 2G (digital), and 3G (also digital w/ higher capacity and data rates) phones are communicate with the base station which covers a small area called a cell. So technically they are all cellular phones. Also, most 2G phones use the 1G frequencies. Many 2G phones will handoff to a 1G base station if there is not a decent signal from a 2G base station. Also, many 1G operators are reusing their 1G frequencies to provide 2G services on those frequencies. Some companies like sprint and t-mobile dont have any 1G frequencies, but even if you have a phone that supports the 1G frequencies, it will roam onto those 1G frequencies if you go out of their coverage areas. The only way you can guarantee that you will be on 2G frequencies is to buy a phone from someone like sprint or t-mobile which only supports 1900MHz or a phone which allows you to disable the 850MHz range though I have not seen any phones that do that. They normally just allow you to disable the European frequencies (900/1800) if they are supported. And just because you are not in a call does not mean you are safe. A cell phone that is not in use is periodically communicating with the surrounding base stations whenever it is on. So the only way to ensure you are not transmitting is to turn it off. |
#8
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"picopirate" writes:
If you want to get technical, first generation aka 1G (analog), 2G (digital), and 3G (also digital w/ higher capacity and data rates) phones are communicate with the base station which covers a small area called a cell. So technically they are all cellular phones. Don't let Patterson hear you say that. http://groups.google.com/groups?selm...0earthlink.net --kyler |
#9
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![]() And just because you are not in a call does not mean you are safe. A cell phone that is not in use is periodically communicating with the surrounding base stations whenever it is on. So the only way to ensure you are not transmitting is to turn it off. This is why when you are doing explosive work, all phones need to be shut off. because even if they are just sitting they will still transmit |
#10
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What is the Dingus? I've heard of Cellset to connect your cell phone to
your headset, but not Dingus. Pete "Dave S" wrote in message nk.net... I bought that 100 dollar dingus a year ago and it works great.. it also doesnt involve having to remove your headset to USE the HF cell speaker/mike. Using that 100 dollar dingus also allows me to use the ANR feature of my headset to overcome airplane noise.. I also can use that dingus to (so ive been told) record intercom traffic on tape/dvr/videocam. And.. to address legalities.. I've been told the letter of the law applies to airborne use of ANALOG cellular phones? Does anyone know specific chapter and verse of the FCC regs that spell this out, and does it INCLUDE or EXCLUDE digital/later generation phones such as PCS which do not confuse/saturate the cell towers when they are used up at altitude Dave Elwood Dowd wrote: Thanks for the note. I spent about $100 for a dingus that connects the cell to an intercom, it sounds like this works just as well for about $75 less! (Legal wrangling aside, of course... I'm sure you only call using 1.9GHz frequencies anyway) Mike Noel wrote: Just thought I would pass this experience along to the group: I had been able to accomplish this a couple of times by throttling back to about 2000 RPM and slipping off my headphones. This weekend I discovered that the reception and transmission is quite good if you use a hands free headset with a dangling microphone. With the ear bud in your ear and the microphone inside the ear cup, the sidetone drives the phone's mike just fine. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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