Thanks for confirming that Topcat. Any idea how far you can talk now?
In the settings menu I turned off Auto volume control. The music sound is very loud now.
Thanks for confirming that Topcat. Any idea how far you can talk now?
I have set something up wrong at the moment though - everyone can hear me broadcast but I cant here them.
That will probably be your CTCSS (Continuous Tone Coded Squelch System) settings. What brand of radio are your riding buddies using? CTCSS, commonly called privacy tones, suppress the incoming signal on the selected channel from being output to audio. This prevents cross-talk between users who are on the same PMR frequency, sort of useful where the airwaves are busy*. There are usually a range of CTCSS frequencies to choose from, 38 pre PMR channel in the case of the Tribe. It's likely that your buddies are transmitting with a different tone frequency to what you have set and hence their transmissions are being suppressed.
The confusing thing is that different manufacturers use different ways of referencing the CTCSS setting. ISTR that we had an issue with the Tribe I bought my friend and had to resort to trial and error to find the right one.
There's a chart of some of the varying systems here.
* one of the issues with CTCSS is that someone closer, or with a more powerful signal, on the same PMR channel but a different CTCSS frequency can wash out a tranmission from someone in your group. CTCSS are not sub channels as such, despite what some manufacturers say, you're still transmitting on the same frequency. The audio is just being suppressed unless it's opened up by recognising a frequency match of the CTCSS sub-tone that's transmitted along with the PMR signal.
I can't recall if the tribe has a Tx/Rx indicator (either an LED that glows one colour for Tx and another for Rx, or a segment on the LCD display). If this is still indicating Rx (received signal) but no audio is heard, then it'll most likely be a CTCSS issue. Again the lack of a speaker on the radio means you can't rule out a BT or headset issue I suppose.
Can't remember but I think it's on the website.
Regards
Tom
It says 5000 metres on a sellers web site. Thats a nice big increase.
Not sure if it was limited to his f4 headset but he could only have one thing, sat-nav enabled phone (also with music for autoroute) or Tribe. He had to manually switch between the two which was frustrating when I wanted to ask him something to say the least.
Pinch of salt required there unless you intend to always be stationary on a mountain top 5km from your line of sight buddy also on a mountain top with good atmospherics thrown in for good measure. Seriously, you'll never get that in the real world. Expect line of sight about 1 mile, less with minor obstructions such as other road users or trees. Start to add buildings and solid topography and you'll be down to hundreds of yards. Go with that and you'll not be too disappointed.
We already get that with the Bluetooth connection. So might stick with that for a while and see how it pans out over time.
Are you getting a mile from a Bluetooth headset, which one? I would estimate the Tribe would give better range, just not the stellar improvement that they claim.
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Annoying thing is for an all singing all dancing Bluetooth setup. You can't have music and talk at the same time.
I have Three devices connected (Sat nav, phone and PMR radio) and all work together, there are inputs for more if required plus a pillion which I don't usually have. There's a priority stack which is well considered by design and can be changed should I want to, though the standard set-up works well for me.