Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Roaming on the Galway DMR Repeater Network


Roaming is possible when a radio is set to automatically move between Repeaters depending on which Repeater receives the strongest signal. In a roaming system it is necessary to set the RSS threshold which is the minimum signal strength that the radio will consider strong enough before it starts searching for a stronger signal. The RSSI needs to be programmed into the radio.

Consider a radio moving between three repeater coverage areas. As the radio moves from Repeater 1 the signal strength slowly reduces and reaches a point where the signal from Repeater 1 reduces below the pre-programmed RRSI threshold. At this point, the radio will search through a list of Repeaters programmed into a Roam List to see if they have a stronger signal at that location.  The Roam List is simply a list of all Repeaters that the radio could use. If one Repeater in the Roam List does have a stronger signal the radio will switch to using that repeater automatically. So as the user moves closer to Repeater 2 the radio will switch to Repeater  2 and as the Radio moves closer to Repeater 2 the RSSI level will increase and the radio will stop searching for other repeaters. If the radio starts to move towards Repeater 3, the signal will fall below the RSSI level and the radio will start searching for a stronger signal. It should detect Repeater 3 and switch to that channel. Once the RSSI is strong enough the radio should stop searching for a stronger repeater and remain with Repeater 3 until the signal, once again, falls below the RSSI threshold.

Roaming Through the Repeater Network

Requirements

Repeaters have to be able to connect to each other and relay the same audio at the same time on at least one common Talk Group. On Hytera and Motorola systems this is called IP Multi-Site Connect. This works well in commercial systems dedicated to only a few users but in Amateur radio this can be more difficult. I amateur radio many talk groups are used and are linked differently. Some Talk Groups are linked to all other repeaters all over the country, whilst others are linked to repeaters within a specific area and some are user-activated. Area-specific Talk Groups can be programmed in such a way that the radio will only roam on Repeaters that have that Talk Group.

Issues

The major problem is that somebody may be operating on another talk group on a Repeater when you roam onto it. This is where roaming would fail in amateur radio. The conversation would have to be terminated or manually set the radio to use another Repeater. A second issue is with user-activated Talk Groups. User activated Talk Groups will only become activated on a specific repeater when you have manually transmitted onto that Talk Group. If you activate the talk group on one repeater and then roam into the coverage of another repeater, the talk group will not be activated on the second repeater.

Ensure that the desired Static Talk Groups are programmed onto each repeater in the network and this will work. The only time there may be problems is if another operator is occupying the Repeater and using a different Talk Group.