An Introduction to Digital Ham Radio

By Dale L. Puckett, KØHYD

On most months the Wichita area ham luncheon on the second Saturday doesn’t feature a program.

September 8th was different.

Like in the movie, “Build it and they will come.” And on this Saturday afternoon, they did! Hams from Garden City, Great Bend, Arkansas City, Emporia and Topeka came. A special presentation about DMR was the dessert.

Chuck Kraly, KØXM, a leader in the Kansas City area’s Backyard Repeater Group (BYRG), and the technical support manager at BridgeCom Systems in Kansas City, spoke.

A ham since 1979, Kraly’s background allowed him to explain the what, why and when about DMR to the excited crowd. BYRG is deep into DMR deployment and Chuck has spearheaded the move.

Much like single sideband in the early 1960s, digital radio is the future of amateur radio in the 21st century. Today it takes many forms including DMR, D-Star and System Fusion. BYRG leadership believes DMR is best suited for amateur radio.

What is DMR?

So what is DMR? For one thing, it’s an acronym for Digital Mobile Radio. Developed by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute, it’s used worldwide.

DMR has three tiers. Amateurs today use the Tier II, which is a twoslot, 12.5-kHz wide peer-to-peer specification. The two slots give it a spectrum efficiency of 6.25 kHz per channel. Amateur repeaters talk to each other using the Internet. The IP Site Connect (IPSC) specification makes communications possible.

Amateurs encode the analog voice from their microphone using the DSVI AMBE+2™ vocoder. Most DMR radio manufactures have implemented licensed copies of this vocoder. The newer version delivers an improved voice quality over earlier versions. D-Star, for example, uses the earlier version.

There are three types of users working with DMR today. They are the individual ham, the repeater operator, and the network operator. It takes all three to make DMR function worldwide.

Another type of amateur DMR user implements a small device called a hotspot. Hotspots deliver worldwide connectivity when there is no DMR repeater in the area. Your DMR radio talks to the hotspot which in turn talks to the Internet. Amateurs use their personal LAN at their home QTH. On the road, they often connect their hotspot to the Internet using their cell phone.

The Future

In the next column, originally written for Grounded Grid, we’ll look at DMR and other digital modes in more depth. With DMR you can get your hands dirty and learn how it works as you program your radio, which is a great mode for DIY fans. It’s a great sport.

If computer programming scares you, never fear. BridgeCom is preparing a preprogrammed Anytone ATD868UV radio. This radio, declared the “must have” DMR radio by many amateurs, is dual band. KØXM will program the radio before it ships.

One last thing! Chuck made an exciting announcement near the end of his presentation. BYRG has received several dozen DMR repeaters from a donor. They are making them available to ham clubs in Kansas at no cost providing the club meets a simple set of criteria. With the blessing of the Wichita Amateur Radio Club membership and board we may soon see a DMR repeater in Wichita. We may even see a robust amateur DMR network spanning Kansas. I’m excited!

Talk to you on DMR!