Garry Edwards
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Thanks for that. I don't feel that anything less powerful can be relied upon to do the job, so will look into getting a licence - which I assume will be needed even though the radios will only ever be used in an emergency?They are good radios and battery life surprisingly long. Very keenly priced too.
However the frequency range and power output of these requires a licence to use them; Amateur Radio (certain frequency ranges only) or other.
Even in the 446Mhz PMR band, their power output is greater than the threshold to be licence-free.
Just sayin'
As you might expect, the instructions are pretty useless, and I don't know how to set it up for maximum efficiency. It displays two channels at a time and I have set it to channels 8 and 9, with 8 as the default and 9 as a backup, because a neighbouring farm seems to be using that channel. Is this the best configuration?
In case anyone reading this thinks I'm being paranoid, farming is the most dangerous occupation there is - machinery, livestock, weather and isolation are all major hazards. We use the farm as a horse rescue centre and although we don't have any mature stallions there, even colts, geldings and mares can be dangerous, especially when (as often happens) they have been badly treated. There was a horrific accident recently, a vet who I know made the mistake of going into a bull's pen. He is now totally paralised and the stockman, who saved his life, was badly injured but recovering. Their survival is down to 2 way radios. A farmer was killed by a bull a few weeks ago, and I knew a farmer whose quad flipped over in a field and trapped him, he wasn't missed until the following morning and when he was found he was holding his mobile phone - no signal so it didn't help - maybe a radio would have saved him, he died from exposure and had no real injuries but we will never know.