Motorola Tetra Radio, MotoTRBO Radio, Commercial Series Radio, Astro 25 Radio, Professional Radio, Trunking Radio, MPT Radio, Alpha Radio, Select-5 Radio, Kenwood.
Description Motorola GP2000 yang ramping dan kompak untuk portabilitas, namun dikemas dengan fitur untuk nilai tambah. Ideal untuk manufaktur, hotel, ritel dan industri jasa lainnya.
Efisien Fitur panel depan pemrograman memungkinkan pengguna untuk menyesuaikan dan program radio dalam telapak tangan. The 99 saluran memungkinkan pengguna untuk mengatur tim kerja mereka menjadi kelompok bicara yang berbeda, meningkatkan fleksibilitas dari radio.
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The 3 tingkat daya disesuaikan memungkinkan pengguna untuk mengontrol efisiensi pengoperasian dengan baterai. Baterai yang tahan lama memungkinkan pengguna untuk menikmati lebih dari 8 jam waktu bicara. Mudah Digunakan. Tombol navigasi saluran memungkinkan pengguna untuk dengan cepat menelusuri saluran pengguna. 4 tombol diprogram memungkinkan pengguna untuk menetapkan hingga 8 fitur yang sering digunakan, memberikan kenyamanan yang lebih besar di ujung jari Anda. Tombol panel depan yang besar menyediakan program mudah fungsi radio tanpa software.
Compact & ergonomis Desain. Desain melengkung ramping dan modern memungkinkan penanganan mudah.
Kenop saluran digantikan oleh mudah menggunakan tombol navigasi depan FEATURES Compact, Lightweight and Ergonomically Designed Designed to be held comfortably, the channel knob is replaced by an easy-to-use navigation button that allows you to quickly scroll through the user channels. Front Panel Programming Large front panel buttons facilitate easy programming of the several radio functions. Customise and reset your radio profiles while on the go without the need for additional equipment.
User-friendly Navigation With two navigation buttons, users can simply scroll through the radios menu. The four programmable buttons allow you to assign up to eight commonlyused features, providing even greater convenience at your fingertips. Private Lines Set up talkgroups/users with unique Private Lines/Digital Private Lines (DPL) to prevent unwanted conversations on the same frequency. The GP2000 has 3 PLs more than the industry standard. Battery Saver Feature With 3 power levels – Economy Low, Low and High, the GP2000 allows flexible user control over the battery operational efficiency. Using Economy Low when communicating in close promixity allows users to save on battery use extending talktime by up to 6 hours. 99 Channels Allows the organising of work teams into talk groups, increasing the flexibility of your radio.
The channel button is located in the front of the radio, providing quick and easy access to the different talk groups. 8-digit Alpha-Numeric & Iconic Display Iconic battery and signal strength indicators enable you to determine the radio’s operating performance at a glance.
Text and number displays such as channel alias and frequency number, provide critical information for your operation. Long Battery Life Allows you to enjoy up to 8 hours of talktime without the need to charge or carry additional batteries during a typical 8-hour work shift.
I scored a few older Motorola GM300 radios off of eBay and thought I got a great deal. This soon changed when I realized the programming options for this old radio were pretty limited. The first two things I ran across was the “Radius GM300 Radio Doctor” over at and the original Motorola Radio Service Software (RSS). The GM300 Radio Doctor piece of software did a good job at being able to program this ancient radio with a “modern” OS like Windows XP.
While it may be good at programming in frequencies and changing around the channel numbers, that is about all I was able to do with it. I really needed to be able to program the pins for the accessory port on the back of the unit, more specifically I need the COS pin to be enabled (see below). GM300 Accessory Plug Pin 8 is shown as “programmable” and unfortunately wasn’t enabled by default for me.
So I opted to take some time to get the original Motorola RSS software running on my Windows XP laptop. To get started, you will need the following:. A machine running Windows XP (Haven’t tried this on Windows 7 yet).
Motorola GM300 Radio. Programming cable for the GM300. Mine is simply an RJ45 connector to a DB9 (serial) connector. I picked mine up off of eBay for pretty cheap.
($8) GM300 Programming cable. USB to Serial adapter. I use an old Keyspan USA-19HS that I’ve had for many years. Looks like you can still pick these up for cheap on eBay.
I’m sure another adapter would work, but this is what I used. Keyspan USA19HS.
DOSBox software. This can be found here:. I used version 0.74 at the time of this article. Original Motorola GM300 RSS Software. This can be found here: Setup:. First thing you want to do is to connect the USB to serial adapter up and plug it in to your computer.
Go to the Control Panel and then the device manager. Make note of what COM port was assigned to your adapter under “Ports” (COM1 in my case). Right click on this and go to Properties. Now click on the Port Settings tab and set the baud rate to 2400, and make sure the other values match below:. Now, Install DOSBox and let it install into its default directory.
Browse to “C: Program Files DOSBox-0.74″ (or other based on version installed). Double click “DOSBox 0.74 Options” and it should open dosbox-0.74.conf in your default text editor. Scroll all the way to the bottom for the serial section. Change “serial1″ to match your COM port and also disable the others. Should look similar to the following:. Open and extract the GM300V5 zip file to your root drive C:. This just makes it quicker to mount in DOSBox for me.
Fire up DOSBox and mount this extracted folder with “mount d c: gm300dos” command. This will mount this directory as the D drive within DOSBox. Browse to the D drive and fire up GM300.exe file. Can just use the commands “d:” and then “GM300.EXE”. You should now be presented with the following with no errors:. Press F9 to get into the SETUP menu. Press F3 now to get to the PC Configuration.
Below is how I configured my directory and set my COM port. Since our config file had “serial1″ set to our COM port, our port setting here is “COM 1″. If I set “serial2″ to point to COM1 in the config file, the setting here would be “COM 2″ and so forth. With these settings, perform a “COMM TEST” by pushing F3. You will notice the results in the upper right hand of the window. When I first attempted this, I was getting either “#2 – No Acknowledge” or “#7 – Invalid Opcode” and then “Radio Communications OK” would come up.
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I thought all might be OK and tried to proceed. It wasn’t working though and thought I might have hit a wall.
After much trial and error I believe I came up with a solution that has been working fine for me since. What you want to do is to hold down “Ctrl” and press F11 until you read “Cpu speed: 191 cycles” in the top window bar of DOSBox. What this will do is essentially emulate slower hardware on your machine. So, Press “Ctrl F11″ until you see “Cpu speed: 191 cycles”. Turn the GM300 radio off and then back on. Press F3 for the “COMM TEST” again.
This time you should only see “Radio Communications OK” message come up. If so, you are now good to go. Go back to the Main Menu by pressing F10 and press F3 to go to the “GET/SAVE Codeplug Data”.
Press F2 to “READ CODEPLUG”. You should now see data being read from your radio. Things are going well if you get this far.
After a successful read, you should see your radio model number show up in the upper left:. From here, you will want to go to back to the Main Menu and then to “CHANGE/VIEW Codeplug Data”. Since I wanted to enable the pin on the back of the radio I wanted to go into “RADIO WIDE Configuration: Scan, Accessory Connector”. Press F9 for “OTHER ACCESSORY”. This section will let you change the function of the programmable pins on the back of the radio:. Changed Pin 8 to “CSQ Detect”.
This pin is active when both PL/DPL and a Carrier are detected by the radio. Press F10 to exit this menu, and then F10 once more to get back to the CHANGE/VIEW Codeplug Menu. Press F5 to get into the “MODE Configuration” menu. This is the menu that will be used to program frequencies in for the various channels on the radio. Pressing F4 will take you to the next channel which is designated by “Mode”.
Once all of your frequencies are programmed in, press F10 to exit this menu. Press F10 once more to return to the main menu. Press F3 to get to “GET/SAVE Codeplug data”. Now press F8 to Program all of these settings and frequencies into your radio.
Press F2 to confirm. You should now see a progress bar similar to when you read the codeplug data. Now press F10 to exit the Motorola software and type “exit” to quit DOSBox.
You should now have a fully programmed Motorola GM300 Radius radio! There are many more settings within this software such as adjusting power for each channel.
I didn’t get around to playing with these settings since I don’t have a meter to measure the radio’s output power. These settings are in the “Service” menu and should probably be adjusted with care. There is a possibility that you can throw your radio out of calibration, so don’t say you haven’t been warned:). Below is what the power adjustment looks like for those curious: Please feel free to leave any comments or problems that you encountered. I haven’t tried this on Windows 7 yet, but suspect that things will work just fine with the above settings.
Hope this info helped someone out there with one of these old dinosaurs like it did for me! 73 de KF5RRX. Useful Files.