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Where is Murphey's and where would one find a SIINCGARS radio? Are they working? Is Murphey's online?
Thanks!
Thanks!
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Are those available on the market?Hmm. POSNAV appears to have been Motorola based, but...wow...I'd like to see those pics as I didn't know we played with that system at all.
Here are a few pics of FBCB2 with both DAGR and PLGR. Still quite a few PLGRs out there though I *think* most should be gone by the end of next year. There were various schemes for mounting the FBCB2 display and at least two different RAM mounts for them, so the pics show them mounted alternately high and low.
Hi. www.murphyjunk.comWhere is Murphey's and where would one find a SIINCGARS radio? Are they working? Is Murphey's online?
Thanks!
FBCB2 or the military GPS units? FBCB2 components show up (mostly screen and CPU mounts - HMMWV system mounts and some miscellaneous cabling including the SIAD and other bits'n'pieces) but so far I've not seen any generation of display or CPU come up. There have been a few of both types of keyboards recently though.Are those available on the market?
On Ebay? I've seen four in the last 12 mos., some from CONUS - others from China - some from UK (PLGR IIs in that case.) One vendor from China told me he gets them all the time. His last one in November went for a Buy-it-Now price of $150.00 (a bunch went over to China as electronic scrap in early days, and bets are some still go that route despite PM-GPS disposal instructions to the contrary.)I haven't seen ANY PLGR's come up for sale since 2004-5.
Heh...truth, that. One sergeant-type was asked why the troops took civvy Garmins etc. into the field knowing full well they had no anti-jam or anti-spoof protection like you'd have with a keyed PLGR, and this guy answered:The PLGR is outdated. Even when fully keyed, it is NOT AS accurate as a mid range MODERN civilian unit. 5 vs 12 channel, waas, etc.
Apparently the SINCGARS come out with the ECCM (hop) cards left in them and the ECCM capability intact, though you'd still have to load all the variables. Seen HAVE QUICK radios come out intact too (PRC-113, ARC-164), so if you can load TOD and WOD and pick the same NET ID...you're good for hopping. It's all just intellectual collector curiosity though. Still waaaaay too many variables to access anyone's operational miliitary net if one had other than collector's intentions.You could load up a hop set oon some of those quasi-demilled radio's though. Just no internal encryption of the voice/data. Could combine it with some of those crypto module's he has though. Would be able to talk to anyone but yourself
Paul Keys sells mainly to friendly foreign nations using a pricing formula that's sort of x-% of the original Magnavox sales price to the Government rather than what the collector market can typically bear, but Columbia's a business rather than our favourite vendor at the Hamfest and prices things accordingly. To be fair he probably has to pay big $$$ to get them and just adds his markup, but still - it all winds up out of range of most collectors. (But after all, we're not the target market anyway.) He has *some* deals now and then on smaller accessory-type things, but mostly if you don't see a price listed - don't bother asking - as you'll get bitten by the old adage:Columbia Electronics also sells radios previously used or issued by US Government.
Main page.
mbia Electronics International, Inc.
Their page on the PRC113.
AN/PRC-113(V)
They're cool. One guy in Israel had a number of the sleds for sale for what I thought was a decent price awhile ago, though the bits and pieces that go with the system and the MBITRs themselves...good luck.Another period correct option would be the AN/PRC 148 MBITR, manufactured by THALES. (...) With it being such new stuff though it might be more of a challenge but you may be able to fabricate something that would work.
I don't have much going on tommorow I'll try and get you a pic of the 148 setup. It will give me something to do.
That'll depend on what particular configuration you want for your HMMWV, what era in the life of the HMMWV (which has spanned more than one radio generation so far) that you're trying to restore it to, how much money you are willing to spend, and (in the case of the latest radios) whether the radios are available at all. There are so many options.Wat kind of radio would you put in a hmmwv if your restoring it
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