Conventional repeaters Conventional repeaters, also known as in-band or same-band repeaters, retransmit signals within the same frequency
band, and they only repeat signals using a particular
modulation scheme, usually
FM. Standard repeaters require either the use of two antennas (one each for transmitter and receiver) or a
duplexer to isolate the transmit and receive signals over a single antenna. The duplexer is a device which prevents the repeater's high-power transmitter (on the output frequency) from drowning out the users' signal on the repeater receiver (on the input frequency). A
diplexer allows two transmitters on different frequencies to use one antenna, and is common in installations where one repeater on 2 m and a second on 440 MHz share one feedline up the tower and one antenna. Most repeaters are remotely controlled through the use of audio tones on a control channel.
Cross-band repeaters A
cross-band repeater (sometimes called
replexer), is a repeater that retransmits a specific mode on a frequency in one
band to a specific mode on a frequency in a different band. This technique allows for a smaller and simpler repeater system. Repeating signals across widely separated frequency bands allows for simple filters to be used to allow one antenna to be used for both transmit and receive at the same time. This avoids the use of complex duplexers to achieve the required rejection for same band repeating. Most modern dual-band amateur transceivers are capable of cross-band repeater access. A smaller subset are capable of being used themselves as a crossband repeater.
Amateur television repeaters Amateur television (ATV) repeaters are used by amateur radio operators to transmit full motion video. The bands used by ATV repeaters vary by country, but in the US a typical configuration is as a cross-band system with an input on the
33 or
23 cm band and output on 421.25 MHz or, sometimes, 426.25 MHz (within the
70 cm band). These output frequencies happen to be the same as standard
cable television channels 57 and 58, meaning that anyone with a cable-ready analog
NTSC TV can tune them in without special equipment. There are also digital amateur TV repeaters that retransmit
digital video signals. Frequently
DVB-S modulation is used for digital ATV, due to narrow bandwidth needs and high loss tolerances. These DATV repeaters are more prevalent in Europe currently, partially because of the availability of DVB-S equipment.
Satellite repeaters In addition,
amateur radio satellites have been launched with the specific purpose of operating as space-borne amateur repeaters. The worldwide amateur satellite organization
AMSAT designs and builds many of the amateur satellites, which are also known as
OSCARs. Several satellites with amateur radio equipment on board have been designed and built by universities around the world. Also, several OSCARs have been built for experimentation. For example,
NASA and
AMSAT coordinated the release of
SuitSat which was an attempt to make a low cost experimental satellite from a discarded Russian spacesuit outfitted with amateur radio equipment. The repeaters on board a satellite may be of any type; the key distinction is that they are in orbit around the Earth, rather than terrestrial in nature. The three most common types of OSCARs are linear transponders, cross-band FM repeaters, and digipeaters (also referred to as pacsats).
Linear transponders Amateur
transponder repeaters are most commonly used on
amateur satellites. A specified band of frequencies, usually having a bandwidth of 20 to 800 kHz is repeated from one band to another. Transponders are not mode specific and typically no
demodulation occurs. Any signal with a bandwidth narrower than the transponder's pass-band will be repeated; however, for technical reasons, use of modes other than
SSB and
CW is discouraged. Transponders may be inverting or non-inverting. An example of an inverting transponder would be a
70cm to
2m transponder which receives on the 432.000 MHz to 432.100 MHz frequencies and transmits on the 146.000 MHz to 146.100 MHz frequencies by inverting the frequency range within the band. In this example, a signal received at 432.001 MHz would be transmitted on 146.099 MHz. Voice signals using
upper sideband modulation on the input would result in a
LSB modulation on the output, and vice versa.
Store-and-forward systems Another class of repeaters do not simultaneously retransmit a signal, on different frequency, as they receive it. Instead, they operate in a
store-and-forward manner, by receiving and then retransmitting on the same frequency after a short delay. These systems may not be legally classified as "repeaters", depending on the definition set by a country's regulator. For example, in the US, the FCC defines a repeater as an "amateur station that simultaneously retransmits the transmission of another amateur station on a different channel or channels." (CFR 47 97.205(b)) Store-and-forward systems neither retransmit simultaneously, nor use a different channel. Thus, they must be operated under different rules than more conventional repeaters.
Simplex repeater A type of system known as a
simplex repeater uses a single transceiver and a short-duration voice recorder, which records whatever the receiver picks up for a set length of time (usually 30 seconds or less), then plays back the recording over the transmitter on the same frequency. A common name is a "parrot" repeater.
Digipeater Another form of repeater used in amateur
packet radio, a form of digital computer-to-computer communications, is dubbed "digipeater" (for
DIGItal rePEATER). Digipeaters are often used for activities and modes such as packet radio,
Automatic Packet Reporting System, and
D-STAR's digital data mode. Also commercial digital modes such as DMR, P25 and NXDN. Some modes are full duplex and internet linked.
SSTV repeater An
SSTV repeater is an
amateur radio repeater station that relays
slow-scan television signals. A typical SSTV repeater is equipped with a
HF or
VHF transceiver and a computer with a
sound card, which serves as a demodulator/modulator of SSTV signals. SSTV repeaters are used by amateur radio operators for exchanging pictures. If two stations cannot copy each other, they can still communicate through a repeater. One type of SSTV repeater is activated by a station sending it a 1,750 Hz tone. The repeater sends K in
morse code to confirm its activation, after which the station must start sending a picture within about 10 seconds. After reception, the received image is transmitted on the repeater's operation frequency. Another type is activated by the SSTV vertical synchronization signal (VIS code). Depending on the software it uses (MMSSTV, JVComm32, MSCAN, for example), an SSTV repeater typically operates in common SSTV modes. == Repeater networks ==