GB3EY - Near Hull IO93RS

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Fully digital GB3EY now operational: EY repeated its first digital pictures on the 22nd November 2020. Please send reports of reception to clive AT hesh.co.uk

Output: 1308MHz, DVB-S2, QPSK, 1000kS/s, H.265, FEC 3/4, stereo audio.

Input: 1275MHz, DVB-S QPSK or DVB-S2 QPSK or DVB-S2 8PSK, 333, 500 or 1000kS/s, H262, H264 or H265, any valid FEC'

Note that GB3EY is switched off between 11pm and 3pm every day to save electricity.

A new NoV was issued for GB3EY in August 2018 allowing the move to the East Yorkshire Repeater Group's site at Cave Wold Radio Station near South Cave in East Yorkshire. The QTH locator is IO93RS37ME. The site is 155m ASL and the Alford Slot antenna is at 180m ASL with a good take off in most directions. The predicted coverage was created using Radiomobile and assumes 10m mast with a 15dBi antenna at the receiving end. This has proved to be reasonably accurate and is a vast improvement over the old site on the North Sea coast at Aldbrough.

GB3EY Coverage



The repeater transmits 1000kS/s, FEC 3/4, with H.265 encoding on 1308MHz. Test transmissions were run from a temporary mast and transmitter from August to October 2019 until the main tower was renovated and a single Alford Slot antenna was installed at 25m AGL fed with 33m of Andrews LDF5-50A. The Alford was made by G3GJA and uses a coaxial 4:1 balun formed from RG402 semi-rigid. This was found to be much easier to construct and test than the usual slotted sides coax balun approach.

Tower.jpg
A work party at the EYRG site checking the P80 tower with 5m extension. A further 3m extension has been added for the Alford Slot

The BATC Repeater Controller software running on a Raspberry Pi replaced the logic from the FM analogue repeater in January 2024. It takes incoming video from a BATC Ryde receiver and Khune 132A2 pre-amp via seamless quad HDMI switches that select the source to be relayed. It is then passed to a LinkPi ENC v2 encoder that produces two IP streams; one at HD resolution is sent to the BATC Streamer using H.264 coding and the other using H.265 is sent via Ethernet to the SDR.

The transmitter, comprising of a ALDALM Pluto SDR and two modules funded by G4YTV, were made by Bert PE1RKI. They provide 11 watts of RF power at the output the duplexer. The duplex filter, a two pole transmit leg inter-digital filter and a five pole inter-digital receive filter were sourced from ID Electronik Gmbh in Germany. The filters allow GB3EY to use a single antenna without any desense and at the same time apply in excess of 100dB of attenuation to the Claxby Radar on 1254.5MHz just 20.5MHz from the input frequency. The radar runs 400MW EIRP and is only 25 miles from the repeater and puts -10dBm into the repeater.

The BATC Streamer feed can be seen here: http://batc.org.uk/live/gb3ey. The Internet is linked to the repeater site by a 6cm link over a 10km path that gives up to 80Mbps downstream / upstream.

M0SKM.jpg,
M0SKM nr Dunstable as seen through GB3EY at 209km

The repeater links parts of Yorkshire with ATV that can't be worked direct on 2m, so extensive use is made of GB3NY on 430.8375MHz (CTCSS tone A, 67Hz) for talkback. GB3NY is located 2.8km north of GB3EY and has a similar coverage area.

We hope to resurrect GB3XY the 10GHz ATV repeater, that was operational from the same site, as a DATV repeater linked to GB3EY. However, designs for upconverters for 3cm are not readily available.

The site is exclusively used by the East Yorkshire Repeater Group and is a former Pye Telecoms location. It also hosts GB3HS a 2m triple mode repeater, GB7HU a 70cm D-Star repeater and a Raynet repeater that can be configured for cross-band 2m / 70cm or in-band 70cm operation.

GB3EY Rx.jpg,
Headless Ryde receiver built for GB3EY