So, it appears that there are a plethora of Astro Saber III in 800 mhz available on the evil auction site, inexpensively. And, I continue to look for UHF Astro Sabers, a I and a III. I have a use for an 800 Astro Saber, but no need for it to be a Model III. Would it be easy to downgrade the 800 M3 to an M1, and use the items from the old 800M3 to make a UHF M3 out of an M1?
Any special software needed? The hardware should be easy to swap over, I am guessing. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.
The Motorola Saberportable radio is a product series of Motorola USA, Inc. The Saber is a commercial radio that was developed for the U.S. military sometime around 1989.[1] The Saber is widely recognizable by thin, sleek design compared to other radios at the time. Despite the fact that the Saber was originally marketed to the military, many law enforcement agencies and fire departments realized the benefits of the Saber and Motorola soon had a much larger customer base for the radio than they expected.
Astro Saber III - 800MHz Justin Van Horne. Unsubscribe from Justin Van Horne? MOTOROLA ASTRO SABER 3 1MEG DIGITAL ANALOG RADIO HANDHELD 8/22/2017 - Duration: 7:50. Astro Saber III programming This forum is for discussions regarding all aspects of Motorola radio programming, including hardware, computers, installation and use of RSS/CPS, firmware upgrades, and troubleshooting.
Saber Conventional[edit]
The first Saber line was Conventional operation only. The conventional Sabers were capable of PL/DPL and were encryption capable. The Saber came in 4 different flavors; I, II, III, and IE. The Model I has 12 channels in 1 zone. No display or keypad. The IE was a Model I with an additional zone of 12 channels, 24 in all. The Model II is either capable of 4 zones of 48 or 10 zones of 120 channels. This is dependent on the memory. It has a backlight display which was capable of 5 alphanumeric characters if you have the 120 channel 2 KB version or the basic zone/channel display for the 48 channel version. It came with 3 softkeys to access menu options. Model III was basically a model II with a full DTMF keypad.
Systems Saber[edit]
The Systems Saber added analog trunking operation, direct access to functions via the keypad (on the Systems Saber III), and increased channel capacity to a then-unheard of 255 conventional channels. The Systems Saber also increased the number of channels per zone to sixteen and added the ability to reprogram the function of many of the controls.
ASTROâ„¢ Digital Saber[edit]
The Astro Saber was introduced in the mid 1990s and was a technologically advanced and state of the art at the time. The Astro Saber is feature packed Not only is it capable of IMBE Digital and conventional analog on a per channel basis, but also some models are 12.5/25 kHz per channel as well. This makes some Astro Saber Narrow Band compliant.
Model I has 16 channels, in 1 zone. No display or keypad. Model II has 16 channels in 16 zones and a 14 character alphanumeric backlight display. It came with 6 softkey buttons to access an advanced menu. Model III was basically a model II with a full DTMF keypad.[2]
References[edit]
- ^Morris, Mike. 'The Motorola Saber Information Page'. The Repeater Builder's Technical Information Page. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
- ^'Batdude's Guide for the XTS 3000 - XTS 5000 and Astro Digital Saber'. 3 November 2006.Missing or empty
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