• Colorado Springs Offline

    We lost the link radio at Almagre which is how the Colorado Springs repeater gets into the rest of the Colorado Connection.  A work party is getting organized, so hopefully won’t be down long.

  • 2020 Plans

    With your donations, we have our plan list for the summer 2020 season up.  See the “2020 Plans” menu tab.  We may not get to everything on the list, but hope to get to most of it this summer.  Thank you to all the donors, this is what your donations are enabling.

  • Salida Machine Re-Linked

    Salida machine connectivity is restored.  The interconnecting site at the Royal Gorge was restored to full service.

  • Durango very intermittent

    The Durango repeater has been intermittent for the past week.  We know it is a link issue with the ISP we are using, but historically it self-healed after a few days.  It has not done so for at least a week now, so fear the ISP issue is not going to clear.

  • Grand Junction Back Online!

    Thanks to Bill (W0BX) for making the trek to the site via mountain bike!  Roads are still at least a month away from passable but accessible via mountain bike (24 miles taking 4 hours).

  • Thorodin Fully Operational!

    We were able to “borrow” a snowcat and make it up to Thorodin earlier than waiting for jeep access and repairs have been made.  The Mt. Thorodin transmitter is back up to being fully operational!

  • Thorodin Interim Fix #2 (updated)

    The temporary transmitter on Lee Hill has been re-tuned to 145.310MHz, so now you can use your normal repeater offset for this location.  The “alternate” 145.430MHz is not available.  Coverage is still not the same as the Thorodin transmitter, but now at least the “normal” frequency.

  • Mt. Thorodin Transmitter Died!

    We have a “not great, but better than nothing” solution, we are using a backup transmitter on Lee Hill.

    It transmits on 145.430MHz with an optional 141.3Hz output tone.

    This transmitter does NOT have frequency paired receiver, so you still need to transmit on 144.710MHz!

    You can either work split frequencies or have a very non-standard (-720Khz) offset whichever is easier for you and your radio.

    This is a very temporary and sub-optimal solution.  No need for signal reports, it isn’t going to be great.

    Plans are under way to be ready to visit Mt. Thorodin hopefully in about a month after a bit more snow melts.

  • What is the Colorado Connection?

    The Colorado Connection is a statewide Amateur Radio system that was conceived and built to help all radio amateurs in Colorado to better communicate. We use commercial quality repeaters and antennas to ensure that the system is always there.

    Some of our sites are above 13000′ and are in a very brutal environment. These need extreme care and high quality installation focus to ensure that these sites are always there for you.

    We know that you count on us and we’ve tried to do our best!

  • Grand Junction Down

    The Grand Junction machine is un-linked. Unfortunately it cannot be fixed remotely, it is going to require a site visit.