The E designates the European version with EU frequency ranges and repeater channels/offsets which differ from the US R version.
To program a PL (Privacy Tone or CTCSS tone) into a Yaesu FT-60, first, turn on the radio and switch to the desired frequency or memory channel. Press the "F" key, followed by the "T" key to access the tone settings. Use the tuning knob to select the desired PL tone frequency, and then confirm your selection by pressing the "F" key again. Finally, ensure the "T" indicator is displayed on the screen to confirm that the tone is activated for that channel.
6"by 6"by" 6"= .5 Cu Ft
There is if you are putting down very expensive tile or carpeting.
Presuming you mean difference in height between the two ends: height = 75 ft × sin(1°) ≈ 1.31 ft ≈ 1 ft 3.7 in
Running Foot (ft) is a measure of distance. Square Foot (ft²) is a measure of area.
16? Nope, the correct answer is 4
I have owned several 60's and have done a lot of turning on and of with no problems whatsoever.... Roger
To program a PL (Privacy Tone or CTCSS tone) into a Yaesu FT-60, first, turn on the radio and switch to the desired frequency or memory channel. Press the "F" key, followed by the "T" key to access the tone settings. Use the tuning knob to select the desired PL tone frequency, and then confirm your selection by pressing the "F" key again. Finally, ensure the "T" indicator is displayed on the screen to confirm that the tone is activated for that channel.
You may have the right frequency, but there a couple or three encoding schemes for encoding the squelch control on the radio's receive section. You won't be able to hear any audio until you match the encoding used in the transmitting radio. It's another way of adding some channel privacy to those who have general purpose receivers, and it also helps to keep the airwaves from being cluttered by a lot of radio transmissions, allowing the transmitter/receiver to become selective in what they'll receive. You'll find info in the Yaesu owner's manual on how to set those frequencies and even have the radio do an automatic search to find them. If you don't have a manual, you should be able top go to the Yaesu website and download a copy.
The Yaesu FT-250 is a 100-watt transceiver that operates on the amateur radio frequency bands between 3.5 MHz and 29.5 MHz. The Motorola EP450 is a hand-held 5-watt transceiver that operates in the VHF ranges of 136-162 MHz and 146-174MHz, and in the UHF ranges of 403-440 MHz, 438-470 MHz, and 465-495 MHz. As you can see, the two units don't share any frequencies of operation. They can't communicate with each other for much the same reason that you can't receive local AM stations on your FM radio. (There are other reasons, but frequency incompatibility is the biggie that's most appropriate to this discussion.)
Yes
nothing
nothing
6"by 6"by" 6"= .5 Cu Ft
there is no difference in net sizes for any ice hockey game they are all 4 ft high and 6 ft long
There is if you are putting down very expensive tile or carpeting.
Presuming you mean difference in height between the two ends: height = 75 ft × sin(1°) ≈ 1.31 ft ≈ 1 ft 3.7 in