Aliasing for radio clones » History » Version 1
Pavel Milanes, 06/29/2016 01:26 PM
Initial text, will need some syntax revisions as I'm not native english speaking person.
1 | 1 | Pavel Milanes | h1. Aliasing for radio clones. |
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3 | If you have a question like the following this page has info you need to know about, keep reading: |
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5 | <pre> |
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6 | My FooBar-300 radio shows itself as China_radio-100 once I opened a saved image of it, it’s that normal? |
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7 | </pre> |
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9 | Since June 2016 Chirp support a feature called radio aliasing, and it’s used to represent a clone of a real radio in the user interface for the users convenience. This is more a trick in the guts of Chirp for the developers but it has a quirk the users need to know about. |
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11 | h2. The problem. |
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13 | Some radio manufacturers – mostly from Asia – are assembling some re-branded radios by request with custom names, at the end this radios are no more than perfect clones of a previous existing radios from the Chirps point of view. The perfect example for this is the Baofeng UV-5R with all the [[Baofeng_UV5R_Variants]]. |
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15 | This is no problem at all for using the radios in the day to day work on it’s features and performance, but for Chirp developers it’s: we need that every radio has it’s own and unique identification code or ID to get it clearly identified. |
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17 | Before the alias feature implementation you have to know before hand that your Juentai JT-6188 Mini was just a clone of the QYT KT-8900 and so on with other vendors/models. |
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19 | This has brought a lot of confusion and problems on the user side, the site issues and the user mailing list are prof of that; with users asking about support for specific radio models that are no more that just clones of others. |
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21 | h2. The fix. |
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23 | The first approach was to educate the users by putting comments on the [[Supported_Radios]] page about the clones and the right radio to select, and answering issues on the site and emails on the user list. That proved to be just a partial fix, as newcomers keep asking the same questions all over again (Who read the manual anyway?) |
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25 | Then, in a debate in the developers list, Dan came across with this alias feature. with this feature developers has the option to register the radio clones as what they are: clones (technically aliases for a real radio) and allow to show them on the users interface as it’s own VENDOR/MODEL for the users pleasure and peace of mind. |
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27 | h2. Some quirks you will notice and a workaround. |
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29 | This alias feature has it’s own quirks an the major one is that when you download and image of a radio that it’s a clone and save it, that image will became the real radio once opened again in Chirp. You will found yourself asking the question on top of this page. |
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31 | For example, if you read and save an image of a Juentai JT-6188 Mini, when you re opened from the file in your hard drive you will found Chirp telling you that this image is for a QYT KT-8900, not the Juentai JT-6188 Mini, you are safe using it for your clone radio. |
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33 | It’s confusing, we know; but remember that Chirp’s team always encourage to keep a few images for every radio and do not cross use them with other radio models or variants. For that reason we have implemented also a suggested naming schema on the saving of a img file to cope with that. |
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35 | Once you want to save a copy of your radio data you will find Chirp is suggesting you to use the {vendor}_{model}_{date}.img schema, for the above example you will receive the suggestion to use this: Juentai_JT-6188 Mini_{date}.img |
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37 | So when you look for and old image file of your radio you will always know that this image was for that particular radio vendor & model as it’s stated on the file name, this will help you with the mentioned quirk in the aliasing feature. |
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39 | h2. Present and future. |
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41 | So far we have just a few clones or aliases listed on Chirp, we hope other developers jump to implement it for the remaining aliases, specially for the Baofeng UV-5R huge family of clones, we know its’t a huge task and will take time. |
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43 | So far this radios are implemented as clones or aliases: |
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45 | * Juentai_JT-6188 Mini (clone of a QYT KT-8900 variant) |
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46 | * Juentai_JT-6188 Plus (clone of Waccom Mini-8900) |
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47 | * QYT KT-UV980 (clone of Waccom Mini-8900) |
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48 | * Jetstream JT2705M (clone of Waccom Mini-8900) |
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49 | * Sainsonic GT-890 (clone of a QYT KT-8900 variant) |
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50 | * Luiton LT-588UV (clone of a QYT KT-8900 variant) |
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52 | We will update this page with more clones as they are implemented or ported to Chirp. |