On Tue, 1 Dec 2020, Quentin Smith wrote:
> That's primarily a function of how the digipeaters in your area are
> configured. Each digipeater has a filter of which packets, if any, it is
> willing to repeat from the Internet to RF.
I'd like to clarify the terminology a bit, to reduce confusion in the
longer term:
* a digipeater is a station which receives packets from RF and retransmits
them on RF; a digipeater is by default not connected to the Internet at
all
* an iGate is a gateway station which has a radio receiver or transceiver
and is connected to the APRS-IS network on the INternet
A station *may* be both an igate and a digipeater at the same time. But
there are a lot of hilltop and mast-mounted digipeaters with no Internet,
with just a radio and a TNC.
> I suggest looking at
aprs.fi to see what node is receiving your RF
> packets and contact that node's operator to inquire about their
> digipeater configuration.
iGate configuration.
> e.g. the digipeater I operate is configured with a filter of "m/40",
> which means messages addressed to a station that was last seen within 40
> km are repeated over RF.
If an iGate software is working according to the specification, it does
not require a range filter such as "m/40". It will, by default, transmit
message packets to RF if a the recipient has been heard recently.
If you're setting a server-side filter of "m/40" the APRS-IS server will
send you *all* packets within 40 kilometers from your position; not just
message packets.
If you don't set any filter, the APRS-IS server will send you the
*message* packets for stations which you have heard recently (within 3
hours if I remember right; the APRS-IS server keeps track of the callsigns
you've igated to it).
> That said, you shouldn't be using the same SSID
> on multiple devices at once - so you shouldn't be seeing the replies on
> your phone if your RF device sends a request.
Right - you should use a unique SSID on each device. But it is expected
that you'll see the replies on the phone, as the devices will show all
messages sent to a callsign regardless of the SSID. They just won't send
out ACKs if the SSID is not used by that device.
- Hessu