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Gloucester County Amateur Radio Club

Gloucester County Amateur Radio Club

Skunkworks Advanced Project Team

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        • What Are DMR Zones?
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What Are DMR Zones?

In DMR radios (especially with firmware like OpenGD77, MD-UV380, GD-77, etc.), Zones are simply user-defined folders or groups of channels that make it much easier to navigate and select what you want to use on the radio.

Think of Zones as the top-level menu on your radio — they organize your hundreds (or thousands) of programmed channels into logical, bite-sized groups so you don’t have to scroll through a giant flat list.

Key Purposes of Zones

  1. Organize channels by location, type, or use case
  • You can have a Zone for your home repeater, one for travel/hotspots, one for analog repeaters, one for national talkgroups, etc.
  1. Make navigation fast and intuitive
  • On the radio, you first select a Zone (usually with the menu or up/down arrows).
  • Then you scroll only through the channels inside that Zone (typically 16–80 channels per Zone, depending on the radio model).
  • This is much faster than scrolling through 500+ channels in one long list.
  1. Reduce clutter on the radio display
  • Instead of seeing “Channel 1”, “Channel 2”, etc., you see meaningful Zone names like:
    • “NYC Repeaters”
    • “BrandMeister Worldwide”
    • “Hotspot Channels”
    • “Analog FM”
  1. No impact on actual radio operation
  • Zones are purely organizational — they don’t affect frequency, talkgroup, timeslot, or routing.
  • The same channel can appear in multiple Zones (very useful!).

How Zones Work in Practice (OpenGD77 Example)

  • You create Zones in the CPS (Codeplug Programming Software).
  • Each Zone can contain up to 80 channels (exact limit varies by radio model).
  • Channels can be digital (DMR) or analog (FM) — mixed in the same Zone if you want.
  • On the radio:
  1. Press the Menu button → select Zone (or use a programmable key).
  2. Scroll to choose a Zone (e.g., “KD2LNB” or “Hotspot”).
  3. Now the channel list shows only the channels in that Zone.
  4. Use up/down arrows to pick the channel → start using it (select talkgroup if it has a TG List).

Example from Your Codeplug (Based on the Tree View You Shared)

Here’s how your Zones are likely organized:

  • Hotspot
    → Contains channels for your personal hotspot (e.g., HS Parrot, HS GCARC, HS LocalComm, HS Public)
  • Parrot
    → Channels specifically for echo/parrot testing (e.g., KD2LNB Parrot, W3PVI Parrot)
  • KD2LNB
    → All channels for the KD2LNB repeater (e.g., KD2LNB Parrot, KD2LNB Direct, KD2LNB Local GCARC, KD2LNB Public)
  • AmCom
    → Channels related to AmCom (possibly analog or specific DMR groups)
  • Repeater
    → General or other repeaters (e.g., W3PVI, SX1/SX2/SX3 DMR, etc.)

You also have analog channels grouped in their own Zones or mixed in.

Advanced Zone Features in OpenGD77

  • Duplicate channels across Zones
    Example: Put your “BM Worldwide 91” channel in both the “Worldwide” Zone and the “Travel” Zone.
  • Zone scanning
    You can scan all channels inside the current Zone (very useful for monitoring multiple local repeaters).
  • No Zone limit
    OpenGD77 supports hundreds of Zones (limited only by codeplug size, usually thousands possible).
  • Zone names appear on display
    When you select a Zone, the radio shows the Zone name at the top of the screen.

Comparison: Zones vs. No Zones

Without Zones (stock firmware style)With Zones (OpenGD77 style)
One giant list of 1000+ channelsLogical groups (e.g., 20–50 channels per Zone)
Hard to find what you want quicklySelect Zone first → only relevant channels shown
Easy to get lostFeels like folders on a computer
Scanning limited to all channelsCan scan just one Zone (e.g., only your local repeaters)

Best Practices for Zones

  • Create Zones based on real-world use:
  • One Zone per major repeater you use
  • One Zone for hotspots
  • One Zone for analog repeaters
  • One Zone for national/worldwide talkgroups
  • One Zone for simplex/direct mode
  • Name Zones clearly and consistently (e.g., “NYC BM”, “Travel Hotspot”, “Analog VHF”)
  • Put your most-used channels in the first few Zones
  • Use the same channel in multiple Zones if you access it from different contexts

In short: Zones are the organizational backbone of a well-programmed DMR radio. They don’t change how the radio transmits or receives — they just make it much easier and faster to find and switch to the channel you want, especially when you have a large codeplug with hundreds of channels.

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  • Home
  • Clubhouse
    • The GCARC Clubhouse
    • Grounding Project
    • Networking Infrastructure
    • Work and Test Bench
    • Clubhouse Satellite Station
      • Satellite Rotator Controller
    • SatNOGS Ground Station
    • Earth-Moon-Earth (EME)
    • Discovery Satellite Snooping Dish
    • GOES-19 Satellite Reception
    • Clubhouse Remote nRSP-ST Resource
    • Skunkworks GitHub Resource
    • ISS SSTV
    • NOAA Weather Fax
    • ADS-B
  • Technical Activities and Resources
    • 3D Printed Projects
    • DMR
      • What is a DMR Codeplug?
        • What Are DMR Channels?
        • What Are DMR Timeslots?
        • What is a Talkgroup in DMR?
        • What Are DMR Zones?
      • What is a DMR Hotspot?
      • Configuring DMR Hotspot for GCARC Talk Group
      • Using DM-1701 CPS Program
      • Open GD77 on Baofeng DM1701
    • Software-Defined Radios
      • Software Defined Radio Demystified
      • Installing an RTL-SDR on a Windows PC
      • SDR Tech Saturday Presentation January 2025
      • SDR Client Applications for Mac
      • Creating a PiAware Station to Track Airplanes
        • Installing PiAware Using the Prebuilt SD Card Image with Raspberry Pi Imager
        • Installing PiAware using Command Line Commands
    • Meshtastic
      • Getting Started with Meshtastic on 915 MHz
      • How to Join the GCARC Channel on Your Meshtastic Device Using a QR Code
      • Installing the Meshtastic CLI on a Windows PC
      • Window-Mounted 915 MHz Meshtastic Yagi Antenna Project
      • Meshtastic CLI Commands
    • Exploring Ham Radio Digital Modes: Packet Radio and WSJT-X
      • Packet Radio (AX.25) in Amateur Digital Communications
      • Exploring WSJT Digital Modes
    • BTECH UV-PRO Radio
      • Satellite Mode for the UV-PRO
    • TIDRADIO H3 Resources
      • TIDRADIO TD-H3 Transceiver: Comprehensive Briefing
      • Overview of Stock Firmware Menu System
      • Comparison of Stock TIDRADIO Firmware vs. nicFW V2 Firmware
    • Balloon Project
      • Balloon Launch – 2025-03-17
    • Tech Saturday Presentations
  • STEM Club and Camp
  • Public Service
    • Winlink VHF and HF Gateways
    • APRS Weather Reporting Station
    • AREDN Development
  • The Foundation
  • Blog
  • Contact

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