Repeater Range Android App

M3OYQ’s Repeater Range is a free application designed to run on the Android mobile phone platform.  The the app listens to the onboard GPS and displays the bundled repeater database as a simple list sorted by the range, and also displays the bearing from your current location.  The list updates every 30 seconds making it useful whilst travelling.  On selecting a particular repeater from the list, another screen is displayed allowing you to view or update the information relating to the selected repeater, such as Input/Output frequencies, CTCSS Tone, Maidenhead Locator, Latitude, Longitude, and a status setting.

Repeater Range V1.0 Screenshots

Version 1.0 is really a proof of concept and has quite limited functionallity, however if there is enough interest I will develop the app further.  M3OYQ’s Repeater Range is available in the android market, just search for repeater range on your handset, or if you have the Barcode Scanner app, you can use the QR code below to locate it.

Scan or Click the QR image below

to download Repeater Range on your handset

Future Versions.

I wrote this app initially because it filled a need for me to be able to find out the frequencies and CTCSS tones of local repeaters whilst I travel to less familiar places in the UK, however since I released Repeater Range on the Android Market I have had some excellent, and very encouraging feedback, much more than I expected!!  Including some offers of help to add more repeaters in countries other than the UK, and also several requests for additional features and functionallity.

Why I have sponser’s advertisments on the app

When I first developed this app I considered selling a paid for version of M3OYQ’s Repeater Range on Android Marketplace but decided that I wanted to keep the product free for the Amateur Radio community as there where very few apps available for our use. I develop software for my day job too and I see this kind of thing as a hobby but it does take a quite a lot of my time! By including relevent advertisements which maybe of use to the M3OYQ’s Repeater Range user, I can keep it free to users as I am paid a very small amount for each advert click from an interested ham.

Your Ideas

If you have any ideas about how I could improve the app or you have spotted any bugs, or you would like to help me collate data, please post them as a comment to this page (n.b. I get a high volume of comment spam and therefore have to moderate each comment, so please be patient).

Unfortunatley I don’t have limitless time to develop as I want to keep this app free, I’ll look at each suggestion and try to release more frequent but small updates rather than big releases with lots of changes, that way it’ll be easier to fit in to my spare time.  I can’t guarantee I’ll implement all or even any of the suggestions provided as it’s a free app and I’m writing it in my spare time.

Suggestions So Far:

  • Include various other countries in the database
  • Add a way in which to search for a particular repeater
  • Add a filter option to exclude/include different bands
  • Add a Map View to display the repeaters graphically
  • Options for imperial and metric ranges

Currently Looking Into

  • Adding the repeaters in the USA to the database
  • Adding a filter to include/exclude different bands
  • Adding a map view

Known Bugs

When handset is rotated to landscape the app crashes. (Fix coming in next update)

73

Noel

12 Responses to “Repeater Range Android App”
  1. Hello Noel
    Nice and helpful app for us Androids…
    When… you are ready with a multicountry versjon I will gladly help you with Norwegian repeater lists!

  2. wounderfull app works very well i have tested this with degree of vigar this week you seem to be missing some repeaters though mainly my main local one gb3yr
    an idea for the update would be dstar repaters like gb7yd etc and for irlp/echolink inof to be presant as well a serch for would good as well but very well done nice app and used a lot by me

  3. Great idea…..
    We need this for the United States. …..
    Keep up the great work
    Thanks

  4. Nice work..! I keep getting asked to make my UK Repeater app which is for the iphone onto Android. Now I don’t have to! :-) Well done..!

    Strangely enough, I’m in Ley Hill… Do us mobile devs all live in the same area? lols.

    Matt
    M0DQW

  5. Dave - G8FXM says:

    Great app, really love it. Only one gripe it doesn’t list my local repeater which I’m literally sat on top of. My locator is IO91wt. Repeater is GB3VH. Keep up the good work.

  6. [...]  You can download the app at Noel’s website here. [...]

  7. W2CYK BOB says:

    pls load us repeaters! Give me your format & ill send you the file!

    I would pay for this app

    Bob

  8. Looks a nice app. Well done. Problem is I cant get it. I get ” There are no matches in Android market for com.loughranassociates.repeaterrange” Am I doing something wrong?

  9. Is the 3 network blocking it .i can’t get it on my android

  10. Hello i have tried for the life of me to find your app, android market says not found etc can you please help ie send me a link so i can download and install via sdcard etc, I do not mind making a donation for your time cheers Damian de 2E0SFX

  11. Hi,

    Nice app, thank you for writing it, it has already proved to be useful. Think I may have found a database error with the half-channel repeaters (such as GB3JB) where the frequency doesn’t show the full freq.

    GB3JB is on 145.7875, which the app showed as 145.788. I updated the freq to 145.7875, and all was well. I wonder whether your database import went wrong somewhere.

    One or three suggestions for changes/improvements:

    1. Allow the user to manually update the list, rather than having to wait 30 secs.
    2. Add in cell-based location info. This would improve battery life and should be good enough for most purposes.
    3. Add the ability to filter according to repeater band. I have a quadbander in the car (70/2/6/10), but a dualband handy for out and about (70/2) so it would be nice to not list the 23cms ones.

    I’m running it on a Motorola Milestone.

    Cheers,

    Lee

  12. When the repeaters are sorted by range (after an update) instead of one continuous list of low to high range they are sorted in 3 lots of low to high (ie L-H L-H L-H) making it awkward to quickly find all the closest repeaters without lots of scrolling up and down the list as the list gets reset to top after an update.

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