Station: KN1B — Kirk, Titusville, FL Contact: kn1b@outlook.com | Full station details on QRZ.com under KN1B Last updated: 2026-06-24
If you’ve found your way here, you’ve probably heard the Doghouse Network mentioned on AllStarLink, EchoLink, YSF, or one of the DMR talkgroups it bridges — or maybe you’re a fellow operator wondering how to connect. This guide explains what the network does, how to reach it from whatever radio or app you already have, and what to expect once you’re connected.
The Doghouse Network, run by KN1B, is a single point that ties several different ham radio networks together, so that operators on completely different systems can hear and talk to each other. Think of it as a crossroads: no matter which road you came in on, you end up in the same room as everyone else.
Specifically, this one network bridges:
Anyone connected through any one of these can hear and be heard by everyone connected through any of the others. A DMR radio on TGIF, a YSF hotspot on the other side of the country, an EchoLink user on their phone, and KN1B’s own physical radio can all be in the same conversation, even though they’re using completely different technology.
There’s no single “right” way in — pick whichever fits the equipment you already own.
You’ll need a small internet-connected “hotspot” device that your radio talks to over the air, which then reaches the network for you.
Have a repeater instead of a personal hotspot? It can join too — but the exact path depends on what kind of repeater it is, and it’s always the trustee’s call, not an individual member’s:
Trustees interested in linking a system in should reach out (see Contact, below).
| App | Reaches | Platform | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|---|
| EchoLink | KN1B-L (EchoLink) | iOS, Android | App Store · Google Play |
| DVSwitch Mobile | Node 54218 directly (AllStarLink/IAX2) | Android only | Google Play |
| DroidStar | YSF, DMR (TGIF and HamUnited), AllStarLink, more | Android, iOS | Google Play · App Store / sideload info via GitHub |
| RepeaterPhone | KN1B-L (EchoLink) or node 54218 (AllStarLink) | iOS only, paid ($7.99) | App Store |
| BlueDV | YSF, DMR (TGIF and HamUnited) | Android | pa7lim.nl — requires a separate AMBE hardware dongle (DVMEGA, ThumbDV, or Star*DV) plugged into your device |
A couple of notes: - EchoLink requires a one-time license validation the first time you use it — see echolink.org for instructions. - DVSwitch Mobile is the same app used for this station’s own approved IAX2 users — if you’d like standing access configured the same way, contact Kirk (see Contact, below). Otherwise, it can still reach node 54218 as a general AllStarLink client. - DroidStar is the most flexible single app here — it can reach YSF and DMR directly without needing separate hotspot hardware, similar to a software-only hotspot. Search for and connect to “US-Doghouse” (YSF) or talkgroup 36940 (TGIF and HamUnited) from within the app. - RepeaterPhone is a polished, paid alternative for iPhone/iPad users, with Apple Watch support — it can reach this network through either EchoLink or AllStarLink, whichever you have an account for. - BlueDV is different from DroidStar/RepeaterPhone in one important way: it needs an actual small USB AMBE hardware dongle plugged into your device to do the digital voice conversion — it’s not a “no extra hardware” option, but it’s a solid choice if you already own one of these dongles.
| Software | Reaches | Platform | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|---|
| EchoLink for Windows | KN1B-L (EchoLink) | Windows | echolink.org |
| DroidStar (desktop build) | YSF, DMR (TGIF and HamUnited), AllStarLink, more | Windows, Mac, Linux | github.com/nostar/DroidStar |
| BlueDV for Windows | YSF, DMR (TGIF and HamUnited) | Windows | pa7lim.nl — requires a separate AMBE hardware dongle (DVMEGA, ThumbDV, or Star*DV) |
EchoLink’s official Mac/Linux support is limited (the mobile apps are the more reliable route on those platforms) — DroidStar is fully cross-platform and a solid option if you’re on a Mac or Linux machine and want to reach YSF or DMR without separate radio hardware.
Note: HamUnited’s side of this bridge has had some recent setup changes on their network; if you connect via HamUnited and don’t yet hear cross-talk from the other networks, it may still be finishing activation — AllStarLink, EchoLink, YSF, and TGIF are all fully active in the meantime.
TGIF and HamUnited are separate, independently-run DMR networks — both happen to carry talkgroup 36940 into this bridge, but joining one doesn’t automatically join the other. Here’s what each one requires:
| Network | Where to register | What you’ll need |
|---|---|---|
| TGIF Network | tgif.network | A free account (verify your callsign/email, generate a security key), plus a free DMR ID from RadioID.net if you don’t already have one. Enter the security key and TG 36940 into your hotspot or repeater’s DMR config. |
| HamUnited | hamunited.com | Same idea — a free account, plus a free DMR ID from RadioID.net if needed. Register, get your credentials, set TG 36940 in your hotspot or repeater. |
If you’re connecting via AllStarLink directly (not through EchoLink, YSF, or DMR — those have their own normal connect procedures), these are the standard DTMF commands once you’re keyed up on your own node, sent to reach node 54218:
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
*354218 |
Connect to node 54218 (transceive — full two-way) |
*254218 |
Connect in monitor-only mode (listen only) |
*154218 |
Disconnect from node 54218 |
*7354218 |
Permanently connect (auto-reconnects if dropped) |
*1154218 |
Permanently disconnect |
A few general-purpose status commands, useful on most AllStarLink nodes:
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
*A1 |
Announce your own node’s local IP address |
*A3 |
Announce your own node’s public IP address |
*A5 |
Announce your own node’s registration status |
*A9 |
One-time “parrot” mode — key up, say something, and hear it played back so you can check your own audio |
(Always key up on your own radio before sending a DTMF command — never key up the radio that’s physically connected to a node you’re trying to control.)
Is anyone actually monitoring this all the time? The network runs automatically and reliably, but it’s not necessarily continuously attended by a live operator. Feel free to call out and wait for a response.
Can I request to be added as a recognized user with standing access? That’s between you and the station owner — email Kirk at kn1b@outlook.com if you’re interested in a standing connection (similar to existing IAX2 users).
Something seems broken — who do I tell? Reach out to Kirk, KN1B, at kn1b@outlook.com. A quick note about what you experienced (what network you were on, roughly what time, what happened) is the most helpful way to report an issue. Full station/contact details are also on QRZ.com under callsign KN1B.
Why do I sometimes hear what sounds like a duplicate or echo? This can happen briefly during cross-network bridging, especially right when a connection is first established. It usually resolves within a few seconds.
Thank you for being part of the Doghouse Network — whichever mode you came in on. 73!