Here is some additional information on converting the European Motorola 
Radius m110  to Ham use

Firstly I would like to point out that I haven't seen a manual for these 
radios so this is all a bit trial and error

the Identification chart on the batlabs web page seems to be right for the 
68-88 ones I have
http://www.batlabs.com/micro.html

the programming cable is almost certainly wrong on the batlabs website 
(those 27v zeners probably should be 2V7 (2.7 Volt Zeners
see
MC Micro download at
http://www.radioamateur.org.uk/
in any case 27volt zeners seem to make no sense at RS232 levels

I made my cable with 9.7 volt zeners because that was all I had ( and in 
any case the m110's were free!) Happily the cable worked 100%

The software MUST be run from a DOS boot disk (or in real dos) it will 
appear to run ok under win2k but will fail to read the codeplug correctly
Radio appears to have no problems being programmed for the ham bands
Be sure to enable monitor & set transmit admit to monitor as this will 
allow the monitor button on the front to be used to bypass the 5tone circuitry.

After programming it up you will need to look at the TX and RX VCO 
voltages. If the radio comes up after programming with a continuos series 
of beeps this means that the RX VCO is out of lock

Alignment
Open screen on RF deck, there is a second screen inside that covers the VCO 
and PLL ref oscillator circuitry

in the compartment nearest the back under the second screen there are 2 
coils, the one nearest the rear is the RX VCO coil and the one below it is 
the TX VCO coil

to the left of the VCO coils there are 2 capacitors, below and to the left 
of these there is a solder pad where the VCO voltage can be measured

I adjusted the RX VCO voltage for ~ 5 V (near middle of range)
I also adjusted the TX VCO for ~5v

In the compartment nearest the front under the second screen there is a 
single coil this trims the PLL ref oscillator (trims TX & RX frequency ) 
this is de-tuned slightly when the lid is put back on so a couple of goes 
may be needed.

Now you will probably need to line up the RX, this is done using the coils 
along the rear of the RF board. After some fiddling you should have a nice 
sensitive RX (better than 0.25 mV for a fairly noise free signal)
the TX appears to be broadband (mine needed no adjustments anyway)

Squelch pot is labeled as is the VCO MOD (Deviation)
the power pot is on the other side, Mine did not need adjusting as it came 
up at the rated 25w after programming.

other tweaks

this page has an interesting mod for 2m operation along with some other 
hints (get rid of the beeps when buttons are pressed and make the volume 
pot go to Zero )
there are some suggested settings for programming

http://lea.hamradio.si/~s57nan/ham_radio/m11_mod/m11_mod.htm

Hope this helps someone else
73
www.hackersrussia.ru