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Encyclopedia > CTCSS

In telecommunications, squelch is a circuit function that acts to suppress the audio (or video) output of a receiver. It is activated in the absence of a sufficiently strong desired input signal, in order to exclude undesired lower-power input signals that may be present at or near the frequency of the desired signal. (Contrast with noise suppression.)


Source: modified from Federal Standard 1037C and from the NTIA Manual of Regulations and Procedures for Federal Radio Frequency Management in support of MIL-STD-188.


Types

Two types of selective squelch are commonly used. A continuous tone-coded squelch system (CTCSS) uses any one of about 50 tones from 67 to 254Hz. Digital-coded squelch (DCS) systems use a continuous stream of digital data to identify themselves, running in the same audio frequency band as the tones but at about 131 baud.


CTCSS is usually called PL tone (for "Private Line", a trademark of Motorola), or simply squelch tone. It can be regarded as a form of in-band signaling. See also radiotelephone.


Squelch can also be used based strictly on the signal strength of the signal, such as when a television mutes the audio or blanks the video on "empty" channels, or when a walkie talkie mutes the audio when no one is calling.


Uses

Basic squelch is always used in amateur radio to keep repeater stations from being keyed-up constantly. Squelch tones are very often used as well since they keep other nearby repeaters on the same input frequency from keying the squelch-equipped one unnecessarily.


Many Family Radio Service (FRS) and PMR446 radios also use 38 different squelch tones, also erroneously called "sub-channels". While these do not add to the available number of conversations which can take place at once in a given area, they do reduce annoying interference experienced by users.


External links

  • http://www.directcon.net/pacres/ctcss.htm
  • http://www.directcon.net/pacres/dcs.htm

  Results from FactBites:
 
CTCSS, PL, Tone Squelch, and other Necessary Evils (1928 words)
Amateur radios do not have this automatic feature since the CTCSS system is used to allow users to restrict what they want to listen to, not to allow several fleets of radios to operate on the same frequency.
There are many repeaters that require CTCSS tones to activate them who welcome any and all users regardless of membership status.
Some repeaters have part time CTCSS access turned on by the Control Operator only when he or she gets tired of listening to stations keying up their repeater while trying to access others.
CTCSS Products (149 words)
The ARi-51 is a low current, miniature CTCSS encoder designed to fit into almost all portable and mobile radios.
The ARi-52 is a sub-miniature, full featured 47 tone Encoder/Decoder allowing voice and data to be multiplexed with a sub-audible tone as a means of directing traffic among user groups who share a common radio channel.
Many CTCSS modules do not filter speech, depending instead on the transmitters pre-emphasis network.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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