|
Professional Mobile Radio (also known as Private Mobile Radio (PMR) in the UK and Land Mobile Radio (LMR) in North America) are field radio communications systems which use portable, mobile, base station, and dispatch console radios and are sometimes based on such standards as MPT-1327, TETRA and APCO 25 which are designed for dedicated use by specific organizations. Typical examples are the radio systems used by police forces and fire brigades. Key features of professional mobile radio systems can include A walkie-talkie is a portable, bi-directional radio transceiver, first developed for military use. ...
The term base station can be used in the context of land surveying, wireless computer networking, and wireless communications. ...
Dispatch is a procedure for assigning customers to taxicabs, couriers, emergency services, and other mobile units. ...
MPT 1327 is a industry standard for trunked radio communications networks. ...
Genera More than 150[1] Look up tetra in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Project 25 (P25) is a suite of standards for digital radio communications for use by federal, state/province and local public safety agencies in North America to enable them to communicate with other agencies and mutual aid response teams in emergencies. ...
Firefighter with an axe A firefighter, sometimes still called a fireman though women have increasingly joined firefighting units, is a person who is trained and equipped to put out fires, rescue people and in some areas provide emergency medical services. ...
- point to multi-point communications (as opposed to cell phones which are point to point communications)
- push-to-talk, release to listen - a single button press opens communication on a radio frequency channel
- large coverage areas
- closed user groups
- use of VHF or UHF frequency bands
âPush to Talkâ redirects here. ...
Very high frequency (VHF) is the radio frequency range from 30 MHz to 300 MHz. ...
Ultra high frequency (UHF) designates a range (band) of electromagnetic waves whose frequency is between 300 MHz and 3. ...
Introduction
When Private or Professional Mobile Radio (PMR) first started the systems simply consisted of a single base station with a number of mobiles that could communicate with this single base station. These systems are still in widespread use today with taxi firms and many others using them for communication. Now facilities such as DTMT and CTCSS provide additional calling selection. Because the antenna may be mounted on a high tower, coverage may extend up to distances of 50 kilometres, although ranges somewhat less than this are more usual, especially when antennas are not as high. In telecommunications, squelch is a circuit function that acts to suppress the audio (or video) output of a receiver. ...
A Yagi-Uda beam antenna Short Wave Curtain Antenna (Moosbrunn, Austria) A building rooftop supporting numerous dish and sectored mobile telecommunications antennas (Doncaster, Victoria, Australia) An antenna is a transducer designed to transmit or receive radio waves which are a class of electromagnetic waves. ...
Licenses are allocated for operation on a particular channel or channels. The user can then have use of these channels to contact the mobile stations in his fleet. The base station may be run by the user himself or it may be run by an operating company who will hire out channels to individual users. In this way a single base station with a number of different channels can be run by one operator for a number of different users and this makes efficient use of the base station equipment. The base station site can also be located at a position that will give optimum radio coverage, and private lines can be provided to connect the users control office to the transmitter site. As there is no incremental cost for the transmissions that are made, individual calls are not charged, but instead there is a rental for overall use of the system. For those users with their own licences they naturally have to pay for the licence and the cost of purchase and maintenance of that equipment.
Selective calling -
Many systems operate with the remote or mobile stations being able to hear all the calls being made. This may not always be satisfactory and a system of selective calling may be required. There are two ways of achieving this. One is to use a system known as Dual Tone Multiple Frequency (DTMF) signalling whereas the other uses Continuous Tone Coded Squelch System (CTCSS). In a conventional, analog two-way radio system, a standard radio has noise squelch or carrier squelch which allows a radio to receive all transmissions on a channel. ...
-
DTMF is a system that is widely used for telephone signalling and is almost universally used for touch tone dialing for landline telephones today. It uses set pairs of tones are used to carry the information. The eight frequencies used are 697, 770, 852, 941 Hz as what are termed the "low tones" and 1209, 1336, 1477, and 1633 Hz as what are termed the "high tones". One high and one low tone are used together and the various combinations are used to represent different numbers. Dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF), also known as Touch Tone® is used for telephone signaling over the line in the voice frequency band to the call switching center. ...
The relevant code consisting of one or more digits is sent and the station programmed to respond to the number, typically one or two digits responds by opening the squelch on the receiver to let the audio through. The disadvantage of this system is that if the receiver does not pick up the code at the instant the DTMF signalling takes place then it will not respond to any of the message. This can be a significant disadvantage because mobile stations often loose the signal for short periods as they are on the move. -
The other widely used system is CTCSS. The system may also be referred to as subaudible tones or PL tones (a Motorola trademark). As the name suggests it uses subaudible tones (below about 250 Hz) to carry the selection information. These are transmitted in addition to the normal voice channel, but as they appear below the audio range passed by most mobile radios (roughly 300-3000Hz), they are filtered out and therefore not heard. In telecommunications, squelch is a circuit function that acts to suppress the audio (or video) output of a receiver. ...
Only when the correct tone for the required station is transmitted will the squelch for that receiver be opened and the transmitted audio will be heard. The advantage of this system is that the subaudible tones are transmitted for the whole period of the transmission so if the signal fades at the beginning of the transmission is lost but later then increases in strength, the continuously transmitted tones will enable the squelch to open and the audio to be heard. Systems typically are able to provide up to 37 different tones, the lowest frequency of which is 67 Hz and the highest 250.3 Hz. This enables a variety of different mobiles to be called selectively.
Modulation In general narrow band frequency modulation is the chosen form of modulation, although airport services use amplitude modulation. Typically a deviation of 2.5 kHz is used for FM and this enables a channel spacing of 12.5 kHz to be implemented. As the demands for PMR are high, it is necessary to make effective use of the channels available. This is achieved by re-using the frequencies in different areas. Base stations must be located sufficiently far apart so that interference is not experienced, and also selective calling techniques such as CTCSS and DTMF are used to ensure that as many mobiles as possible can use a given channel.
Overview of TETRA Private Mobile Radio (PMR) TETRA is a modern standard for digital Private Mobile Radio (PMR) and Public Access Mobile Radio (PAMR). It offers many advantages including flexibility, security, ease of use and offers fast call set-up times. This makes it an ideal choice for many business communications requirements. Genera More than 150[1] Look up tetra in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Work started on the development of the TETRA standards in 1990 and has relied on the support of the European Commission and the ETSI members. Experience gained in the development of the highly successful GSM cellular radio standard, as well as experience from the development and use of trunked radio systems has also been used to fashion the TETRA standard. In addition to this the process has gained from the co-operation of manufacturers, users, operators and industry experts. With this combined expertise the first standards were ready in 1995 to enable manufacturers to design their equipment to interoperate successfully. For users, the TETRA system offers fast call set-up times as well as direct mode operation between radios. Packet data as well as circuit data modes are available and the system provides excellent security along. The systems makes efficient use of the available frequency allocations using Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) technology with 4 user channels on one radio carrier with 25 kHz spacing between carriers. TETRA allocates the channels to users on demand in both voice and data modes. Additionally national and multi-national networks are available and national and international roaming can be supported. With the increased levels of international travel in business nowadays this enables a user to be always in contact with colleagues. Although invisible to the user, there are a variety of frequency bands that are used by TETRA. For civil systems in Europe the frequency bands 410-430 MHz, 870-876 MHz / 915-921 MHz, 450-470 MHz, 385-390 MHz / 395-399.9 MHz, have been allocated for TETRA. Then for the emergency services in Europe the frequency bands 380-383 MHz and 390-393 MHz have been allocated. In addition to this, the whole or appropriate parts of the bands between 383-395 MHz and 393-395 MHz can be utilized should this be required. TETRA is a growing standard for PMR and PAMR. It has shown itself to be very successful and is being implemented by civil and emergency services alike across Europe and beyond.
PMR Trunking using MPT1327 A trunked version of the Private Mobile Radio (PMR) concept that is defined under the standard MPT 1327 (MPT1327) is widely used and provides significant advantages over the simpler single station systems that are in use. MPT1327 enables stations to communicate over wider areas as well as having additional facilities. In view of the very high cost of setting up trunked networks, they are normally run by large leasing companies or consortia that provide a service to a large number of users. In view of the wider areas covered by these networks and the greater complexity, equipment has to be standardised so that suppliers can manufacture in higher volumes and thereby reduce costs to acceptable levels. Most trunked radio systems follow the MPT1327 format. To implement trunked PMR a network of stations is set up. These stations are linked generally using land lines, although optical fibres and point to point radio are also used. In this way the different base stations are able to communicate with each other. In order to be able to carry the audio information and also run the variety of organisational tasks that are needed the system requires different types of channel to be available. These are the control channels of which there is one in each direction for each base station or Trunking System Controller (TSC). A number of different control channels are used so that adjacent base stations do not interfere with one another, and the mobile stations scan the different channels to locate the strongest control channel signal. In addition to this there are the traffic channels. The specification supports up to 1024 different traffic channels to be used. In this way a base station can support a large number of different mobile stations that are communicating at the same time. However for small systems with only a few channels, the control channel may also act as a non-dedicated traffic channel. The control channels use signalling at 1200 bits per second with fast Frequency Shift Keying (FFSK) subcarrier modulation. It is designed for use by two-frequency half duplex mobile radio units and a full duplex TSC. For successful operation it is essential that the system knows where the mobiles are located so that calls can be routed through to them. This is achieved by base stations polling the mobile stations using the control channel. To make an outgoing call the mobile transmits a request to the base station as requested in the control channel data stream from the base station. The mobile transmits its own code along with that of the destination of the call, either another mobile or a control office. The control software and circuitry within the base station and the central control processing area for the network sets up the network so that a channel is allocated for the audio (the traffic channel). It also sets up the switching in the network to route the call to the required destination. To enable the mobile station to receive a call, it is paged via the incoming control channel data stream to indicate that there is an incoming call. Channels are allocated and switching set up to provide the correct routing for the call. There is no method to "handover" the mobile from one base station to the next if it moves out of range of the base station through which a call is being made. In this way the system is not a form of cellular telephone. It is therefore necessary for the mobile station to remain within the service area of the base station through which any calls are being made. The control channel signalling structure has to be defined so that all mobiles know what to expect and what data is being sent. Signalling on the forward control channel is nominally continuous with each slot comprising 64 bit code words. The first type is the Control Channel System Codeword (CSCC). This identifies the system to the mobile radio units and also provides synchronisation for the following address codeword. As mentioned the second type of word is the address codeword. It is the first codeword of any message and it defines the nature of the message. It is possible to send data over the control channel. When this occurs, botht he CSCC and the address codewords are displaced with the data appended to the address codeword. The mobile radio unit data structure is somewhat simpler. It consists fundamentally of synchronism bits followed by the address codeword. There are a number of different types of control channel messages that can be sent by the base station to the mobiles: Aloha messages -- Sent by the base station to invite and mobile stations to access the system. Requests -- Sent by radio units to request a call to be set up. "Ahoy" messages -- Sent by the base station to demand a response from a particular radio unit. This may be sent to request the radio unit to send his unique identifier to ensure it should be taking traffic through the base station. Acknowledgements -- These are sent by both the base stations and the mobile radio units to acknowledge the data sent. Go to channel messages -- These messages instruct a particular mobile radio unit to move to the allocated traffic channel. Single address messages -- These are sent only by the mobile radio units. Short data messages -- These may be sent by either the base station or the mobile radio unit. Miscellaneous messages -- Sent by the base station for control applications. One of the problems encountered by mobile signalling systems is that of clashes when two or more mobile radio units try to transmit at the same time on the control channel. This factor is recognised by the system and is overcome by a random access protocol that is employed. This operates by the base station transmitting a synchronization message inviting the mobile radio units to send their random access message. The message from the base station contains a parameter that indicates the number of timeslots that are available for access. The mobile radio unit will randomly select a slot in which to transmit its request but if a message is already in progress then it will send its access message in the next available slot. If this is not successful then it will wait until the process is initiated again. Although the data is transmitted as digital information, the audio or voice channels for the system are analogue, employing FM. However some work has been carried out to develop completely digital systems. The main systems are by Motorola, by Ericsson (EDACS) and Johnson (LTR). These systems have not gained such widespread acceptance.[citation needed]
External links | Two-way radio | Amateur and hobbyist Amateur radio • Amateur radio repeater • Citizens' band radio • Family Radio Service General Mobile Radio Service • Mobile rig • Multi-Use Radio Service • PMR446 • LPD433 • UHF CB (Australia) Motorola HT1000 hand-held two-way radio A two-way radio is a radio that can both transmit and receive (a transceiver), unlike a broadcast receiver which only receives content one way. ...
Amateur radio station with modern solid-state transceiver featuring LCD display and DSP capabilities Amateur radio, often called ham radio, is a hobby that uses various types of radio broadcasting equipment to communicate with other radio amateurs for public service, recreation and self-training. ...
An amateur radio repeater is an electronic device that receives a weak or low-level amateur radio signal and retransmits it at a higher level or higher power, so that the signal can cover longer distances without degradation. ...
A typical CB base station. ...
The Family Radio Service is an improved walkie talkie system authorized in the United States. ...
GMRS capable handheld radio The General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) is a land-mobile UHF radio service in the United States available for short-distance two-way communications to facilitate the activities of an adult individual who possesses a valid GMRS license, as well his or her immediate family members...
Mobile surveillance camera watching over passengers in a taxicab A mobile rig (or automobile rig) is a class of communications system that is midway between a base station (building-mounted) and portable (body mounted). ...
The Multi-Use Radio Service (MURS) is a small two-way radio service consisting of five frequencies in the VHF spectrum. ...
Alan 456r PMR446 (Personal Mobile Radio, 446 MHz) is a radio frequency part of the UHF range that is open without licensing for personal usage in most members of the European Union. ...
In telecommunication, a low-power communication device is a restricted radiation device, exclusive of those employing conducted or guided radio frequency techniques, used for the transmission of signs, signals (including control signals), writing, images and sounds or intelligence of any nature by radiation of electromagnetic energy. ...
UHF CB is a licence-free citizens band radio service authorised by the government of Australia in the UHF 477MHz band. ...
Aviation (aeronautical mobile) Air traffic control • Aircraft emergency frequency • Airband • Mandatory frequency airport • Single Frequency Approach • UNICOM For the Canadian musical group, see Air Traffic Control (band). ...
The aircraft emergency frequency is a frequency used on the aircraft radio band reserved for emergency communications for aircraft in distress. ...
A Bendix/King KY197 Airband VHF communication radio mounted above a Cessna ARC RT-359A Transponder (the beige box) in a light airplane instrument panel. ...
An airport with a mandatory frequency (MF), mandatory traffic advisory frequency (MTAF) or air/ground radio (A/G) is an airport which does not have a control tower but still requires arriving and departing airport to communicate with other aircraft or a radio operator on a published frequency. ...
In aviation, a Single Frequency Approach (SFA) is a service for a military single-piloted turbojet aircraft to use a single UHF frequency during their landing approach. ...
UNICOM, or UNiversal Integrated COMmunication, is an air-ground communication facility operated by a private agency to provide private advisory station (PAS) service at uncontrolled aerodromes and airports with no Air Traffic Services (ATS) air-ground communication facility. ...
Land-based commercial and government mobile Business band • Base station • Mobile radio • Professional Mobile Radio • Radio repeater • Specialized Mobile Radio • Trunked radio system • Walkie talkie The business band is the name used by US scanner hobbyists who listen to Federal Communications Commission licensees using Industrial/Business pool frequencies. ...
The term base station can be used in the context of land surveying, wireless computer networking, and wireless communications. ...
This article is about professional equipment. ...
A Radio Repeater is a combination of a radio receiver and a radio transmitter that receives a weak or low-level signal and retransmits it at a higher level or higher power, so that the signal can cover longer distances without degradation. ...
The Specialized Mobile Radio system (SMR) is a conventional two-way radio system, or trunked radio system, operated by a service in the 800 or 900 Mhz bands. ...
A trunked radio system is a radio system used to maximize available capacity in a two-way radio system, usually UHF. Groups of users are given a logical talkgroup to share for their communications, rather than a dedicated radio frequency. ...
For the album by Air, see Talkie Walkie. ...
Marine (shipboard) 2182 kHz • Coast radio station • Marine VHF radio • Maritime mobile amateur radio The radio frequency of 2182 kilohertz (kHz) is the international calling and distress frequency for voice maritime communication (radio telephony) on the marine MF bands. ...
Coast radio station is a maritime radio station situated on shore which monitores radio distress frequencies and relays ship-to-ship and ship-to-land communications. ...
Portable VHF radio set Marine VHF radio is installed on all large ships and most motorized small craft. ...
Most countries amateur radio licences allow licensed operators to install and use radio transmission equipment while at sea. ...
Signaling / Selective calling CTCSS • Dual-tone multi-frequency • D-STAR • MDC-1200 • Push to talk • Quik Call I • Quik Call II • Selcall In a conventional, analog two-way radio system, a standard radio has noise squelch or carrier squelch which allows a radio to receive all transmissions on a channel. ...
In telecommunications, squelch is a circuit function that acts to suppress the audio (or video) output of a receiver. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
D-STAR (Digital Smart Technologies for Amateur Radio) is a digital voice and data protocol specification developed for use in amateur radio. ...
MDC, also known as MDC-1200 and MDC-600, is a low-speed Motorola two-way radio data system using audio frequency shift keying, (AFSK). ...
âPush to Talkâ redirects here. ...
Quik-Call I, also known as 2+2, is a selective calling method originally used in one-way paging receivers. ...
Selcall (selective calling) is a type of squelch protocol used in radio communications systems, in which transmissions are preceded by a brief burst of sequential audio tones. ...
System elements and principles Antenna • Audio level compression • Automatic vehicle location • APRS • Call sign • CAD • DC remote • Dispatch • Fade margin • Link budget • Rayleigh fading • Tone remote • Voice procedure • Voting (diversity combining) A Yagi-Uda beam antenna Short Wave Curtain Antenna (Moosbrunn, Austria) A building rooftop supporting numerous dish and sectored mobile telecommunications antennas (Doncaster, Victoria, Australia) An antenna is a transducer designed to transmit or receive radio waves which are a class of electromagnetic waves. ...
Audio level compression, also called dynamic range compression, volume compression, compression, limiting, or DRC (often seen in DVD player settings) is a process that manipulates the dynamic range of an audio signal. ...
Automatic vehicle location is a means for determining the location of a vehicle and transmitting this information to a point where it can be used. ...
Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS) is an amateur radio based system for digital communications, most commonly used to automatically report the position (GPS coordinates) of a person or object, or weather data at a remote location. ...
Call sign can refer to different types of call signs: Airline call sign Aviator call sign Cosmonaut call sign Radio and television call signs Tactical call sign, also known as a tactical designator See also: International Callsign Allocations, Maritime Mobile Service Identity This is a disambiguation page — a navigational...
The CAD system of a fire department on a busy day. ...
A current loop describes two different electrical signalling schemes. ...
Dispatch is a procedure for assigning customers to taxicabs, couriers, emergency services, and other mobile units. ...
In telecommunication, the term fade margin (fading margin) has the following meanings: A design allowance that provides for sufficient system gain or sensitivity to accommodate expected fading, for the purpose of ensuring that the required quality of service is maintained. ...
A link budget is the accounting of all of the gains and losses from the transmitter, through the medium (free space, cable, waveguide, fiber, etc. ...
Rayleigh fading is a statistical model for the effect of a propagation environment on a radio signal, such as that used by wireless devices. ...
A Motorola T-1300 series remote control is built in a telephone housing. ...
Voice procedure includes various techniques used to clarify, simplify and standardize spoken communications over two-way radios, in use by the military, in civil aviation, police and fire dispatching systems, citizens band radio (CB), etc. ...
Diversity Combining is the technique applied to combine the multiple received signals of a diversity reception device into a single improved signal. ...
| |