User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Federal Communications Commission Regulations
- Compliance with RF Exposure Standards
- RF Exposure Compliance and Control Guidelines and Operating Instructions
- Mobile Antennas
- Approved Accessories
- Contact Information
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- SECTION 1 GENERAL
- SECTION 2 CONTROLS AND DISPLAY
- SECTION 3 GENERAL OPERATION
- SECTION 4 RADIOWIDE FEATURES
- SECTION 5 CONVENTIONAL FEATURES
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Monitoring Before Transmitting
- 5.3 Monitor Mode
- 5.4 Busy Channel Lockout
- 5.5 Call Guard Squelch
- 5.6 Penalty Timer
- 5.7 Conversation Timer
- 5.8 Repeater Talk-Around
- 5.9 Displaying Transmit/Receive Frequency
- 5.10 Emergency Alarm and Call
- 5.11 Conventional Mode Scanning
- 5.12 Standard Conventional Calls
- 5.13 DTMF/ANI Signaling
- 5.14 Single Tone Encoder
- 5.15 Project 25 Mode Features
- 5.16 Keypad Programming
- SECTION 6 SMARTNET/SMARTZONE/P25 TRUNKED FEATURES
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Analog and Digital Operation
- 6.3 Viewing Unit ID
- 6.4 Standard Group Calls
- 6.5 Private (Unit-To-Unit) Calls
- 6.6 Telephone Calls
- 6.7 Call Alert
- 6.8 Messaging
- 6.9 Sending Status Conditions
- 6.10 Emergency Alarm and Call
- 6.11 Failsoft Operation
- 6.12 SMARTNET/SmartZone/P25 Trunked Scanning Features
- 6.13 Dynamic Regrouping
- 6.14 SmartZone and P25 Trunking Unique Features
- SECTION 7 MISCELLANEOUS
- SECTION 8 DETERMINING AVAILABLE OPTIONS
- SECTION 9 5300 MOBILE FIRMWARE VERSIONS
- SECTION 10 PASSWORD DESCRIPTION
- SECTION 11 SECURE COMMUNICATION (ENCRYPTION)
- INDEX
GENERAL OPERATION
18
SmartZone operation, the control channel data rate
is 3600 baud (both digital and analog calls) and the
narrowband digital voice data rate is 9600 baud.
• The P25 mode uses a system ID, Wide Area
Communications Network (WACN) ID, and RF
Subsystem ID (RFSS). The SmartZone mode does
not use the WACN and RFSS IDs.
• P25 Unit IDs can be 1-16,777,215 (000001-FFFFFF
hex) and SmartZone Unit IDs can be 1-65,535
(0001-FFFF hex).
3.7.5 SYSTEMS, CHANNELS, AND ZONES
A zone and channel are selected to place and
receive calls. The following describes the relationship
between systems, channels, and zones.
Systems
A system is a collection of channels or talk
groups belonging to the same repeater site. It defines
all the parameters and protocol information required to
access a site. Up to 16 systems of any type can be
programmed.
The maximum number of channels assignable to
a system is limited to 256. Channels may also be
limited by available memory space as described in the
following information.
Channels
A channel selects a radio (RF) channel or talk
group as follows:
Conventional Analog Mode - A channel selects a
specific radio channel, Call Guard (CTCSS/DCS)
squelch coding, and other parameters unique to that
channel.
Conventional Project 25 Mode - A channel selects a
specific radio channel, NAC squelch coding, talk
group ID, and other parameters unique to that channel.
Mode - A channel selects a specific talk group ID and
other parameters unique to that talk group.
SMARTNET/SmartZone and Trunked Project 25
Modes - A channel selects a specific talk group,
announcement group, emergency group, and other
parameters unique to that talk group.
A maximum of up to approximately 256 channels
can be programmed with the preceding modes. These
channels can belong to a single system or multiple
systems. The maximum number is also limited by the
available memory. For example, since more memory is
required to program a SMARTNET system than a
conventional system, the total number of channels
decreases as the number of SMARTNET channels
increases. The programming software displays a bar
graph which shows the amount of available memory
space that is used by the current data.
Zones
A zone is a collection of up to 16 channels of any
type. For example, a zone could include 12 conven-
tional channels and 4 SMARTNET channels. One use
of zones may be to program the channels used for
operation in a different geographical areas. The
maximum number of zones is 16.