1 cap communications radio operator authorization course voice of command revision 11.0 07-jan-2010...
TRANSCRIPT
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CAP CommunicationsRadio Operator Authorization
Course
“Voice of Command”
Revision 11.0 07-Jan-2010 / Lt. Colonel Steven Haney, SWR-TX-001 CAPRevision 14.1 03-Jan-2014 / Lt. Colonel Fred Blundell, TX-129
This Training Slide Show is a project undertaken by Lt Colonel Fred Blundell of the TX-129 Fort Worth Senior Squadron, Fort Worth, TX for local use to
assist those CAP Members interested in advancing their skills. The information contained herein is for CAP Member’s personal use and is not intended to replace or be a substitute for any of the CAP National Training Programs. Users should review the presentation’s Revision Number at the
end of each file name to ensure that they have the most current publication.
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CAP Radio Operator Authorization
1. Basic Communications User Training
2 - 4 Hour Class on:Standard Operating ProceduresLocal Operating ProceduresBasic Radio Operations
Entitles a CAP member to operate a CAP Radio
Required for most ES specialties
Authorization is done in two phases
2. Advanced Communications User Training
4 - 8 Hour Class
Hands on Radio Operations and Radio System Setup
Pass the Advanced Communications User Test, CAPF 119
Entitles CAP member to be assigned a call sign for their radio
Required as part of the Communications Specialty Track
CAP Radio Operator Authorization
(Continued)
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CAPRadio Station Licensing
CAP is a considered a federal agency, thus its Radio Stations are authorized by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA)
Public stations are licensed by the FCC Federal agencies are not allowed to use
services allocated exclusively to the public sector for their business.
This excludes the use of Amateur Radio and Citizens Band for CAP business.
The regulation for all CAP Communications is CAPR 100-1
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5 Habits Of AGood Radio Operator
1. Speak clearly2. Annunciate your words.3. Speak slowly 4. Remain calm no matter what
happens - Never Panic.5. THINK - “Use Your Head”
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OperatorResponsibilities
LISTEN Be Prepared to Assist Do NOT Transmit Unless You
Have Something to Offer or Contact is Requested
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ProhibitedOperating Practices
Transmission of False Distress Signals
Violation of Radio Silence
Personal Conversation
Transmitting in a Net without permission of NCS
Lack of identifying call sign
Excessive tuning and testing
Use of Amateur Radio or Citizens Band frequencies for CAP business, and Vice-Versa
Use of 10 codes or Amateur Radio Q Signals
DO NOT Transmission of false distress signals
Violation use Profanity
Violating operational security rules
ProhibitedOperating Practices
(Continued)
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Prowords
ROGER - Last transmission received OK THIS IS - Preface to your call sign OVER - I’m done, go ahead OUT - I’m done, bye WAIT - I will be back in a few seconds SAY AGAIN - Say that again CORRECTION - Oops! I really meant to say WILCO - ROGER and I will comply AFFIRMATIVE - Yes
Refer to CAPR 100-3, Attachment 1, for the complete list
Prowords are a special set of words used for clarity and brevity in communications.
Some of the most commonly used prowords are:
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Phonetic Alphabet
A AlphaB BravoC CharlieD DeltaE EchoF FoxtrotG GolfH HotelI IndiaJ JulietK KiloL LimaM Mike
N NovemberO OscarP PapaQ QuebecR RomeoS SierraT TangoU UniformV VictorW WhiskeyX X-RayY YankeeZ Zulu
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“I SPELL”Figures / Initials
Use “I SPELL” for pronounceable words• PIZZA
“I SPELL PIZZA PAPA INDIA ZULU ZULU ALPHA PIZZA”
Use “FIGURE(S)” AND “INITIAL(S)” for non-words• N516F
“INITIAL NOVEMBER FIGURES FIVE ONE SIX INTIAL FOXTROT”
! Use proword “CORRECTION” to correct a mistake! Example:
Turn right at next corner … CORRECTION Turn left at next corner…”
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Numerics
Pronunciation
1 WUN 2 TOO 3 TREE 4 FO-WER 5 FIFE 6 SIX 7 SEVEN 8 ATE 9 NINER 0 ZERO
When writing the numbers, do not write them down the way they are pronounced.
For example, do not write “one” as “wun” or “five” as “fife.” Write them as “1” and “5”.
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PunctuationSymbol Spoken as
. Day-See-Mal or Full Stop
, Comma
/ Slant
--?:
Hyphen Question Mark Colon
* Asterisk
# Pound
@ At Symbol
& Ampersand
~ Coda
( ) Paren On - Paren Off
[ ] Bracket On – Bracket Off
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Sending Numerics
Use Prowords “FIGURES”, “DECIMAL”, “TIME”, “INITIALS”
Digit-by-Digit Not“Seven Fifty”
750 “FIGURES SEVEN FIFE ZERO”
NinerNot Nine
849 “FIGURES ATE FO-WER NINER”
DecimalPoint
14.5 “FIGURES ONE FO-WER DECIMAL FIFE”
Z Time 1635Z “TIME ONE SIX TREE FIFE ZULU”
Initial AndFigures E21 “INITIAL ECHO FIGURES TOO WUN”
One Figureand Initial 3-A “FIGURE TREE DASH INITIAL ALPHA”
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ZULU Time
AKA Greenwich Mean Time or Universal Coordinated Time.
Refers to the current time in Greenwich, United Kingdom.
Zulu time is a system of timekeeping that refers to the same time, no matter what time zone you are in.
Central Standard Time is Zulu – 6 Hours
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Types of StationsTactical Call Signs
GROUND AIRMOBILE
TEXAS CAP 2112
CAP 4247
TEXAS CAP 6122
CAP VEHICLES
TEXAS WING CALL SIGN EXAMPLES
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Texas Call Signs
TEXASCAP 1 – TEXASCAP 99 Wing HQ Staff-TC1=Wing Commander-TC2=Wing Vice Commander-TC3=Wing Chief of Staff-TC4=Wing Director of Communications-TC5=Wing Chaplain-TC6=Wing Director of Professional Development-TC7=Wing Director of Logistics
-TC8=Wing ES Officer -TC9=Wing Operations Officer
-TC10=Wing Headquarters Station-TC11=Wing Director of Cadet Programs-TC12=Wing Director of Personnel
Assistants and staff officers working under a
director will be assigned calls signs accordingly
Wing Communications staff will have calls in the
40 to 49 block, Operations staff in the 90 to 99
block
Texas Call Signs
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Texas GroupCall Signs
Wing HQ: 1 - 99 Group 1 HQ: 100 – 199 Units: 1000 - 1999 Group 2 HQ: 200 – 299 Units: 2000 - 2999 Group 3 HQ: 300 – 399 Units: 3000 - 3999 Group 4 HQ: 400 – 499 Units: 4000 - 4999* Group 5 HQ: 500 – 599 Units: 5000 - 5999 Group 6 HQ: 600 – 699 Units: 6000 - 6999 Group 7 HQ: 700 – 799 Units: 7000 - 7999
* 42XX block is not assigned to reduce confusion with aircraft CAP42xx call signs
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CallingAnother Station
Aircraft To Establish Contact• “TEXASCAP 2550 THIS IS CAP 4247 OVER”
Response from the Ground Station• “CAP 4247 THIS IS TEXASCAP 2550 OVER”
On Closing the Contact• “… CAP 4247 OUT”OR• “…TEXASCAP 2550 OUT”• Only the first station to finish must say this.
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CallingAnother Station
(Continued)
• Always end a transmission with
OVER or OUT - NOT BOTH!
• Do not use “Roger Wilco” instead of Wilco. “Roger Wilco” means “Last transmission received OK last transmission received OK and I will comply.”
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Radio Net Operation
A Formal Net is established to control the flow of traffic on a single radio channel
The Net Control Station (NCS) maintains net discipline by controlling who is talking
Break Ins to the Net should be done only if you have emergency traffic
The NCS must be contacted first for permission to contact another station
Sample Net Check-in (TC2550 is the NCS):• “TEXASCAP 2550, THIS IS TEXASCAP 5181 with
no traffic, over”
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All transmissions must receive permission from the Net Control Station (NCS)
Radio Nets - Contacting Another Station
TC5181
TC2550NCS
TC5182
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“TEXASCAP 2550, THIS IS TEXASCAP 5181 with traffic for TEXASCAP 582 OVER”
“TEXASCAP 581, YOU MAY PASS YOUR TRAFFIC, OUT”
“TEXASCAP 582, THIS IS TEXASCAP 581, OVER”
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Net StationCheck-In Examples
Checking into a Net with no traffic during roll call:“This is TEXASCAP 5181 with no traffic OVER“
Acknowledgement of check-in:" I recognize TEXASCAP 5181 with no traffic OUT"
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General RadioControls Summary
Common Controls: Volume Squelch Channel Selector Mike with Push to Talk Switch (Release to Listen)
Radio Setup Radio Transceiver (VHF-FM, HF-SSB, SAR) Power Supply (110 VAC or 12 Volt DC) Antenna (Vertical, Magnetic Mount, Dipole)
AC Power 12 Volt Power Supply Radio Antenna
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The Communications System
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Civil Air PatrolCommunications
TELEPHONES - Landline and cellular telephones can be used in addition to radio communications.
INTERNET - E-mail communications, information web pages, internet phone and other methods of communication over the internet.
GOAL - To have a readily available and comprehensive communications network using a variety of assets.
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Civil Air Patrol Communications(Continued)
Intersquadron Radio (ISR)
Military Ultra High Frequency channels Very short range Not CAP frequencies, may have to share with other
Military users May not be used in flight 14 channels, named ISR 1 to ISR 14 Use standard CAP or ICS call signs Texas CAP numbers will be issued for these radios to
support communications training. Use of ICS call sign (Ground Team 2) etc… is also
permitted during operations.
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Voice OperatingModes
SIMPLEX
REPEATER
Single Frequency - One Station at a Time
SAME FREQ
R T
INPUT FREQOUTPUT FREQ
Two Frequencies - One Station at a Time
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Repeater Operation
INPUT FREQ OUTPUT FREQ
*Repeater increases the range of mobilestations due to its high profile location*
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Inside The Repeater
INPUT FREQ
123.1 Hz Tone
Receiver
123.1 HzTone Decoder
Transmitter
“Mike Button”
Voice OUTPUT FREQ
PTT
Repeater will only turn on its transmitter if it hears the one site tone
The Tone Decoder “listens” for the specific site tone on the incoming signal
The Tone Decoder “presses” the Push To Talk (PTT) button to turn on the transmitter. When the specific tone is received
123.1 Hz Tone
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Operational Security
All CAP frequencies are FOUO – “For Official Use Only”
Do not publicly release CAP radio frequencies.
Do not release CAP radio frequencies over the air.
Channels may be referred to by their designators
THE DESIGNATORS WILL BE USED ON THE AIR TO DIRECT STATIONS TO ANOTHER FREQUENCY, SUCH AS “ALL STATIONS CHANGE
FREQUENCY TO WHISKEY CHARLIE, OUT”.NEVER TRANSMIT THE DESIGNATOR OF THE FREQUENCY YOU ARE CURRENTLY ON!!!!
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Extract from CAP/CC Memorandum of 20 Jan 2006
In addition, all documents containing frequencies will be marked “UNCLASSIFIED // FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY”
(FOUO) at the top and bottom of each page. And, the following statement should be clearly displayed on the front page of any document containing FOUO
information:UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Frequency information contained in this document is designated by the Department of Defense as For
Official Use Only (FOUO) and may not be released to anyone without the prior permission of the NHQ DOK
and CAP-USAF.
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CAP VHF Radio ChannelsEF Johnson Mobile & Handheld
VHF-FM -- Analog– Radio Channel Designator Use– ZONE1 CH. 1 CC1 Primary Command – ZONE1 CH. 2 CC2 Alternate Command– ZONE1 CH. 3 Air 1 Aircraft to aircraft– ZONE1 CH. 4 Air 2 Aircraft to aircraft– ZONE1 CH. 5 TAC 1 Ground Teams
VHF-FM -- Digital– Radio Channel Designator Use– ZONE16 CH. 1 CC 1P Primary Command – ZONE16 CH. 2 CC 2P Alternate Command– ZONE16 CH. 3 Air 1P Aircraft to aircraft– ZONE16 CH. 4 Air 2P Aircraft to aircraft– ZONE16 CH. 5 TAC 1P Ground Teams
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TDFM-136 Aircraft Radio
IndentifierChannelPosition Indentifier
ChannelPosition Indentifier
ChannelPosition
AIR 1 003 AIR 1P 019 TXLAW1 050
AIR 2 004 AIR 2P 017 TXLAW2 051
CC1 001 CC1P 014 TXLAW3 052
CC2 002 CC2P 015 TXFIRE1 053
TAC 005 TAC 1P 019 TXFIRE2 054
Guard 1 GD1 Guard 1P 018 TXFIRE3 055
R63 010 R63P 024 TXMED1 056
R64 011 R64P 025 TXAIR2 057
R67 006 R67P 020 USCG 6 090
R68 007 R68P 021 USCG16 091
R69 008 R69P 022 USCG 21A 092
R70 009 R70P 023 USCG22A 093
VCALL10 058 USCG 23A 094
VFIRE21 060 USCG 81A 095
VLAW31 062 USCG 82A 096
VMED28 061 USCG 83A 097
VTAC11 059
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Repeater Channels All repeaters have a Rxx designator Fixed repeater designators are R01 through R62 Portable/Airborne repeater designators are R63, R64, and
R67 through R70 Digital Channels have a “P” following the designator (e.g.
R11P) Analog Channels
• EF Johnson radios use Zone 8 – 11• TDFM-136 (Aircraft) radios use Channels 101 – 164
Digital Channels• EF Johnson radios use Zone 12 – 16• TDFM-136 (Aircraft) radios do not have digital capability• Except R63P, R64P, R67P- R70P and 6 simplex channels• Channels 014 - 025
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Sample Of Operational Repeaters in Texas
Location DesignatorEF Johnson
AnalogEF Johnson
DigitalTDFM-136
Analog Only
Amarillo R35 Z10,CH3 Z14, CH3 135
Brownsville R09 Z8, CH9 Z12, CH9 109
Dallas – North R11 Z8, CH11 Z12, CH11 111
Decatur R44 Z10, CH12 Z14, CH12 144
Granbury R01 Z8, CH1 Z12, CH 1 101
Houston – North R14 Z8, CH14 Z12, CH14 114
Kerrville R50 Z11, CH2 Z15, CH 2 150
King Mountain R52 Z11, CH 4 Z15, CH4 152
San Antonio – N R26 Z9, CH10 Z13, CH10 126
San Antonio – S R57 Z11, CH 9 Z15, CH9 157
Sulphur Springs R60 Z11, CH12 Z15, CH12 160
Tyler R07 Z8, CH7 Z12, CH7 107
Victoria R27 Z9, CH11 Z13, CH11 127
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Portable/Airborne Repeaters Field installable or aircraft mounted (in repeater configured aircraft) Limited power
• 10 watts airborne• 20 watts ground mounted
DesignatorEF Johnson
AnalogEF Johnson
DigitalTDFM-136
AnalogTDFM-136
Digital
R63R63P
Z1,CH7Z16, CH13
135024
R64R64P
Z1, CH8 \Z16, CH14
109025
R67R67P
Z1, CH9Z16, CH9
111020
R68R68P
Z1, CH10Z16, CH10
144021
R69R69P
Z1, CH11Z16,CH11
101022
R70R70P
Z1, CH12Z16,CH12
114023
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Aeronautical SARStations
Aeronautical search and rescue stations (SAR) operate on two aircraft frequencies• 122.9 MHz - TRAINING only• 123.1 MHz - ACTUAL missions only
Contact ground teams by using VHF-FM• Air 1 or air 2 - air-to-ground simplex
Base call signs assigned by geographical location• “THIS IS Spinks Mission Base OVER”
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Use Of Non-CAPChannels
CAP may use state of Texas Interoperability Channels when specifically requested by a state agency to do so. These frequencies are programmed into Johnson and
new aircraft FM radios.
Marine Band: 8 Marine Band Channels are programmed for use with Coast Guard or other agencies.
These frequencies should be used only for interagency communications with state, county or local government
or agencies. CAP will use cap call signs and standard cap procedure.
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Narrow BandTransition
Only VHF narrow band transmissions are permitted on CAP channels, wide band transmissions are prohibited
Designators V1, V2, V3, V4 and any repeater designator beginning with a “P” are NOT TO BE USED for any CAP operations
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Questions
Always Think Safety!