User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- For your safety
- Menu maps
- 1 About this guide
- 2 Before using your radio
- 3 Getting started
- 4 Basic operation
- 5 Operating in conventional mode
- Making a call
- Making an individual call
- Understanding talkgroups
- Making a local call
- Connecting to a telephone network
- Making an emergency call
- Sending a status message
- Receiving calls
- Communicating directly with other radios
- Checking that the channel is clear
- Using the radio in different repeater areas
- Hearing faint and noisy signals
- 6 Operating in P25 trunking mode
- 7 Scanning
- 8 P25 services
- 9 Location services
- 10 Emergency operation
- 11 Encryption
- 12 Customizing radio settings
- 13 Charging and caring for batteries
- 14 Troubleshooting
- 15 Glossary
- Simplified Declaration of Conformity
- Tait Software Licence Agreement
P25 services 109
If the other radio has received your request, it will
now call you, so that you can monitor activity near
the radio.
If an acknowledgement is not received from the
recipient’s radio, you will have the option of either
canceling or resending the request.
Radio inhibit and uninhibit
Warning When your radio is immobilized (‘inhibited’),
your encryption keys may be automatically deleted
from your radio.
This feature is only available for digital channels
operating in conventional mode, and for radios
configured for dispatcher operation.
If you want to make another radio on the system
inoperable, you can use the radio inhibit feature. This
feature is also known as ‘stun’.
To the user of the inhibited radio, it appears as though
the radio has turned off. The radio remains inoperable
even if it is turned off and then on again.
The radio cannot return to operation until it receives
an uninhibit request. This is also known as ‘revive’.
Sending a radio inhibit request
1 Press Menu and select Services > Radio inhibit.
2 Scroll to the radio you wish to make inoperable.
3 Press Send to.
Call received
Car 2
Menu
Radio inhibit
Car 2
Car 3
Send toCancel