|
Club Info |
Radio Operations |
OARS Freq |
Hardware |
Misc |
FUNDAMENTALS OF RADIOTELEPHONE PROCEDURE
Radiotelephone procedure is designed to speed up the transmission of messages and reduce the number of errors by using a clearly understood and uniform method of handling radio transmissions under all operating conditions.
Messages should be clear, complete, and as short as possible. Writing messages out before transmitting the message helps to accomplish this objective.
Speak clearly, slowly, and in natural phrases. If receiving operators must copy, allow enough time for them to do so.
Listen before transmitting to avoid interfering with other transmissions.
Always assume that others are listening.
PHONETIC ALPHABET
To help identify spoken letters of the alphabet,
a set of easily understood words has been developed. BRAVO for example,
is the word used for the Letter B, and DELTA is the word used for
the letter D. BRAVO and DELTA are less likely to be confused in
a radiotelephone conversation than the letters B and D. All radio
operators must know and use the same phonetic alphabet.
Over the years many phonetic alphabets have been
adopted. The ITU (International Telecommunications Union) Alphabet,
shown here, has been adopted by NATO and is used by the military,
aeronautic, marine, and amateur radio services throughout the world.
|
ITU Phonetic Alphabet |
|
| Character | Spoken As |
| Alpha | AL fah |
| Bravo | BRAH voh |
| Charlie |
CHAR lee (SHAR lee) |
| Delta | DELL tah |
| Echo | ECK oh |
| Foxtrot | FOKS trot |
| Golf | GOLF |
| Hotel | hoh TELL |
| India | IN dee ah |
| Juliet |
JEW lee ett |
| Kilo |
KEY loh |
| Lima | LEE mah |
| Mike |
MIKE |
| November | no VEM ber |
| Oscar | OSS cah |
| Papa |
pah PAH |
| Quebec | keh BECK |
| Romeo | ROW me oh |
| Sierra | see AIR rah |
| Tango |
TANG go |
| Uniform | YOU nee form (OO nee form) |
| Victor |
VIK tah |
| Whiskey | WISS key |
| X-ray |
ECKS ray |
| Yankee | YANG key |
| Zulu | ZOO loo |
| Note: Capitalized syllables carry the accent. | |
Difficult or easily misunderstood words within a
message may be spelled out using the phonetic alphabet. Before spelling
the word, you must use the proword "I SPELL". If the operator can
pronounce the word that he is going to spell, he will do so before
and after he spells the word to help identify the word.
Example A:
The
operator cannot pronounce the word "zloty".
-I SPELL - ZULU-LIMA-OSCAR-TANGO-YANKEE.
Example B: the operator can pronounce the word "catenary".
-CATENARY-I SPELL- CHARLIE-ALPHA-TANGO-ECHO-NOVEMBER-ALPHA-ROMEO-
YANKEE-CATENARY
Abbreviations in the text are transmitted as follows:
1. Initials used alone or with short titles such
as APC (Armored Personnel Carrier), shall be spoken phonetically.
Example: "APC" shall be spoken as "ALPHA-PAPA-CHARLIE".
"Paragraph A" shall be spoken as "
Paragraph ALPHA".
2. Personal initials shall be spoken phonetically
after sending the proword "INITIALS".
Example: "G.M.Smith" shall be spoken
as "INITIALS-GOLF-MIKE-SMITH"
3. Abbreviations used in normal speech may be used
in the same manner when transmitted by voice.
Example: FEBA, RATELO, RECON, ASAP
4. Punctuation shall be spoken as follows:
| Comma | , |
COMMA |
| Period | . | FULL STOP or PERIOD |
| Parenthesis | () | PAREN/UNPAREN or OPEN BRACKETS/CLOSE BRACKETS |
| Oblique stroke | / |
SLANT |
| Quotation Marks | " " | QUOTE/UNQUOTE |
| Hyphen | - | HYPHEN |
| Colon | : | COLON |
| Semicolon | ; |
SEMICOLON |
| Dash | -- | DASH |
PRONOUNCING NUMBERS
When numerals are transmitted by radiotelephone,
the following rules will be used
| Numeral | Spoken as |
| 0 | ZE ro |
| 1 | WUN |
| 2 | TOO |
| 3 | TREE |
| 4 | FOW er |
| 5 | FIFE |
| 6 | SIX |
| 7 | SEV en |
| 8 | AIT |
| 9 | NIN er |
Numbers will be transmitted digit by digit. For example,
the number "519" would be transmitted as "FIFE-WUN-NINER" not as
" FIVE HUNDRED NINTEEN". Multiples of thousands may be spoken as
such. For example, 6,000 can be transmitted as "SIX-THOUSAND" instead
of "SIX-ZERO-ZERO-ZERO". However, there are special cases, such
as identifying a group in a message, when the normal pronunciation
of numerals is required; for example, identifying the 17th group
in a message would be pronounced as "SEVENTEEN". To identify this
group as "ONE-SEVEN" could be confused with the first and seventh
groups of the same message.
Examples:
| Numeral | Spoken as |
| 44 | FOWer FOWer |
| 90 | NINer ZERO |
| 136 |
WUN TREE SIX |
| 500 | FIFE ZERO ZERO |
| 1200 | WUN TOO ZERO ZERO |
| 1478 |
WUN FOWer SEVen AIT |
| 7000 | SEVen TOU-SAND |
| 16000 | WUN SIX TOU-SAND |
| 812681 | AIT WUN TOO SIX AIT WUN |
PROWORDS
Procedure words are used to convey a common meaning.
They are used in regular communication between radio operators to
shorten transmissions.
| PROWORD | EXPLANATION |
| ALL AFTER | The remaining part of the message which follows the word _______. |
| ALL BEFORE |
The part of the message that comes before
the word________. |
| BREAK | This separates one part of a message from the next. |
| CORRECT | You are correct, or what you have transmitted is correct. |
| CORRECTION |
An error was made in transmission, what follows is the correct version (starting with the last word that was transmitted correctly).
That which follows is a correction to the
message in answer to you request for verification. |
| DISREGARD THIS TRANSMISSION-OUT |
This transmission is in error. Disregard it.
This proword shall not be used to cancel
any message that has been completely transmitted and for
which receipt or
acknowledgement has been received. |
| FIGURES | Numerals or numbers follow |
| FROM |
The originator of this message is as follows: |
| I SAY AGAIN |
I
am repeating the transmission or portion requested. |
| I SPELL | I shall spell the next word phonetically. |
| I VERIFY |
That which follows has been verified at your
request and
is repeated.(Use only as reply to VERIFY). |
| MESSAGE | A message that you are required to write down follows. |
| MORE TO FOLLOW |
Transmitting station has additional traffic
for the receiving station. |
| RADIO CHECK | How well can you hear and understand my transmission. |
| READ BACK |
Repeat this entire transmission back to me
exactly as received. |
| RELAY (TO) |
Transmit this message to all addressees.
The address component is mandatory when this proword is
used. |
| ROGER |
I have received your last transmission satisfactorily. |
| SAY AGAIN | Repeat all or (ALL BEFORE___ or ALL AFTER___) of your last transmission. |
| SPEAK SLOWER | Your transmission is at too fast a speed. |
| THIS IS |
This transmission is from _____. |
| TIME |
That which immediately follows is the time
or date-time
group of the message. |
| TO |
The addressees immediately following are
addressed for action. |
| VERIFY |
Verify the entire message (or portion) with
the originator and send correct version. (to be used only
by addressee) |
| WAIT-OUT |
I must pause longer than a few seconds. (Others
may transmit on this frequency) |
| WORD AFTER |
The word in the message to which I have reference
is that which follows _____________. |
| WORDS TWICE | Communication is difficult. Transmit (or I am transmitting) each phrase (or each code group) twice. This proword may be used as an order, request or as information. |
| WRONG |
Your last transmission was incorrect. The
correct version is ____________________. |
RESPONDING TO INTERFERENCE
Interference will be encountered from time to time. Never respond to interference on the air. If you have alternate modes of communication, immediately switch. It is important to maintain a professional image at all times. A prearranged alternate channel or mode will get the message through in spite of deliberate interference. Most interference will be accidental and can be overcome by proper radio operating techniques.