UBCD396XT

Trunked system basics

There are three major elements common to most trunked systems:

System Controller

The system controller is a special computer that assigns voice channels to users as they key up their radio. The controller is the brains behind the trunking system.

Voice Frequency Pool

The voice frequency pool is a selection of radio frequencies available to the system controller for assigning voice traffic. By assigning voice frequencies to channels only as they are needed, a trunked system can support many more channels than it actually has frequencies.

Talk Group IDs

A Talk Group ID identifies which user or agency has been assigned a particular voice frequency at any particular moment. The Talk Group ID is essentially the user's "channel": since each voice frequency is used over and over by all the agencies on the system, trunked systems rely on the Talk Group ID to identify which particular user or agency is talking.

How a trunked system works

A typical communication on a trunked system goes something like this:

1.A user selects the channel they want to communicate on and presses the PTT button on the side of their radio.

2.This sends a channel request message to the controller that the user wants to start a transmission on the Talk Group ID (the channel) that they selected.

3.The controller locates an unused voice frequency and assigns it to that Talk Group ID.

4.The controller then sends out a channel grant message to all radios on the system so everyone knows where to find the voice channel for that Talk Group.

5.At this point, the original user's radio beeps, and the user can begin their transmission. While this sounds complicated, in real life this process takes about half a second (sometimes less).

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Uniden UBCD396XT owner manual Trunked system basics, System Controller, Voice Frequency Pool, Talk Group IDs