Selcall (selective calling) is a type of squelch protocol used in radio communications systems, in which transmissions include a brief burst of sequential audio tones. Receivers that are set to respond to the transmitted tone sequence will open their squelch, while others will remain muted.
Selcall is a radio signalling protocol mainly in use in Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand, and continues to be incorporated in radio equipment marketed in those areas.
There are eight, well known, selcall tone sets.
0 | 1981 Hz | 1981 Hz | 600 Hz | 2400 Hz | 2400 Hz | 2400 Hz | 2200 Hz | 2400 Hz |
1 | 1124 Hz | 1124 Hz | 741 Hz | 1060 Hz | 1060 Hz | 1060 Hz | 970 Hz | 1060 Hz |
2 | 1197 Hz | 1197 Hz | 882 Hz | 1160 Hz | 1160 Hz | 1160 Hz | 1060 Hz | 1160 Hz |
3 | 1275 Hz | 1275 Hz | 1023 Hz | 1270 Hz | 1270 Hz | 1270 Hz | 1160 Hz | 1270 Hz |
4 | 1358 Hz | 1358 Hz | 1164 Hz | 1400 Hz | 1400 Hz | 1400 Hz | 1270 Hz | 1400 Hz |
5 | 1446 Hz | 1446 Hz | 1305 Hz | 1530 Hz | 1530 Hz | 1530 Hz | 1400 Hz | 1530 Hz |
6 | 1540 Hz | 1540 Hz | 1446 Hz | 1670 Hz | 1670 Hz | 1670 Hz | 1530 Hz | 1670 Hz |
7 | 1640 Hz | 1640 Hz | 1587 Hz | 1830 Hz | 1830 Hz | 1830 Hz | 1670 Hz | 1830 Hz |
8 | 1747 Hz | 1747 Hz | 1728 Hz | 2000 Hz | 2000 Hz | 2000 Hz | 1830 Hz | 2000 Hz |
9 | 1860 Hz | 1860 Hz | 1869 Hz | 2200 Hz | 2200 Hz | 2200 Hz | 2000 Hz | 2200 Hz |
A | 2400 Hz | 1055 Hz | 2151 Hz | 2800 Hz | 885 Hz | 885 Hz | 825 Hz | 970 Hz |
B | 930 Hz | 930 Hz | 2433 Hz | 810 Hz | 825 Hz | 810 Hz | 740 Hz | 810 Hz |
C | 2247 Hz | 2400 Hz | 2010 Hz | 970 Hz | 740 Hz | 2800 Hz | 2600 Hz | 2800 Hz |
D | 991 Hz | 991 Hz | 2292 Hz | 885 Hz | 680 Hz | 680 Hz | 885 Hz | 885 Hz |
E | 2110 Hz | 2110 Hz | 459 Hz | 2600 Hz | 970 Hz | 970 Hz | 2400 Hz | 2600 Hz |
F | 1055 Hz | 2247 Hz | 1091 Hz | 680 Hz | 2600 Hz | 2600 Hz | 680 Hz | 680 Hz |
Typical tone periods include; 20ms, 30ms (sometimes 33ms), 40ms, 50ms, 60ms, 70ms, 80ms, 90ms and 100ms.
The longer the tone period, the more reliable the decoding of the tone sequence. Naturally, the longer the tone period, the greater the duration of the selcall tone burst; longer bursts may be enough to force the user pause before speaking, especially if using the leading-edge ANI scheme.
A typical tone period selection is 40ms, so for a 5-tone sequence this represents a total selcall duration of 5 x 40ms = 200ms. However this is vendor specific and for example commercial radios from Ericsson uses a tone period selection of 100ms where the first tone is 700ms. The 700ms is used on the first tone and allows radios to run a tone scan on several channels without missing a call.
For example; the sequence "12334" is actually transmitted as "123E4".
If a transmission would have multiple repeats, like "12333", it would be transmitted as "123E3" in order to not have the same problem again.
There are two ANI schemes; leading-edge and trailing-edge. Leading-edge ANI will transmit the selcall sequence as soon as the user presses the PTT button. Trailing-edge ANI will transmit the selcall sequence as soon as the user releases the PTT button.
Some selcall implementations use the last digit in the selcall sequence to signify some sort of status or condition, for example emergency or duress. Both transmitting and receiving devices are configured such that they attribute the same significance to each of the status codes. Often a device that decodes a certain status can display a predefined message to alert the user.
Together, ANI and status provide a convenient way to rapidly relay information via the radio network, without the user having to speak. For example, an ambulance paramedic in the field, having encountered some emergency, can simply press and release the PTT button on their radio to signal their predicament to the base. The ANI will identify the caller, the status code will indicate the scenario and the base can dispatch assistance as required.
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