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Motorola Type II systems refer to the the second generation Motorola Trunking systems that replaced Fleets and Subfleets with the concept of talkgroups and individual radio IDs. There are no dependencies on Fleetmaps, therefore there are no limitations to how many radio ids that can participate on a talkgroup. This allows for greater flexibility for the agency.
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[[Trunked Radio Systems]] → Motorola Type II
  
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'''Motorola Type II''' refers to the second generation Motorola [[Trunked Radio Systems]] that replaced fleets and subfleets with the concept of [[talkgroups]] and individual radio IDs.
  
The term Smartnet refers to a set of features made available for public safety users. This includes better security, emergency signaling, dynamic regrouping, remote radio monitoring, and other features.
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Variations of the Type II Trunking system include:
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*[[Motorola Type IIi Hybrid]]
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*[[Motorola Type II Smartnet]]
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*[[Motorola Type II SmartZone]]
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*[[Motorola Type II SmartZone OmniLink]]
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*[[Motorola Type II VOC]]
  
The following is true of a Type II Smartnet system:
 
  
* Up to 28 system channels
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=== Talkgroup and Radio ID Display ===
* Up to 65535 unique radio ids
 
* Up to 4000 talkgroups
 
* [[APCO-16]] Compliant
 
  
Type II Smartnet systems uses status bits for special transmissions such as Emergency, Patches, DES/DVP scrambled transmissions, and Multiselects on Motorola Trunking systems. Motorola Trunking radios directly interpret them for their special functions, thus no difference is noticed by the person with the radio. The Trunktracker scanners however interpret these special talkgroup status bits as different talkgroups entirely. Below is the conversion chart for these special status bits.
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Type II systems have no dependencies on fleetmaps, and therefore no limitations to how many radio ids that can participate on a talkgroup. This allows for greater flexibility for the agency.
 
Dec ID + # Usage
 
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ID+0         Normal Talkgroup
 
ID+1         All Talkgroup
 
ID+2         Emergency
 
ID+3         talkgroup patch to another
 
ID+4         Emergency Patch
 
ID+5         Emergency multi-group
 
ID+6         Not assigned
 
ID+7         Multi-select (initiated by dispatcher)
 
ID+8         DES Encryption talkgroup
 
ID+9         DES All Talkgroup
 
ID+10         DES Emergency
 
ID+11         DES Talkgroup patch
 
ID+12         DES Emergency Patch
 
ID+13         DES Emergency multi-group
 
ID+14         Not assigned
 
ID+15         Multi-select DES TG
 
  
Therefore, if a user was transmitting a multi-select call on talkgroup 1808, the trunktracker would actually receive those transmissions on 1815. Some common uses of these status bits are as follows:
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Motorola Type II talkgroups appear on a scanner as an even number without a hyphen, ranging from 16 to 65504 in increments of 16 or 32 (depending on whether the system uses Priority Monitor or not). Talkgroups on systems using Priority Monitor will display as 16, 48, 80, 112 and so on; on systems where Priority Monitor is not used, talkgroups display as 16, 32, 48, 64, 80 and so on.
  
* When a user hits their emergency button, all conversations on the talkgroup revert to the Emergency status talkgroup (ID+2) until the dispatch clears the emergency status. Therefore, if someone hit their emergency button and their radio was on talkgroup 16, all communications would switch to talkgroup 18.
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Individual radio IDs, on the other hand, appear as a number between 1 and 65534; while Type II systems have some gaps in usable IDs (for system technical reasons), most are capable of up to at least 65000 individual radio IDs.
* A lot of Fire and EMS departments dispatch tone-outs and alarms as Multi-select communications (ID+7). Therefore, if your fire department dispatch talkgroup is 1616, and they do dispatch tone-outs and alarms as Multi-selects, then those communications will be on talkgroup 1623.
 
  
This can be a problem, because you will miss communications if you don't have those talkgroups programmed. By setting the Type II block you are monitoring with a fleetmap of S-1 (Mot Size A), you'll essentially get Type I subfleets for each Type II talkgroup - encompassing all of the status bits into one subfleet.
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=== Emergency Flagging ===
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Motorola systems have two potential forms of flagging a talk group as being in an emergency mode (this gives a user priority on a talk group until the emergency state is cleared by the user or the dispatcher): the first method is to set a status bit in the management traffic, the second is to shift the talk group ID by +2 and patching it to the original talk group ID (+0). Uniden scanners are only capable of detecting the first method. A hack of a solution is to add the original talk group ID and the offset talk group ID (+2) to the system in the scanner and set the priority of the +2 talk group ID to be On; one can then add an alert tone and alert backlight to the offset talk group to simulate the emergency detection functionality available to systems that use the second flagging method.
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[[Category:RR Glossary]]
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[[Category:Professional Radios Glossary]]
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[[Category:Receivers Glossary]]
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[[Category:Scanners Glossary]]
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[[Category:Signal Analysis and Decoding Glossary]]
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[[Category:Trunktracking Glossary]]

Latest revision as of 00:01, 30 January 2016

Trunked Radio Systems → Motorola Type II

Motorola Type II refers to the second generation Motorola Trunked Radio Systems that replaced fleets and subfleets with the concept of talkgroups and individual radio IDs.

Variations of the Type II Trunking system include:


Talkgroup and Radio ID Display

Type II systems have no dependencies on fleetmaps, and therefore no limitations to how many radio ids that can participate on a talkgroup. This allows for greater flexibility for the agency.

Motorola Type II talkgroups appear on a scanner as an even number without a hyphen, ranging from 16 to 65504 in increments of 16 or 32 (depending on whether the system uses Priority Monitor or not). Talkgroups on systems using Priority Monitor will display as 16, 48, 80, 112 and so on; on systems where Priority Monitor is not used, talkgroups display as 16, 32, 48, 64, 80 and so on.

Individual radio IDs, on the other hand, appear as a number between 1 and 65534; while Type II systems have some gaps in usable IDs (for system technical reasons), most are capable of up to at least 65000 individual radio IDs.


Emergency Flagging

Motorola systems have two potential forms of flagging a talk group as being in an emergency mode (this gives a user priority on a talk group until the emergency state is cleared by the user or the dispatcher): the first method is to set a status bit in the management traffic, the second is to shift the talk group ID by +2 and patching it to the original talk group ID (+0). Uniden scanners are only capable of detecting the first method. A hack of a solution is to add the original talk group ID and the offset talk group ID (+2) to the system in the scanner and set the priority of the +2 talk group ID to be On; one can then add an alert tone and alert backlight to the offset talk group to simulate the emergency detection functionality available to systems that use the second flagging method.