Title: P25 Aviation Radio Training
1P25 Aviation Radio Training
- Oxford Suites
- Boise, Idaho
- March 10-14, 2008
2Welcome Housekeeping
3Why Interagency Fire is Requiring P25 Digital
Equipment in Aviation
- Frank Smith
- NIFC-FS
- Aviation Safety Inspector (Avionics)
4P25 Background
- A national standard for digital radio
communication. - Created by the Association of Public-Safety
Communications Officials. - Specifications agreed upon by several
communication companies and government
organizations.
5Why Was It Created
- Law enforcement agencies around the country were
using proprietary digital radio systems. - These systems could not communicate with each
other. - A deputy sheriff would have to roll their window
down to talk to the local police.
6Federal Involvement
- Congress required the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) to develop a
compliance assessment program (CAP) for P25
equipment. - Millions of dollars for first responder
communications. - How to make these radio system interoperable?
- NIST could create a standard or use an existing
one. - NIST adopted P25.
- Department of Homeland Security specifies what
tests are important. - If P25 does not work, NIST will create a system
that does.
7P25 Digital Implementation
- Required by DOI USDA ( and other federal
agencies) for all new radio purchases. - Required by 1/1/2010 for interagency wildfire
aviation. - Required by 1/1/2010 for all DOI aviation.
- Required in 2005 for federal law enforcement.
- FS non-fire operations (i.e. forest health) not
required to implement P25.
8Interagency Wildfire Requirement Letter
See www.fs.fed.us/fire/niicd/Hotsheet/Hotsheet.htm
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9Interagency Fire P25 Digital Implementation
- No waivers for contractors or fleet aircraft.
- Contractors unavailable until they comply.
- All analog-only radios are boat anchors.
- If mission or contract requires two or more FM
radios, then they all must be P25. - Cant get by with one P25 one analog
10Unintended Benefits of Requiring P25 by 1/1/2010
11New Narrowband FCC VHF-FM Frequencies
- FCC started issuing to states, local governments,
and private organizations in 2005. - Narrowbanding from 15 kHz to 7.5 kHz channel
spacing with 12.5 kHz bandwidth. - (Federal Govt - 25 kHz to 12.5 kHz spacing)
- New 7.5 kHz narrowbanded frequencies incompatible
with some existing radios.
12New Narrowband FCC VHF-FM Frequencies
- Incompatibilities effect radios designed prior to
1997. - Radios manufactured after 1997 using a pre-1997
design also effected. - Known problems in Georgia, Oregon, Texas, and
Washington. - All states likely effected.
- Examples 151.1525, 158.7825, 159.2925
13Interagency Wildfire Requirement Letter
See www.fs.fed.us/fire/niicd/Hotsheet/Hotsheet.htm
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14New Narrowband FCC VHF-FM Frequencies
- Radios known to be 7.5 kHz incompatible
- B/K LPH EPH
- NAT NPX138
- Wulfsberg 9600
- Eureka Radio ERS96000
15New Narrowband FCC VHF-FM Frequencies
- Radios known to be 7.5 kHz compatible
- B/K GPH DPH
- Motorola XTS2500 XTS5000
- Thales (Racal) P25
- EF Johnson 5113, 5123, 5133
- Datron Guardian
- Technisonic TFM-138B TDFM-136
- NAT NTX138 NPX136D
16Acceptable P25 Digital Radios for Interagency Fire
NAT NPX136D
Technisonic TDFM-136
17- Avionics P25
- Jose Lopez
- USDA Forest Service
- National Interagency Incident Communications
Division - National Interagency Fire Center
- March, 2008
18What is Project 25?
- What is Project 25?
- A joint development project to develop a public
safety digital land mobile (LMR) standard. - Why are we (the Federal Government) using P25?
- Congress mandated all federal agencies to change
to 12.5 khz (narrowband) by Jan. 1st of 2005.
19P25 Phases
- P25- compliant technology is being deployed in
several phases. - Phase 1 Radio systems operate in 12.5 kHz
analog, digital or mixed mode. - Phase 2 Currently under development, will use
6.25 kHz bandwidth efficiency. - Phase 3 Currently under development, high-speed
data for public-safety use.
20Benefits of P25
- P25 has many various benefits
- Interoperability
- Radios that are P25 compliant will allow users
from different agencies or areas to communicate
directly with each other. - Backwards Compatibility
- P25 radio standard is backward compatible with
standard analog FM equipment. - Encryption Capability
- P25 Standard includes a requirement for
protecting digital communications with encryption
capability. - Over the Air Re-keying (OTAR)
21Benefits of P25 Continued
- Spectrum Efficiency
- P25 maximizes spectrum efficiency by narrowing
bandwidths.
The RF spectrum is a limited resource used by
every county in the world. Spectrum efficiency
frees up more channels for radio system use.
22Benefits of P25 Continued
- Improved Audio Quality
- P25 digital signals have greater voice quality
over standard analog signals. - Audio is digitally encoded, so background noise
typically present in analog systems is removed. - Enhanced Functionality
- P25 radio systems have signaling capabilities.
- Allows a vast array of additional functions and
features to be standard in any P25 radio system. - Selective calling, Talk Groups (TGID), NAC,
emergency flags, GPS, other data.
23Analog Tones vs P25 NAC/TGID
- Analog CTCSS Tones
- 64 CTCSS Tones (standard non-standard)
- 83 DCS Codes
- P25 Digital
- 4096 NAC codes
- 65535 TGID
- A different way of doing the same thing
- When you need a tone, use it
- When you need a NAC/TGID, use it
24Analog Tones vs P25 NAC/TGID
- Analog Modes
- No tone
- Tx only tone
- Rx Tx tone
- P25 Digital Modes
- Monitor mode (analogous to analog no tone)
- NAC only
- NAC TGID
25P25 DEMO
- Analog to Analog
- Analog to Mixed-Mode (Shadow Channel)
- P25 to P25
- P25 to Analog
- Analog to P25
26Questions?