Title: CAP Communications Orientation Class
1CAP Communications Orientation Class
Voice of Command
2CAP Radio Operator Authorization
Authorization is done in two phases
- Communications Orientation Class
- 1-2 Hour Class on
- Standard Operating Procedures
- Local Operating Procedures
- Entitles CAP member to operate a CAP Radio
- Issued a CAPF 76, Radio Operators Permit by Wing
or higher headquarters - Advanced Communications User Training
- 4 Hour Class
- Pass the Advanced Communications User Test, CAPF
119 - Entitles CAP member to be assigned a call sign
for their radio - Required as part of the Communications Specialty
Track
3CAP Radio Station Licensing
- CAP is a considered a federal agency, thus its
Radio Stations are authorized by the National
Telecommunications and Information Administration
(NTIA) - Public stations are licensed by the FCC
- Federal agencies are not allowed to use services
allocated exclusively to the public sector for
their business. - This excludes the use of Amateur Radio and
Citizens Band for CAP business.
The regulation for all CAP Communications is CAPR
100-1
4Types of Stations Tactical Call Signs
ALABAMA WING CALL SIGN EXAMPLES
AIRMOBILE
GROUND
CAPFLIGHT 101
MOBILE
Goldenrod 265
Goldenrod 75
5PROWORDS
Reference 100-1
Prowords are a special set of words used for
clarity and brevity in communications. Some of
the most commonly used prowords are
- THIS IS Preface to your call sign
- ROGER Last transmission received OK
- OVER Im done, go ahead
- OUT Im done, bye
- WAIT I will be back in a few seconds
- SAY AGAIN Say that again
- CORRECTION Oops! I really meant to say
- WILCO ROGER and I will comply
- AFFIRMATIVE Yes
6Phonetic Alphabet
A Alpha B Bravo C Charlie D Delta E Echo F Foxtrot
G Golf H Hotel I India J Juliet K Kilo L Lima M M
ike
N November O Oscar P Papa Q Quebec R Romeo S Sierr
a T Tango U Uniform V Victor W Whiskey X X-Ray Y Y
ankee Z Zulu
7Numbers
- Pronunciation
- 1 WUN
- 2 TOO
- 3 TREE
- 4 FO-WER
- 5 FIFE
- 6 SIX
- 7 SEVEN
- 8 ATE
- 9 NINER
- 0 ZERO
When writing the numbers, do not write them down
the way they are pronounced. For example, do
not write one as wun or five as fife.
Write them as one and five.
8I SPELL / FIGURES / INITIALS
- Use I SPELL for pronounceable words
- PIZZA
- I SPELL PIZZA PAPA INDIA ZULU ZULU ALPHA
PIZZA - Use FIGURE(S) AND INITIAL(S) for non-words
- N516F
- INITIAL NOVEMBER FIGURES FIVE ONE SIX INTIAL
FOXTROT
CORRECTIONS
? Use proword CORRECTION to correct a
mistake Example Turn right at next corner
CORRECTION Turn left at next corner
9SENDING NUMBERS
- Use Prowords FIGURES, DECIMAL, TIME,
INITIALS
Digit-by-Digit Not Seven Fifty
750 FIGURES SEVEN FIVE ZERO
Niner Not Nine
849 FIGURES EIGHT FOUR NINER
Decimal Point
14.5 FIGURES ONE FOUR DECIMAL FIVE
Z Time
1635Z TIME ONE SIX THREE FIVE ZULU
Initial And Figures
E21 INITIAL ECHO FIGURES TWO ONE
One Figure and Initial
3-A FIGURE THREE DASH INITIAL ALPHA
10ZULU Time
- AKA Greenwich Mean Time or Universal Coordinated
Time. - Refers to the current time in the United Kingdom
(uncorrected for Daylight Savings Time). - Zulu time is a system of timekeeping that refers
to the same time, no matter what time zone you
are in.
11Date-Time Group
16 0218Z APR 97
Date
Time
Month
Year
Date and Time in ZULU
12Distress and Emergency Signals
MAYDAY Distress PAN Urgency SECURITE Safety
Supercedes all Priority or Routine Traffic
13Operator Responsibility
- LISTEN
- Be Prepared to Assist
- Do NOT Transmit Unless You Have Something to
Offer or Contact is Requested
14Calling Another Station
- To Establish Contact
- Goldenrod 40 THIS IS Capflight 3421 OVER
- Response from the Ground Station
- Capflight 3421 THIS IS Goldenrod 40 OVER
- No need to use call signs until communications
are complete - On Closing the Contact
- Capflight 3421 OUT
15Calling Another Station cont
- Always end a transmission with OVER or OUT -
NOT BOTH! - Do not use Roger Wilco instead of Wilco.
Roger Wilco means Last transmission received
OK last transmission received OK and I will
comply.
16- Airborne operators
- Before transmitting, make sure you are on the
correct frequency. - Before leaving the aircraft at the close of a
mission, make sure the ELT is off.
175 Habits of a Good Radio Operator
- Speak clearly
- Annunciate your words.
- Speak slowly
- Remain calm no matter what happens - Never Panic
- THINK - Use Your Head
18Prohibited Operating Practices
- Violation of Radio Silence
- Personal Conversation
- Transmitting in a Net without permission of NCS
- Lack of identifying call sign
- Excessive tuning and testing
- Use of Amateur Radio or Citizens Band frequencies
for CAP business, and Vice-Versa. - Use of 10 codes or Amateur Radio Q Signals
19(No Transcript)
20CAP Communications cont.
- Telephones - Landline and cellular telephones can
be used in addition to radio communications. - INTERNET - E-mail communications, information web
pages, internet phone and other methods of
communication over the internet. - GOAL - To have a readily available and
comprehensive communications network using a
variety of assets.
21NTIA Deviation Changes
- Currently, 25Khz channel spacing and 5Khz
deviation - By January 1, 2008, the NTIA has mandated the
Federal government to use radio equipment with
12.5kHz channel spacing and 2.5kHz deviation to
allow for more channels and more users. - If you purchase your own equipment, be sure that
the equipment has the new 2.5 kHz deviation and
that it is capable of the new channel plan. Make
sure that the receiver will be selective enough
to ignore stations that are 12.5 kHz away
22 Voice Operating Modes
Single Frequency - One Station at a Time
SIMPLEX
Channel 3 or 4
REPEATER
Two Frequencies - One Station at a Time
R
T
23Repeater Operation
100.0 Hz Tone
Universal Access Tone used by low power stations
only
Repeater increases the range of mobile stations
due to its high profile location
Note All CAP Repeaters respond to the 100.0 Hz
tone
24Inside the Repeater
Repeater will only turn on its transmitter if it
hears one of two tones 1) Universal access tone
(100.0 Hz) or 2) Repeater site specific tone
(123.0 Hz for the Montgomery Repeater)
Receive Frequency
Transmit Frequency
Voice
Receiver
Transmitter
PTT
123.0 Hz Tone
100.0 123.0 Hz Tone Decoder
Mike Button
The Tone Decoder listens for either of the two
tones on the incoming signal
The Tone Decoder presses the Push To Talk (PTT)
button to turn on the transmitter.
25Airmobile use of Repeaters
- Primary mode of operation should be simplex.
- Only use the repeater if simplex is not possible.
- Selectively use a repeater through use of its
assigned access tone - Use of 100 Hz tone is prohibited since this will
bring up multiple repeaters - The key is to limit use to a single repeater
26CAP Radio Frequencies
- CAP Radio Frequencies are For Official Use Only
(FOUO). Listings are available in CAPR 100-1
Vol. 1
27Aeronautical SAR Stations
- Aeronautical Search And Rescue Stations (SAR)
Operate on two Aircraft Frequencies (see CAPR
100-1 Vol. 1 for frequencies). - Contact ground teams by using VHF-FM
- Air-to-Ground Simplex
- Base Call Signs assigned by geographical location
- THIS IS Montgomery Mission Base OVER
28Radio Operation Summary
Common Controls Volume Squelch
Channel Selector Mike with Push to Talk
Switch (Release to Listen)
Radio Setup Radio Transceiver (VHF-FM,
HF-SSB, SAR) Power Supply (110 VAC or 12
Volt DC) Antenna (Vertical, Magnetic Mount,
Dipole)
1
Power Supply
V
S
29Radio Net Operation
- A Formal Net is established to control the flow
of traffic on a single radio channel - The Net Control Station (NCS) maintains net
discipline by controlling who is talking - Break Ins to the Net should be done only if you
have emergency traffic - The NCS must be contacted first for permission to
contact another station - Sample Net Check-in (GR10 is the NCS)
- Goldenrod 10, THIS IS Goldenrod 404 with no
traffic, over
30Radio Nets - Contacting another Station
GR 10 NCS
1
GR 401
GR404
2
3
- All transmissions must receive permission from
the Net Control Station (NCS)
1 - Goldenrod 10, THIS IS Goldenrod 401 with
traffic for Goldenrod 404 OVER 2 - Goldenrod
401, Contact Goldenrod 404 with your traffic,
OUT 3 - Goldenrod 404, THIS IS Goldenrod 401,
OVER
31NET STATION CHECK IN ANDOPERATING EXAMPLES
- Checking into a Net with no traffic during roll
call - This is ltYOUR CALL SIGNgt with no traffic OVER"
- Requesting permission from NCS to send a message
- " ltNCS CALL SIGNgt this is ltYOUR CALL SIGNgt with
a ltPRIORITYgt message for ltADDRESSEE CALL SIGNgt
OVER" - Acknowledging readiness to receive traffic
- "This is ltADDRESSEE CALL SIGNgt, go ahead with
your traffic OVER" - Acknowledging receipt of a message
- "This is ltADDRESSEE CALL SIGNgt, roger your
message OUT"
32Levels of Precedence
- FLASH - Not used in CAP Messages
- HIGHEST PRIORITY
- HANDLED AS FAST AS POSSIBLE, AHEAD OF OTHER
MESSAGES - IMMEDIATE
- MESSAGES RELATED TO SITUATIONS GRAVELY AFFECTING
THE SECURITY OF THE NATION. - REQUIRES IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
- PRIORITY
- USED FOR MESSAGES WHERE ROUTINE ISNT FAST
ENOUGH - PROCESSED AHEAD OF ROUTINE MESSAGES
- ROUTINE
- MOST USED. DELIVERED IN ORDER RECEIVED.
33Message Construction
- MESSAGE HEADING
- The Originator (From)
- The Addressee (To)
- Precedence (Urgency)
- Date and Time Group
- TEXT
- Information being sent.
- Separated from the heading and ending by the
proword BREAK (may not be part of the text
being passed) - ENDING
- Reserved for the Radio Operators Notes