A trunked radio system is a two-way radio system that uses a control channel to automatically assign frequency channels to groups of user radios. In a traditional half-duplex land mobile radio system a group of users (a talkgroup) with mobile and portable two-way radios communicate over a single shared radio channel, with one user at a time talking. These systems typically have access to multiple channels, up to 40-60, so multiple groups in the same area can communicate simultaneously. In a conventional (non-trunked) system, channel selection is done manually; before use, the group must decide which channel to use, and manually switch all the radios to that channel. This is an inefficient use of scarce radio channel resources because the user group must have exclusive use of their channel regardless of how much or how little they are transmitting. There is also nothing to prevent multiple groups in the same area from choosing the same channel, causing conflicts and 'cross-talk'. A trunked radio system is an advanced alternative in which the channel selection process is done automatically by a central controller (computer).
Trunking is a more automated and complex radio system, but provides the benefits of less user intervention to operate the radio and greater spectral efficiency with large numbers of users. Instead of assigning a radio channel to one particular user group at a time, users are instead assigned to a logical grouping, a talkgroup. When any user in that group wishes to communicate with another user in the talkgroup, an idle radio channel is found automatically by the system and the conversation takes place on that channel. Many unrelated conversations can occur on a channel, making use of the otherwise idle time between conversations. Each radio transceiver contains a microprocessor that handles the channel selection process. A control channel coordinates all the activity of the radios in the system. The control channel computer sends packets of data to enable one talkgroup to talk together, regardless of frequency.
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Project 25 (P25) ou APCO-25 désigne un ensemble de normes de télécommunications pour les radio numériques en usage parmi les personnels de sécurité en Amérique du Nord, que ce soit des policiers ou des pompiers. Utilisé aux niveaux fédéral, provincial (au Canada), de l'État (aux États-Unis) et municipal, il permet aux personnels de communiquer avec tout professionnel dans le cas d'urgence ou d'une demande d'aide. Il ressemble beaucoup au système européen TETRA.
La radiodiffusion est l'émission de signaux par l'intermédiaire d'ondes électromagnétiques destinées à être reçues directement par le public en général et s'applique à la fois à la réception individuelle et à la réception communautaire. Ce service peut comprendre des émissions sonores, des émissions de télévision ou d'autres genres d'émission. Il s'agit d'une forme de radiocommunication. Le terme radio est souvent utilisé pour toute la chaîne de conception et de réalisation d'émissions de radio, la transmission avec les émetteurs radio et la réception au travers des postes de radio.
A two-way radio is a radio transceiver (a radio that can both transmit and receive radio waves), which is used for bidirectional person-to-person voice communication with other users with similar radios, in contrast to a broadcast receiver, which only receives transmissions. Two-way radios usually use a half-duplex communication channel, which permits two-way communication, albeit with the limitation that only one user can transmit at a time.