Frequency
VHF 136-174MHz; UHF 400-470MHz
Channel Numbers
32
Channel Spacing
12.5kHz / 25kHz
Operating Voltage
DC 13.6 ±15% / AC100-240VA
Operating Temperature
-22ºF to +140ºF
Storage Temperature
-40ºF to +185ºF
Weight
16.75 lb
Dimensions
1.7in x 19in x 17.7in
LCD
1.8in / 128/160 pixels, TFT color LCD
Current Drain
Standby: <1A; Transmit: <11A
Shock & Vibration
MIL-STD-810 C/D/E/F/G standard
Continuous Duty Cycle
100%
EDS
IEC 6100-4-2(level 4) ±8KV (Contact), ±15KV (Air)
Surge Immunity Test (EN 6100-4-5)
Differential Mode: 6KV Common Mode: 6KV
Digital Sensitivity
-120dBm/BER 5% / -116dBm/BER 1%
Digital Dynamic Faded Sensitivity
(100KM/H & 8KM/H Rayleigh Fading) -104dBm
Analog Sensitivity
-120dBm/12dB SINAD
Intermodulation
75dB (TIA603) / 70dB (ETSI)
Blocking
95dB (TIA603 & ETSI)
Spurious Response Rejection
75dB (TIA603 & ETSI)
Selectivity
75dB @ 25kHz (TIA603 & ETSI) / 65dB @ 12.5kHz (TIA603 & ETSI)
Conducted Spurious Emission
-57dBm
Rated Audio Power
1W
Rated Audio Distortion
3%
Hum and Noise
45dB @ 25kHz / 40dB @ 12.5kHz
Audio Response
+1dB to -3dB
Digital Vocoder Type
AMBE++/NVOC
Digital Protocol
ETSI-TS102 361-1, -2, -3, -4
Frequency Stability
0.5ppm
RF Power Output
High Power Model: 45-50W; Low Power Model: 25W
Digital Modulation
7K60FXD (Data only); 7K60FXW (Data and Voice)
FM Modulation
16K ¢ F3E @ 25kHz / 11K ¢ F3E @ 12.5kHz
4FSK Modulation Accuracy
5%
4FSK BER
0%
4FSK Magnitude Error
5% / 1%
Adjacent Channel Power
70dB @ 25kHz / 60dB @ 12.5kHz
Conducted and Radiated Emission
-36dBm <1GHz / -30dBm >1GHz
Transmission Deviation Limits
5kHz @ 25kHz / 2.5kHz @ 12.5kHz
Audio Distortion
Hum & Noise
The FCC requires companies and individuals using radio frequencies listed in the Industrial/Business Pool to obtain a radio station license for these frequencies.
When you buy two-way radio equipment from us that requires FCC licensing you have three options:
FCC licenses expire after 10 years unless you apply for renewal within 90 days of the expiration date.
The main benefit of using FCC licensed frequencies is less interference. No one except you should be using those frequencies in the geographical area where your FCC license applies. If you find out another company or individual are using your frequency/s you can start a claim with the FCC to force those operating illegally to stop.
References: