It is YOUR responsibility to properly word your request. To obtain Motorola software see the Sticky in the Motorola forum. The various other vendors often permit their dealers to sell the software online i. Please use Google or some other search engine to find a dealer that sells the software. Typically each series or individual radio requires its own software package. One package is for conventional programming and the other for trunked programming.
The conventional package is more reasonable though is still several hundred dollars. The benefit is you do not need multiple versions for each radio unlike Motorola. This is a large and very visible forum.
We cannot jeopardize the ability to provide the RadioReference services by allowing this activity to occur. Please respect this. JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. User Manual for MTS Thread starter benjaminfs Start date Oct 19, Status Not open for further replies.
Any help would be great. Specifically I need to know how to select what channels I want the radio to scan and which ones I don't. Sounds crazy but the people in charge don't like to give the users of the radio much flexibility in programing and I would like more.
You should be able to order a users manual from Motorola. Unfortunately, any button or menu item can be setup as Scan Program. If your radio shop doesn't want people to reprogram scan lists, they probably haven't setup a scan program button or menu item. MMIC Member. Joined Oct 9, Messages Location Inside of the circuit Mike's right - the entire radio is completely configurable by the programmer.
They can enable and disable the ability for the end user to change the scan lists. If one appears, press the dot ". Then a menu should appear that says "SCAN". Press the dot ". At this point, you should be able to page through the channels in your zone with the channel selector, and change zones with the right and left arrows.
Members that are in the scan list have a "Z" above the talk group name. Press the "HOME" button to exit the scan list programming mode. If you are unable to access any of the aforementioned menus in your radio, they have locked out the ability to program your scan lists. I would not suggest ordering a user's guide from Motorola. They are very vague and are not very helpful since nearly all of the buttons and switches are programmable.
It gives a good overview on the radio, but overall are not helpful. Not to mention the fact that the guide will carry that proud Motorola price tag. Last edited: Oct 19, Joined Apr 18, Messages 42 Location Kentucky. Ben, knowing that most of the MTS's do not have the keypad on them lots of options with those you have to have your radio reprogrammed to do what you want.
You can try Mobile Communications yeah those people who originally programmed them to have it scan the way you want. Could be the way the department wanted all of them to be. The reason you don't have much flexibility is because of the Radio Committee. Very strict on what can and cannot be done with the radio system, adding radios and who gets what channels. Other than that you have no options.
Network Slicing: 5G Networks. Test Solutions for the Data Center. Automating Test Workflow to Accelerate Jobs. Bidirectional Fiber Testing. PON Basics. Understanding 5G: Lessons from the Field. Software Downloads. Product Flashes December 1, July 19, June 29, February 11, July 30, May 23, August 8, May 1, August 10, January 14, February 18, March 20, Learn More.
Related Products Certifier. The industry standard in enterprise certification for both copper and fiber network certification. Visual fault locators for fiber bends and breaks, localization of damages and end-to-end continuity check. FI Live Fiber Identifier. Each byte of binary data is encoded as a 2-character hexadecimal number: the first ASCII character representing the high-order 4 bits, and the second the low-order 4 bits of the byte. Accuracy of transmission is ensured by the record length byte count and checksum fields.
Some specific info relating to the radio's codeplug: The block type S1 refers to 'InternalCodeplugRootBlock' The data is radio parameters defined by various tools like Lab, Factory test and tuning equipment, RSS and others. Also contains pointers to linked Blocks ie. Now, on to toolproofing The Encryption function is similar to ordinary DES. On power up, the radio always calculates the current fingerprint of the radio, and this value is compared to the 9 bytes stored in the codeplug.
The important thing at this state, the ROS is able to communicate with the external world using serial bus, so, if you have codeplug image from THIS radio, you will be able to put it back by labtool for example any time and resume normal operation.
The radio will be operational with such a codeplug, but someone will need to spend hours with test equipment tuning this radio to meet the specifications and adjust hundreds of settings to have all the specs in their type-approval window for the specified temperature and battery level range.
Field Labtools do not support toolproof radios. Of course this fine tuning can be omitted if the radio used for HAM radio purposes. This doesn't unpack the codeplug, rather what you have stored on disk is a raw binary image of the radios codeplug, internal and external.
You cannot edit this codeplug from memory. In order to edit a codeplug using RSS, the codeplug has to be unpacked and we bypassed that step so that the RSS won't hose things up. It is safe to say that trying to do anything with a toolproofed radio in Lab is useless. These methods should be able to protect one from screwing up their radio if they want to try to circumvent the toolproofing.
I'm sure there are persons out there that may be able to. This should get you to a list like this:. Next you will have to find the actual frequency limits for the radio and change these as well.
If you look further down in the file you should see a few lists like:. If you try and enter an invalid frequency in the RSS you will get a warning in the upper right box on the screen informing you of the legal band limits for your radio.
This is where those limits are stored. Change them as required for your radio and you should be able to enter any frequency you want no guarantees that it will actually transmit or receive there though.
0コメント