Goto Section: 80.316 | 80.318 | Table of Contents
FCC 80.317
Revised as of October 1, 2005
Goto Year:2004 |
2006
Sec. 80.317 Radiotelegraph and radiotelephone alarm signals.
(a) The international radiotelegraph alarm signal consists of a series of
twelve dashes sent in one minute, the duration of each dash being four
seconds and the duration of the interval between consecutive dashes one
second. The purpose of this special signal is the actuation of automatic
devices giving the alarm to attract the attention of the operator when there
is no listening watch on the distress frequency.
(b) The international radiotelephone alarm signal consists of two
substantially sinusoidal audio frequency tones transmitted alternately. One
tone must have a frequency of 2200 Hertz and the other a frequency of 1300
Hertz, the duration of each tone being 250 milliseconds. When generated by
automatic means, the radiotelephone alarm signal must be transmitted
continuously for a period of at least 30 seconds, but not exceeding one
minute; when generated by other means, the signal must be transmitted as
continuously as practicable over a period of approximately one minute. The
purpose of this special signal is to attract the attention of the person on
watch or to actuate automatic devices giving the alarm.
Goto Section: 80.316 | 80.318
Goto Year: 2004 |
2006
CiteFind - See documents on FCC website that
cite this rule
Want to support this service?
Thanks!
Report errors in
this rule. Since these rules are converted to HTML by machine, it's possible errors have been made. Please
help us improve these rules by clicking the Report FCC Rule Errors link to report an error.
hallikainen.com
Helping make public information public