Determining Tone A and Tone B

Maxagonzales

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Hi everyone,

I’m reaching out to see if anyone here might be able to assist me with identifying the two-tone alert tones (Tone A and Tone B) used by the Rural/Metro Fire Department in the Tucson, Arizona area. I’ve attached an audio clip that contains what I believe is the actual alerting tones used during dispatch, and I’m hoping someone with the right tools or experience can help me determine the exact frequencies.

Unfortunately, I don’t have the decoding equipment necessary to analyze the tones myself. I’m relatively new to working with pagers and two-tone alerting, and I don’t currently have access to a decoder or software that can accurately read and measure these tones from the audio. What I do have is a Unication G5 pager, and my goal is to program it so that I can receive and monitor Rural/Metro dispatches properly.

If anyone is familiar with the tone pairs Rural/Metro uses, or if you’re able to analyze the audio and determine the tone frequencies, I would be extremely grateful for your help. Even just pointing me in the right direction would be appreciated.

Additionally, I’d be interested to know if there’s a known VHF frequency or channel that Rural/Metro Fire typically uses for dispatch or fireground operations. I’ve been researching online and scanning local frequencies, but I haven’t been able to confidently identify which ones are active for this department.

If it helps, I’m located in the Tucson area, so this is specific to Southern Arizona operations – not Phoenix or Maricopa County.

Thank you in advance to anyone who can offer advice, guidance, or technical assistance. I know this community has a wealth of knowledge, and I appreciate the time you take to help folks like me get started and get set up properly.

Looking forward to hearing from you.

– Max
 

RaleighGuy

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Unfortunately, I don’t have the decoding equipment necessary to analyze the tones myself. I’m relatively new to working with pagers and two-tone alerting, and I don’t currently have access to a decoder or software that can accurately read and measure these tones from the audio. What I do have is a Unication G5 pager, and my goal is to program it so that I can receive and monitor Rural/Metro dispatches properly.

If you have a G5 with new FW and PPS you have the tools, look in the menus for TONE DETECT and it will decode the tones for you.
 

cmjonesinc

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can i do this on a trunked system or does this have to be VHF for tone detection
My area still tones out over analog with just voice over a digital trunked system. I don't think you'll be able to detect a tone that's been digitized but I'm not certain on that. I don't have any experience with tones over a digital trunked system.
 

clareconley

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Feb 26, 2014
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Radio Reference shows two conventional dispatch frequencies for Rural Metro Fire under Pima County Az. 154.370 fire dispatch, and 153.815 EMS dispatch. EMS is simulcast on the fire dispatch. I have a Uniden radio and I entered the fire dispatch frequency into the fire tone out standby. I received several tone-outs for Meds units. For example Meds 845 showed tone A 1209.0 and tone B 1335.2 and Meds 874 tone A. 1209.5 and tone B 1335.6 There were several Meds calls throughout the day in Tucson and Pime County. I hope this will be helpful.
 

prcguy

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So Cal - Richardson, TX - Tewksbury, MA
Couple ways you can find the tone frequencies if you record them. Feed the recorded tone to an oscilloscope vertical input with variable tone generator into the horizontal input and adjust for a Lissajous pattern then the tone generator will be at the same frequency. Or if you have a frequency counter that will go down to audio you can use an audio program like Audacity to cut and paste the short recording into a long one so the audio frequency counter will lock on it.
 

kf8yk

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For example Meds 845 showed tone A 1209.0 and tone B 1335.2 and Meds 874 tone A. 1209.5 and tone B 1335.6
Tones will not be a few tenths of a Hz different, 1209.0 and 1209.5 is the same pager tone, the display difference is just small decode errors in the scanner.

Here’s a chart with many of the standard pager tone frequencies: https://www.sigidwiki.com/images/f/f3/Tone-signaling-charts.pdf Motorola Quick Call 2 is probably the most common with GE type 99 and Plectron tones less common.

Try to match up what the scanner decodes to the closest match from this chart. Keep in mind the tone tolerance is around 1 to 2% so a scanner decode of 1209 could be +\- 12 to 25 Hz.
 
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