I also would like to let some know that there is a county coordinator on the fire side who is telling or i may say advising fire agencies not to purchase dual band radios for the fact that you have to switch back and forth to get to channels ( which is normal ) but such as a uhf channel being used and then switching to 7/800 system and that there is a long delay in registering radio back with the 7/800 system when switching from uhf?. Is this true or not because I mean I am familiar with Mototrbo and switching from an analog channel to a trunked system takes less then a second. So is he correct on telling them not to purchase dual band radios because of a delay between channels and talkgroups or is he just making it up?.
Also GTR8000 are the Harris Unity able to scan multiple systems or a system along with analog channels on same scan zone.
Mbk127k,
I agree with the County Coordinator advising the fire departments to not purchase multi-band radios. A FF operating on the scene of an incident, should be using a portable radio on an analog non-repeated frequency.The NFPA guidelines on radio communications, state that fire ground communications should NOT be conducted in digital mode, especially for interior fire operations. It further states that a repeater should NOT be used and all communications should be conducted on direct (talk around). The Orange County16 Channel UHF Radio Plan follows these guidelines. As far I know, there is no plan to change the 16 channel radio plan.
Following the radio plan, the average Firefighter, on a scene, would have no need to access and communicate on the digital 700/800 radio system. The only people on scene that would need to use the 700/800 system, would be the Chiefs, County Coordinators, Incident Commanders etc, because they would be talking to the dispatchers and incoming units. Basically, similar to how Chiefs use the County low band radio system right now.
Since, multi-band portable radios are very expensive (like $5000+), it would not make sense financially, for the FDs go go out and purchase or lease a bunch of these types of radios. A basic Motorola or Kenwood UHF 4-5 watt portable radio is all that is really needed for fire ground operations. These radios can be purchase for a fraction of what a multi-band portable radio would cost.
In addition, when it comes to the Chiefs, Coordinators etc, trying to use 1 multi-band portable or mobile radio to monitor fire ground traffic and the 700/800 digital system at the same time, is not going to work out well, due to the limitations that Signal-Zero & GTR8000 outlined earlier. These limitations could cause an important or urgent message from the dispatcher or a MAYDAY from a firefighter to be missed. The best idea, would be for the Chiefs etc, to use 2 radios, 1 radio to monitor the 700/800 system and 1 radio to monitor the fire ground.