loumaag said:
DonS said:
For a 3600 bps Mot Type-II system, using hexadecimal talk group IDs (Win9x's, not Mot's) makes it obvious that you're looking at values with/without status bits set.
Don, while this is true there is a problem. First, only the Pro-96/2096 will allow you enter TG's with status bits set (anything other than "0"). Second, your own software, other than Win96, doesn't allow it (hmm, I have not tried the Win99 so I can't comment on it) either.
That was kind of my point. I wasn't suggesting actually
entering a value with status bits set. Instead, when entering in hexadecimal, you'd never enter a value where the last digit was anything but zero. Just glancing at the value (prior to entering in Win9x) tells you whether there are status bits set. If there are, you'd just enter that last digit as a zero.
Personally, I like the hexadecimal values for Mot Type-II IDs. They're always 4 digits long, and the last digit is always a zero. (Again - not referring to Mot's 3-digit, no status bit format).
Mot's 3-digit format can save typing: in Win9x, you could leave the bank set to "Conv", then just enter the Mot 3-digit, no status bit IDs. When done, change the bank to "MOT".
And no, Win99 certainly doesn't accept IDs with status bits set. I left that feature out, primarily because the PRO-99 is not a trunking scanner
