Furuno USA 9ZWFS1575 GMDSS SSB User Manual FS1575 2575 5075 OME Frontcover
Furuno USA Inc GMDSS SSB FS1575 2575 5075 OME Frontcover
Contents
- 1. users manual part 1A
- 2. users manaul part 1B
- 3. users manual part 2
- 4. users manual part 3
users manual part 3
10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION For IB-585: • To enter the frequency, press the 9 key to select [Set Frequency]. Go to step 3. Set Frequency Tx Freq : 0.00 RX Freq : 0.00 • To enter the ITU or user channel, press the 0 key to select [Set Channel]. Go to step 4. Set Channel Channel 3. Input a pair of TX and RX frequencies. Go to step 5. 4. Input the user channel. To select the user channel from the list, press the → key to display [User Channel List]. Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select the desired user channel. User Channel List No. Channel TX Freq 1 02001 2174.5 2 04001 4177.5 3 06001 6268.0 4 08001 8376.5 5 012001 12520.0 6 016001 16695.0 RX Freq 2174.5 4177.5 6268.0 8376.5 12520.0 16695.0 5. Press the Enter key. Note: You can not set frequency or user channel in the following cases; • When opening the menu from the control panel (FS-2575C). • When communicating by radiotelephone. • When the DSC scan screen is displayed. • When sending DSC calls. 6. Press the function key F3 then the 8 key to select [Manual Calling]. Manual Calling Mode : ARQ FEC ID 7. Press the ← or → key to select a communication mode. 8. Press the ↓ key then input party's ID number. 9. Press the Enter key to connect the communication line. "Channel Busy Check" appears. If the line is free, "Connect", "Send" and "Lock" appear in highlight as below. 1:File 2:Edit 3:Operate 4:Window 5:Station 6:System 7:WRU 8:HR 9:Over 10:Break 10-Apr-2012 15:10:30 UTC Caps-Eng Station Name Frequency (T/R) : 8765.00 / 8965.00(kHz) Comm Mode :ARQ Connect Send Lock Error Comm Status Sending Volume : 100(%) ARQ Error : 0 ARQ Time : 0(sec) 10-2 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION For the ARQ mode, go to step 10. For the FEC mode, type your message then go to step 13. 10. Press the function key F7. The party's answerback code appears on the screen. Note: Step 10 and 11 are needed for ship-to-ship calling only. 11. Press the function key F8. Your ship's answerback code is sent to the party. 12. Press the Enter key and type your message. 13. If you want to receive other party's response, press the function key F9. 14. Press the function key F10 to disconnect the line. 10.2 ARQ Mode Operation In ARQ operation, one station (information sending station) sends data to another block by block, then listens for the acknowledge signal between blocks from the information receiving station which requests either the next block or retransmission of the last block if there is an error. The request can be repeated up to 32 times until the complete block is received free of error. How to establish connection 1. Press the function key F3 to open the [Operate] menu. 2. Press the 1 key to select [Call Station]. 1:File 2:Edit 3:Operate 4:Window 5:Station 6:System 7:WRU 8:HR 9:Over 10:Break 10-Apr-2012 15:10:30 UTC Caps-Eng Station Name : CHOUSHI-8M Call StationComm Mode :AQW Frequency (T/R) : 8765.00 / 8965.00(kHz) Comm Status :Station ConnectList Send Lock Error MarkStation Space Setup Sending Volume : 100(%) ARQ Error : 0 ARQ Time : 0(sec) Station : ABC-4M ABC-4M ID Code : 45678 ABC-6M Mode : ARQ FEC ABC-12M CH/Table : Channel Scantable ABC-8M Num/Table: FURUNO 3. Select a station. (Station must be registered for use in the ARQ mode). 4. Press the Enter key. The message "Calling Station" appears. If the message shown below appears, check both the power of the radiotelephone and the connections between the radiotelephone and the NBDP terminal unit. Message: "Station calling suspended. Check interconnections between the terminal and main units. Press any key to escape." When an acknowledge signal is detected, "Connect" appears in reverse video on the [Comm Status] line. Note: If the signal conditions are poor, connection can take a while. If the line could not be connected in one minute, the calling stops. The message "Station calling suspended" appears. Try step 3 again, one minute later. Should the signal conditions worsen during message transmission, "Error" appears in reverse video on the [Comm Status] line and the line is disconnected. 5. Transmit message by one of the following methods: 10-3 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION How to send a file stored on a floppy disk or an SD card 1. Press the function key F7 to request the answerback code of the other station. Verify that the code from the station called is correct. 2. Press the function key F8 to transmit your own identity (answerback code). 3. Press the function key F3 then the 3 key to open the [Send File] window. 4. Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select the file to send and press the Enter key. 5. Press the Enter key again. [A:\TEST1. File name LOG File TEST1. TEST2. TEST3. NBDP Send File Size Date & Time 52 12-04-15 17:25 120 12-04-10 16:30 151 12-04-11 09:25 180 12-04-11 20:16 169 12-04-12 06:23 End of Directory 4 Files exist To select : ENTER 1454000 bytes free To view : SPACE To quit : ESC Sending volume (percentage of message transmitted, counts upward as the message is being transmitted), ARQ error count and ARQ transmission time appear on the screen. "Lock" appears in reverse video when the mark and space signals in the received signal are normal. [ARQ Error] shows the number of errors found during transmission. [ARQ Time] is the time in seconds the communication connected. 1:File 2:Edit 3:Operate 4:Window 5:Station 6:System 7:WRU 8:HR 9:Over 10:Break 10-Apr-2012 15:10:30 UTC Caps-Eng Station Name Frequency (T/R) : 8765.00 / 8965.00(kHz) Comm Mode :ARQ Connect Send Lock Error Comm Status Sending Volume : 100(%) ARQ Error : 0 ARQ Time : 0(sec) 6. After the message is transmitted, press the function key F10 to disconnect the line. How to type a message from the keyboard 1. After exchanging answerback code by the function keys F7 and F8, type your message directly from the keyboard. 2. To change the direction of traffic, press the function key F9, or + and ? in order. The other station becomes the information sending station, your station becomes the information receiving station. Receive a message from the sending station. 3. After you have completed communications, press the function key F7 to request the answerback code of the other station. 4. Press the function key F8 to transmit your own answerback code. 5. Press the function key F10 to disconnect the line. Note: When you are requested to change the direction of traffic while transmitting a message, or communication is interrupted because of an error, some of the final characters on the screen may not be sent to the receiving station. 10-4 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION How to stop transmission 1. Press the function key F3 then the 4 key. The message "Send Canceled" appears on the screen. Transmission is stopped but the line is still connected. 2. Press the function key F10 to disconnect the line. 10.3 FEC Mode Operation The FEC mode transmits the same data twice for less errors. Compared with the ARQ mode, the FEC mode is better for communication when the signal is weak. 1. Press the function key F3. 2. Press the 1 key to open the [Call Station] menu. 3. Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select a station which is registered for the FEC mode. 4. Press the Enter key. "Connect" appears in reverse video. 5. Transmit a message directly input from the keyboard, or do the following to transmit a message stored on a floppy disk or an SD card: 1) Press the function key F3 then the 3 key to select [File to Send]. 2) Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select the file to send then press the Enter key. 6. After the message is transmitted, press the function key F10 to disconnect the line. Note 1: When communication is force-quitted by control display, some of the final characters may not be sent to the receiving station. Note 2: When the continuous transmission by FEC mode exceeds one minutes, the output power reduces to low automatically to prevent overheating. 10.4 How to Select Reception Mode 1. Press the function key F3 then the 6 key to open the [Manual Reception] menu. 2. Press the ← or → key to select the reception mode: [AUTO]: Automatic reception in ARQ or FEC mode [ARQ]: International radiotelex ARQ mode [FEC]: International radiotelex FEC mode 3. Press the Enter key. The reception mode appears on the screen. All received (and transmitted) mes12 04 10 0 0. X X X sages are saved to a floppy disk or an Serial number from 000 Year month date SD card when [TX/RX MSG Save] is [ON] in the [System] menu. The file is automatically named (see the figure). Note 1: Press the function key F10 to cancel NBDP reception (quit waiting for connection). Note 2: For NBDP procedure controlled by DSC function, the function key F10 is not available to cancel NBDP reception. Select [QUIT] option on the control panel to cancel NBDP reception. Note 3: During reception in FEC mode, the characters which are not detected because of reception error are displayed as "*". 10-5 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 10.5 Communication Example Call the coast station following the procedure in section 10.2. Then, communicate with the coast station. Below is a communication example. Call completed, connected with coast station 12345 KOBE X Selcall No. If this is your first communications with a particular coast station, the coast station asks you selcall no., ship name, call sign and AAIC (your enterprises name for which to charge toll call). That registers you with the coast station. Thereafter, if your answerback code is correct, automatic transmission is possible. To send message to ship Own answerback code Ship name or call sign 1480 HKRDO VRX MOM GA+? OPR+ MOM 1480 HKRDO VRX 12345 KOBE X KOBE DE HKRDO GOOD MORNING NW NIL QRV GA+? GM NW QTC1+? QRV K GA+? TOR Teleprinting Over Radio (Message TX starts.) NR 9004 Msg No. TO: TELEX 1234567 FURUNO JAPAN OFFICE INT. DEP. SEC-1 MANAGER FM: KOBE MARU/12345 KOBE X TEXT: Type message. Automatically sent from Coast station (ex. Hong Kong) Type at your side within 30 s. (Call operator manually.) Message from coast station (Wait. From HKRDO to KOBE. Nothing to send. Do you have anything to send?) Type at your side (GM=Good Morning. I have a message for you.) From coast station (Send your message.) Type at your side (To send a message file, type MOM before TOR and wait awhile.) Receiver: Telex no.1234567 FURUNO ELEC. CO. Sender: KOBE MARU Type message KKKK QSL +? Message completed. Can you acknowledge receipt? KOBE DE HKRDO QSL NR9004 TKS NW NIL +? From coast station From HKRDO to KOBE. Received NR9004. Thank you. No more to send. End message. TKS NW NIL BIBI +? TKS SEE YOU LATER BIBI Coast station disconnects the line. Communications example 10-6 Type at your side (Thank you. I have nothing to send. Bye Bye. From coast station (Thank you. See you later.) 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION Table of abbreviations Abbreviation QRA QRC QRU QRV QRX QSJ QSL QSX QTA QTC QTU Abbreviation BK CFM DE NIL NW PSE REF SVC Question What is the name of your station? By what private enterprise are the accounts for charges for your station settled? Have you any thing for me? Are you ready? When will you call me again? Answer or Advice My station name is ... The accounts for my station are settled by the private enterprise ... I have nothing for you. I am ready. I will call you again at ... hours [on ... kHz]. What is the charge to be collected to ... The charge to be collected to ... includincluding your internal charge? ing my internal charge is ... Can you acknowledge receipt? I can acknowledge receipt. Will you listen to ... [call sign] on ... kHz? I am listening to ... [call sign] on ... kHz. Shall I cancel message number ...? Cancel message number ... How many messages have you to send? I have ... message for you. What are the hours your station is open? My station is open from ... to ... hours. Definition Signal used to interrupt a transmission progress. Confirm From ... Invitation to transmit. I have noting to send to you. Now Please Received Reference to ... Prefix indicating a service telegram. Command and abbreviation Command TGM+ MSG+ OPR+ URG+ MED+ TEST+ BRK+ Abbreviation GA+ MOM MSG+ KKKK or NNNN XXXXX Function To indicate that the following message is a radiotelegram. To indicate that the ship station needs to be connected immediately any message held. Call operator. Safety, urgency and distress message. Request medical advice. Request coast station to send a test message for checking the ship station. To clear the connection with the coast station. Function I am ready. Transmit your command. Wait a moment. Request pending messages from the shore. Terminate a message. Typo 10-7 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 10.6 Timer Operation A built-in timer permits automatic transmission and reception of telex messages. 10.6.1 How to enable timer operation 1. Press the function key F3 to open the [Operate] menu. 2. Press the 7 key to open the [Timer Operation List]. 3. Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select the operation (name) to execute. 4. Press the Enter key. An asterisk appears beside the operation selected and "T. Op" appears in reverse video on the communication status screen. If a file stored on a floppy disk or an SD card is to be sent, be sure the floppy disk or the SD card containing the file is inserted in the drive. Timer Operation List *1 OP4 OP5 5. If desired, select another operation (name) then press the Enter key. 6. Press the Esc key. When the predetermined time passed, the NBDP terminal unit automatically sends or receives the message. The results of timer operation are displayed as either [OK] or [NG] (No Good) on the [Timer Operation List] window. Timer Operation List *1 *3 *OP4 *OP5 10.6.2 OK OK OK NG How to stop timer operation 1. Press the function key F3. 2. Press the 7 key. 3. Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select the operation (name) which has an asterisk attached to it then press the Enter key. Remove all asterisks to cancel all timer programs. "T. Op" disappears from the communication status screen. 10-8 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 10.7 Scanning The radio equipment scans a group of operator-selected frequencies (channels), and stops scanning when a signal is received. See section 8.5 for registeration of scan group. 1. Press the function key F3 then the 5 key to open [Scanning Group List]. You can confirm the scan channel by pressing the ↑ or ↓ key while pressing the Shift key. Scanning Group List *1 Coast Station A Coast Station B Coast Station C 2. Press the ↑ or ↓ key to select a scan group then press the Enter key. The scanning starts and the indication "Scan" appears in reverse video. Further, the name of the scan group appears in the [Station Name] field. 1:File 2:Edit 3:Operate 4:Window 5:Station 6:System 7:WRU 8:HR 9:Over 10:Break 10-Apr-2012 15:10:30 UTC Caps-Eng Station Name : SAITO-1 Scan Frequency (T/R) : 8344.00 / 8705.00(kHz) Comm Mode : Auto Comm Status : Connect Send Lock Error Sending Volume : 100(%) ARQ Error : 0 ARQ Time : 0(sec) Communication status screen 3. Press the function key F3 then the 5 key to stop scanning. "Scan" disappears from the communication status screen. 10.8 Communication Buffer The communication buffer is a temporary memory which stores the transmitted and received messages. To display the contents of the communication buffer, do the following: 1. If necessary, close the [Edit] window 1 or 2, pop-up, or menu. 2. Press the Pg Up or Page Up, or Pg Dn or Page Down key. The contents of the communication buffer are displayed. Press the P key while pressing the Ctrl key to print them. Press the function key F1 then the 9 key to erase the contents of the buffer. To erase the contents from the screen, do one of the following: • Press the Pg Dn or Page Down key on the last page. • Press the ↓ key at the bottom line. • Press the Esc key. 10-9 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 10.9 Preparation of Macrofiles for Automatic Telex 10.9.1 Automatic telex overview This section shows you how to communicate with a coast station which handles automatic telex transmission, using macrofiles. You need to register communication channels and stations, and prepare macrofiles. The coast stations using automatic telex are MCI Marine Services (North America), Sydney Radio (Australia), Lyngby Radio (Denmark), and others. The procedure is mostly common to all coast stations, however refer to the coast station's traffic manual for details. INTERNATIONAL TELEX NETWORK SHIP STORE-ANDFORWARD DIRECT DIALING CENTRAL SYSTEM MULTIADDRESS SYSTEM CONTROL SUB-STATION Sample of automatic telex network The services available in automatic telex are • Message transfer between ship and coast station (store-and-forward) • Connection with landline telex (direct dialing) • Multi address 10.9.2 Preparations You need to register the following three items to use automatic telex. • Answerback code • Scan groups • Station names How to register answerback code The coast station assigns a telex number. This number functions as an answerback code. An answerback code contains the following: OOOOO SHIP X OOOOO: Coast station-assigned five-digit telex code SHIP: Ship name X: For shipboard station, normally X is entered The procedure to register the answerback code is the same as which appears in paragraph 8.1.1. If an answerback code was registered before the commissioning of 10-10 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION the coast station, a new answerback code must be entered. Contact FURUNO or an authorized FURUNO agent or dealer to enter a new answerback code. How to register scan groups The central system emits a free-signal to indicate a coast station radio channel is in idle condition and available for ship-to-shore calls. The free-signal is detected and recognized by the shipboard equipment as a permission to start the transmission. Then, the shipboard operator initiates a call. You can automatically scan search for the free-signal by registering coast station radio channels in scan group(s). The procedure to register scan groups for coast station use is the same as that which appears in paragraph 8.5.1. How to register stations The next step is to enter station name. The procedure is the same as that shown in paragraph 8.3.1. 10.9.3 Commands The following tables describe the commands for macro operation. Command (Prefixed with @) Parameter Content CALL S: Station Name Calling station name and ID on assigned parameter FREE (support command for CALL) Two digits, 0-99 min Free-channel signal searching time according to assigned parameter (default setting: 10 min) $R$ Detect free-channel signal of 200 ms dot pattern $RR$ Detect free-channel signal of 300 ms dot pattern $RRR$ Detect free-channel signal of 400 ms dot pattern $RRRR$ Detect free-channel signal of 500 ms dot pattern $RRRRR$ Detect free-channel signal of 600 ms dot pattern $RRRRRR$ Detect free-channel signal of 700 ms dot pattern $RRRRRRR$ Detect free-channel signal of 800 ms dot pattern $RRRRRRRR$ Detect free-channel signal of 900 ms dot pattern The combination of two capital letters and "c". For example: $EcR$ Detect free-channel signal like ARQ call block E, RQ, R "c" for repetition signal RQ. 10-11 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION Command (Prefixed with @) Parameter Content RETRY (support command for CALL) Two digits, 0-99 min Calling according to assigned parameter (default setting: 10 min) CASE Text For receiving a message (designated by parameter) transmitted by coast station TIMEOUT (support command for CALL) Two digits, 0-99 min Time allotted for reception of message by CASE command SEND Text Text transmitted according to assigned parameters A: file name Send a file from floppy disk WRU HR OVER BREAK None Function keys F7 - F10 DISPLAY Text Text of message appears INPUT None Waiting for keyboard input. Transmit keyboard input message. Example: Commands Command Function BRK+ Disconnect communications line DIRTLX ...... + Direct dialing telex (receive only) KKKK Terminate message LTR+ For telex letters mailed from Operations Station to destinations worldwide MED+ Request medical advice OPR+ Request operating assistance POS+ Send position data STA+ Status requested on a store-and-forward message TLX ...... + Store-and-forward method For details, see the coast station's traffic manual. 10-12 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 10.9.4 Store-and-forward method The following is the sequence of events for transmission of a file by the store-and-forward method. 1. Ship station sends message to coast station. 2. Coast station stores message in memory buffer. 3. Ship station and coast station clear the radio circuit. 4. Coast station sends message to subscriber designated. Actual procedure for store-and-forward telex No. Procedure Call a coast station. Transmit WRU signal. Key in subscriber's telex number. Example: (Hong Kong) 12345 Display "Connect" appears in reverse video and bell sounds. Remarks Free-signal found; radio circuit ready. 00190 TLG DK 26XXX SHIP X GA+? Initial identity exchange between coast station and shipboard station. MSG+? Request to start message transmission. TLX80212345+ Transmit file. When transmission is completed, type KKKK. Message transmission. 26XXX SHIP X 00190 TLG DK GA+? Transmit your answerback code. Receive other party's answerback code. Transmit BREAK command to clear radio circuit. Procedure to prepare a macrofile for store-and-forward method You need a macrofile to enable automatic message transmission by store-and-forward method. After preparing it, save it to a floppy disk for future use. 1. Press the function key F1 to open the [File] menu. 2. For IB-585, press the B key. For IB-583, press the 1 key. 10-13 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 3. Prepare the macrofile. Below is a simple example. < [1] UNTITLED1 > @FREE $RRR$ @CALL S:LYNGBY RADIO @WRU @CASE GA+? @SEND TLX80212345+ @CASE MSG+? @SEND A: \ABC @SEND KKKK @CASE GA+? @SEND BRK+ 1 Search dot pattern free signal until it is found 2 Station name (Example: LYNGBY RADIO) Who are you? Station identity exchange 3 Subscriber's telex number (in example, 802 is country code of Hong Kong) for store-and-forward method 4 Location and name of file message A: \ABC 5 Request for termination of message Sample macrofile for store-and-forward method 4. Press the function key F1 to open the [File] menu. 5. Press the 3 key. The [Close Text] appears. Close Text Save File? Yes No (UNTITLED 1) 6. Press the Enter key then enter a file name as follows: .MCR File name (max. 14 characters in conjunction with identifier) 7. Press the Enter key. 10-14 Extension name 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION DIRTLX macrofile Sample DIRTLX macrofile < [1] UNTITLED1 > @FREE $RRR$ @CALL S:LYNGBY RADIO @WRU @CASE GA+? @SEND DIRTLX725644325+ @CASE MSG+? @SEND A: \ABC @SEND KKKK @CASE GA+? @SEND BRK+ 1 Search dot pattern free signal until it is found 2 Station name (Example: LYNGBY RADIO) Who are you? Station identity exchange 3 Subscriber's telex number (in example, 72 is country code of Japan) for direct dialing mode 4 Location and name of file message A: \ABC 5 Request for termination of message Sample DIRLTX macrofile 10.10 Automatic Telex Using Macrofile This section describes how to transmit a telex message using a macrofile. Basic procedure 1. Register an answerback code (telex number assigned by the coast station). 2. Register the coast station frequency and channel to a scan group. 3. Register the station name including the scan group name. 4. Retrieve a macrofile. Include the station name and the message file name. Type the message and save the file. 5. Open the macro operation menu and select a macrofile. Your message will be transmitted automatically. Below is the sequence of automatic message transmission to a coast station. 1) Search for free-signal 2) Call coast station on one of its radio channels 3) After connection is established, identity exchange 4) Transmission of service category and subscriber's address 5) Transmission of message 10-15 10. NBDP TRANSMISSION, RECEPTION 6) Transmission of termination of message signal 7) Identity exchange 8) Clearing of radio circuit Actual procedure 1. Press the function key F3 to open the [Operate] menu. 2. Press the 2 key to open the [Call Macro] window. Call Macro [A:\TEST1. File name LYNGBY1.MCR Size 169 Date & Time 12-04-10 06:23 End of Directory 1 Files exist To select : ENTER 1454000 bytes free To view : SPACE To quit : ESC 3. Press the ↓ key to select a macrofile. 4. Press the Enter key. Call Macro: Lyngby1.MCR Call OK? Yes No 5. Press the Enter key to confirm the macrofile selected. The message "Wait for Free Signal" appears. Your message is transmitted automatically. 10-16 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING WARNING ELECTRICAL SHOCK HAZARD Do not open the equipment. Only qualified personnel should work inside the equipment. 11.1 NOTICE Do not apply paint, anti-corrosive sealant or contact spray to plastic parts or equipment coating. Those items contain products that can damage plastic parts and equipment coating. Test Do the following tests to check the radiotelephone for proper operation. Daily test 1. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [TEST] on the [MENU] screen then push the knob. 2. With [DAILY TEST] selected, push the ENTER knob to start the test. After completing the test, the audio alarm sounds and the screen shown below appears. This screen shows: • Program version numbers. • Test results for RX, DSC, WR1 and WR2, shown as [OK] or [NG] (No Good). For NG, contact your dealer for advice. The DSC test checks, using a DSC signal, the encode and decode functions of the signal processor. To print out the test result manually, press the 4 key. Automatic printing of the daily test is available. See section 6.6. 11-1 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING TX self test 1. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [TEST] on the [MENU] screen then push the knob. 2. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [TX SELF TEST] then push the knob. [OK] or [NG] (No Good) appears as the test result for each item. For [NG], contact your dealer for advice. Press the 1, 2 or 3 key to see the detailed test result for [TX PLL], [PA] or [TX FIL]. Unexecuted items [SW REG1], [SW REG2]: For FS-2575/5075 [DRV]: For FS-2575/5075 [PA2], [COMB] ([DETAILED TEST] for [PA]): For FS-5075 Others: For FS-1575/2575/5075 Tone test (SSB mode) You can execute tone test with lowering transmission power. 1. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [TEST] on the [MENU] screen then push the knob. 2. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [TONE TEST] then push the knob. 3. With [OFF] selected, push the ENTER knob. 4. Rotate the ENTER knob to select the item desired then push the knob. Press the PTT switch of the handset to output the tone signal from the speaker. 11-2 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING 11.2 Maintenance Regular maintenance helps to keep your equipment in good condition and prevents future problems. Check the items shown in the table below. Item Antenna Wire antenna Insulators for antenna Antenna coupler Control unit Transceiver unit Power supply Check point Check for physical damage and corrosion. Check that the antenna is properly spanned and separated sufficiently from metallic structures. Check for salt water deposits on insulators. Check that connection at the leadin insulator is tight and rust-free. Remedy/Remarks Replace damaged parts. If necessary, re-span antenna. Replace damaged insulator(s). Remove salt water deposits. Clean with fresh water, then dry. Remove rust, then tighten bolts and lock nuts. Cover metallic surface with sealing compound. • Check condition of antenna terminal, • Tighten the loosened connections. ground, coaxial cable and control ca- • Fasten the lid firmly and evenly to ble. prevent water leakage. • Check that coupler lid and cable • Replace if damaged. glands are firmly secured. • Check for physical damage, corrosion and salt water deposits. • Check ground connection, control ca- • Tighten the loosened connections; ble, and external equipment. remove foreign materials from con• Confirm that there are no objects on nectors. the top of the control unit. • Remove any objects. • Remove dust from control unit with • Wipe the LCD carefully to prevent soft cloth. scratching, using tissue paper and an Note: Do not use chemical cleaners to LCD cleaner. To remove dirt or salt clean the control unit; they can remove deposits, use an LCD cleaner, wiping paint or markings and deform the equipslowly with tissue paper so as to disment. solve the dirt or salt. Change paper frequently so the salt or dirt does not scratch the LCD. • Check connection at signal cable, co- • Tighten loosened connections; remove foreign materials from connecaxial cable, control cable, power cable, and navigator. tors. • Confirm that there are no objects on • Remove any objects. the top of the cabinet. Check that the supply voltage at trans- If not within the range, check power mission is within the rated range (21.6 source. Low voltage may cause erratic to 31.2 VDC at the power connector). operation. 11-3 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING 11.3 Simple Troubleshooting The table below provides possible problems and the means with which to restore normal operation. If normal operation cannot be restored, do not attempt to check inside the equipment. Any servicing should be referred to a qualified technician. Problem Power cannot be turned on. Display indications do not appear. Power is on but no sound from the main speaker. Poor articulation Output power reduced to LOW Antenna coupler cannot tune antenna 11.4 Probable cause • Mains switchboard is off. • (DC) voltage is too high. • Battery has discharged, or poor contact at terminals. Display brilliance is too low. Remedy • Turn on the mains switchboard. • Check supply voltage. • Recharge the battery and tighten the battery terminals. Press the BRILL key to adjust the display brilliance. Main speaker is off. Press the speaker. Wrong class of emission. Class of emission should match that of incoming signal. Wait until the unit cools. Power is automatically reduced to protect against overheating due to continuous transmission. • Antenna is disconnected or shorted to ground. • Antenna is out of tunable length. • Poor grounding of antenna coupler. • Breaker in coupler has tripped. • Connection cable loosened or disconnected. key to turn on the main • Check the antenna connection. • Recommended length is 10 to 18 meters. • Check coupler ground. • Check mains voltage and polarity. If normal, reset the breaker. • Check the cable. Error Messages The table below shows error messages, their meanings, and remedies. To delete the messages, press the CANCEL key. If other error occurs, contact your dealer. Error message ERROR: TX PLL UNLOCK [CANCEL]: Stop alarm ERROR: RX PLL UNLOCK [CANCEL]: Stop alarm ERROR: WR1(2) PLL UNLOCK [CANCEL]: Stop alarm ERROR: Tx power reduced. Main AMP heated. [CANCEL]: Stop alarm ERROR: Tx power reduced. Ship's main failure. [CANCEL]: Stop alarm System was rebooted. 11-4 Meaning TX PLL is unlocked. Transmission is stopped. Remedy Contact your dealer. RX PLL is unlocked. Reception is stopped. Contact your dealer. WR1(2) PLL is unlocked. Reception is stopped. Contact your dealer. Power amplifier is too hot. Transmission power is reduced to one level lower. Allow amplifier to cool. AC power is interrupted and replaced with DC power (only when connecting PR-850A). Can use DC power with low transmission power. Check AC power and decrease the transmission power to the minimum. System restarts automatically. Unusual event is detected. 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING Error message ERROR: VC error! Please restart the power supply. [CANCEL]: Stop alarm 11.5 Meaning VC voltage decreases. Transmission is stopped. Remedy Reset the power. If normal operation is not restored, contact your dealer. Breaker on PR-850A The AC-DC power supply unit PR-850A has a circuit breaker. If the breaker has tripped, find the reason before resetting the breaker. POWER ON ON Breaker OFF AC INPUT 50/60Hz 11.6 DC OUTPUT Test Call This function sends a test signal to a coast or ship station, over one of six distress and safety frequencies. For that reason, it should not be executed unnecessarily. You can prepare a test call beforehand (see paragraph 6.16.5). 1. Press the OTHER DSC MSG key to open the [COMPOSE MESSAGE]. 2. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [MSG TYPE] then push the knob. 3. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [TEST MSG] then push the knob. [PRIORITY] is automatically set to [SAFETY]. 4. With [TO] selected, push the ENTER knob. 5. Rotate the ENTER knob to select [DIRECT INPUT] or [ADDRESS BOOK DATA] then push the knob. [ADDRESS BOOK DATA]: Select a MMSI from the [ADDRESS BOOK] (see section 6.15) then push the ENTER knob. [DIRECT INPUT]: Enter the MMSI of the station where to send the test message then push the ENTER knob. 6. With [DSC FREQ] selected, push the ENTER knob. 7. Rotate the ENTER knob to select DSC frequency then push the knob. 8. With [GO TO CALL] selected, push the ENTER knob to send the test message. The screen is changed to one for transmission. After the call is sent, the equipment waits for acknowledgement of the call. The timer starts counting up the time to wait for acknowledgement. 9. Do one of the following. Test acknowledge message received The audio alarm sounds and the message "TEST ACK received! [CANCEL]: Stop alarm" appears. Press the CANCEL key to silence the alarm. 11-5 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING No response Re-send call: Rotate the ENTER knob to select [RESEND] in the user options area then push the knob. Cancel call: Rotate the ENTER knob to select [QUIT] in the user options area then push the knob. 11.7 NBDP Terminal Unit Maintenance Regular maintenance is important for good performance. A regular maintenance program should be established and should at least include the items mentioned below. 11.7.1 Cleaning the equipment Wipe the LCD carefully to prevent scratching, using tissue paper and an LCD cleaner. To remove dirt or salt deposits, use an LCD cleaner, wiping slowly with tissue paper so as to dissolve the dirt or salt. Change paper frequently so the salt or dirt does not scratch the LCD. Do not use solvents such as thinner, acetone or benzene for cleaning. Also, do not use degreaser or antifog solution, as they can strip the coating from the LCD. 11.7.2 Connectors and earth connection Periodically check the connectors for proper seating and the earth connection for rust. Remove rust to maintain a good ground system. 11.7.3 Floppy disk drive Foreign materials on the floppy disk drive head can scratch the magnetic materials on the floppy, resulting in loss of data. Clean the floppy disk drive head regularly with a floppy disk drive cleaning disk to prevent erasure of information stored on disks. 11.7.4 Diagnostics General diagnostics 1. Press the function key F6 to open the [System] menu. Setup System Lock Change Default Slave Delay xx msec (10 - 50 msec) TX/RX MSG Save Edit Before sending TX POWER* Header/Footer* OFF ON OFF ON HIGH MID LOW OFF ON Time System Time & Date Window Color Self Test OFF UTC SMT JST 10/Apr/2012 10:00:00 *: Only for IB-585 11-6 For serviceman No need to change. Only serviceman can change. 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING 2. Select [Change] at [Setup]. 3. Select [Self Test] at the bottom of the screen. 4. Press the Enter key. The results of the self test are displayed a short time later. Selftest Terminal Unit Test Main Unit Test Modem Unit Test Radio Unit Test DSC Unit Test Printer Unit Test* ver. X.XX ver. XX ver. XX ID FS5075 ID FS5075 :OK :OK :OK :OK :OK Print all character :OK IB-583 Main terminal soft (T-CPU board) NBDP modem X.XX: Version No. *: "NG" and "Printer not ready" when printer is off or abnormal. Selftest results for IB-583 Selftest Date & Time Software ver Main unit name Main unit ver Term CPU Test SD Card Test*1 SIO Test*2 Printer Test*3 USB Test*4 10/Apr/2012 20:45:30 0550251-01.XX FS-xx75 0550243-01.XX OK OK OK OK OK XX: Version No. xx: FS-1575, FS-2575 or FS-5075 *1: “NG” when the SD card is not inserted. *2: “NG” when FS-xx75 is turned off. *3: "NG" and "Printer not ready" when printer is off or abnormal. *4: The message “Press 3 keys” appears. Press any three keys. Selftest results for IB-585 Self test results The test results are shown as [OK] or [NG] (No Good). For any [NG], check the connection of the equipments then try the self test again. If it appears again, call for service. When the test is completed, the message "Selftest Completed. Press any key to escape." appears. 11-7 11. MAINTENANCE & TROUBLESHOOTING This page is intentionally left blank. 11-8 APPENDIX 1 MENU TREE MENU key TEST Bold: Default setting DAILY TEST TX SELF TEST TONE TEST USER CH (open user channel list) LOG (open log data list) INTERCOM SYSTEM SQ FREQ (500Hz - 2000Hz, 1000Hz) KEY ASSIGN (F1 (RX FREQ), F2 (DAILY TEST), F3 (TEST CALL)) TX MSG (AUTO, MANUAL) PRINT RX MSG (AUTO, MANUAL) DAILY TEST (AUTO, MANUAL) POSITION (open setting window) DATE/TIME (open setting window) MENU END (10MIN, NO TIMEOUT) TIMEOUT DSC GENERAL (15MIN, NO TIMEOUT) RX DISTRESS (15MIN, NO TIMEOUT) SSB (10SEC, 30SEC, 10MIN) TELEX (10SEC, 30SEC, 10MIN, NO TIMEOUT) FAX (10SEC, 30SEC, 10MIN, NO TIMEOUT) AM (10SEC, 30SEC, 10MIN, NO TIMEOUT) FAX RX (ENABLE, DISABLE) RX SETUP ANT SELECT (TRX ANT, RX ANT) CLARIFIER (ON, OFF) URGENCY (ON, OFF) EXTERNAL ALARM SAFETY (ON, OFF) ROUTINE (ON, OFF) NETWORK DSC ADDRESSBOOK (open address data list) MSG FILE (open message file list) ACK SETTINGS INDIVIDUAL (MANUAL, AUTO (UNABLE)) PSTN (AUTO (ABLE), AUTO (UNABLE)) REASON (NO REASON, BUSY, EQUIP ERROR, CAN'T USE MODE, CAN'T USE CH) POSITION MSG (AUTO (ABLE), AUTO (UNABLE), MANUAL) POLLING MSG (AUTO, MANUAL) TEST MSG (AUTO, MANUAL) SPECIAL MSG NEUTRAL (ABLE, UNABLE) MEDICAL (ABLE, UNABLE) ROUTINE SCAN DISTRESS SCAN AUDIO KEY CLICK (0 - 3, 2) OFF HOOK SP (SP ON, MUTE) SAFETY (0 - 5, 5) ORDINARY ALARM ROUTINE (0 - 5, 5) ALARM DISTANCE (500NM, OFF) ALARM (open alarm list) SERVICE (For serviceman) AP-1 APPENDIX 1 MENU TREE NBDP terminal unit (telex) F1: File 1: New 2: Open 3: Close 4: Delete 5: Rename 6: Real Time Printing 7: File to Print 8: Cancel Priniting 9: Clear Buffer 0: Floppy Disk Format*1 or SD Card Format*2 A: Remove SD Card*2 B: New Macro*2 Setup (Lock, Change, Default) Slave Delay (0-50 msec, 8) TX/RX MSG Save (OFF, ON) Edit Before Sending (OFF, ON) Time System (OFF, UTC, SMT, JST) Time & Date Window Color Window Window Color Setup Fore Color Back Color Default Color F2: Edit 1: Undo 2: Cut 3: Copy 4: Paste 5: Select All 6: Search 7: Replace 8: Goto Top 9: Goto Bottom 0: Goto Line A: Change Text F3: Operate 1: Call Station 2: Macro Operation 3: File to Send 4: Cancel Sending 5: Scan (Start/Stop) 6: Manual Reception 7: Timer Operation 8: Manual Calling 9: Set Frequency 0: Set Channel*2 Self Test Setup (Lock, Change, Default) Slave Delay (10-50 msec, 12) TX/RX MSG Save (OFF, ON) Edit Before Sending (OFF, ON) TX Power (HIGH, MID, LOW*4, (LOW1, LOW2)*5) Header/Footer (OFF, ON) Time System (OFF, UTC, SMT, JST) Time & Date Window Color Window Color Edit Target Present (1, 2, 3) Load Default Window BASE WINDOW, BACK SCROLL, EDIT 1-2, FUNCTION, SUB MENU 1-3, MESSAGE Fore Color WHITE, BLACK, L-WHITE, GRAY, Back Color L-BLUE, BLUE, L-GREEN, GREEN, L-CYAN, CYAN, L-RED, RED, L-MAGENTA, MAGENTA, L-YELLOW, YELLOW Brightness (0 - 10, 10) Self Test F5: Station 1: Station Entry 2: Timer Operation (Entry) 3: Scan Entry 4: User Channel Entry*1 5*3: Answerback Code Entry 6*3: Group ID Entry (4/5 digit) 7*3: Group ID Entry (9 digit) 8*3: Select ID Entry (4/5 digit) 9*3: Select ID Entry (9 digit) AP-2 BASE WINDOW, BACK SCROLL, EDIT 1-2, FUNCTION, SUB MENU 1-3, MESSAGE L-WHITE, YELLOW, L-MAGENTA, L-RED, L-CYAN, L-GREEN, L-BLUE, GRAY, WHITE, BROWN, MAGENTA, RED, CYAN, GREEN, BLUE, BLACK F6: System*2 F4: Window 1: Calendar 2: Distress Frequency Table 3: Screen Saver*2 (OFF, ON) Bold: Default setting F6: System*1 F7: WRU (Who are you?) F8: HR (Here is) F9: Over *1: For IB-583 *2: For IB-585 *3: For IB-585, the numbers after 5 are moved up. *4: For FS-1575/2575 *5: For FS-5075 F10: Break F11: Setup*2 (For serviceman) APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES DSC frequency table TX (kHz) 2187.5 4207.5 6312.0 8414.5 12577.0 16804.5 2189.5 (2177.0*) 4208.0 6312.5 8415.0 12577.5 16805.0 18898.5 22374.5 25208.5 4208.5 6313.0 8415.5 12578.0 16805.5 18899.0 22375.0 25209.0 4209.0 6313.5 8416.0 12578.5 16806.0 18899.5 22375.5 25209.5 RX (kHz) 2187.5 4207.5 6312.0 8414.5 12577.0 16804.5 2177.0 4219.5 6331.0 8436.5 12657.0 16903.0 19703.5 22444.0 26121.0 4220.0 6331.5 8437.0 12657.5 16903.5 19704.0 22444.5 26121.5 4220.5 6332.0 8437.5 12658.0 16904.0 19704.5 22445.0 26122.0 Remarks Distress and Safety Frequencies International Frequencies Local-1 Frequencies Local-2 Frequencies File Name INTL-2M INTL-4M INTL-6M INTL-8M INTL-12M INTL-16M INTL-18M INTL-22M INTL-25M LOCAL1-4M LOCAL1-6M LOCAL1-8M LOCAL1-12M LOCAL1-16M LOCAL1-18M LOCAL1-22M LOCAL1-25M LOCAL2-4M LOCAL2-6M LOCAL2-8M LOCAL2-12M LOCAL2-16M LOCAL2-18M LOCAL2-22M LOCAL2-25M *: Ship-to-ship AP-3 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES Custom channels (to be programmed by FURUNO dealers) CH NO AP-4 Ship Receive (kHz) Ship Transmit (kHz) Remarks APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES MF band working carrier frequencies (ref. US CFR 47 Part 80.371) Region East Coast West Coast Ship Transmit (kHz) Ship Receive (kHz) 2031.5 2118.0 2126.0 2142.0 2166.0 2198.0 2366.0 2382.0 2390.0 2400.0 2406.0 2490.0 2514.01 2522.0 2538.0 2558.0 2590.0 2450.0 2482.0 2566.0 2400.0 2506.0 2003.0 2009.0 2009.0 2031.5 2126.0 2206.0 2382.0 2406.0 2430.0 2450.0 2442.0 2566.0 2566.0 2522.0 2598.0 2466.0 2506.0 2482.0 Region Ship Transmit (kHz) Ship Receive (kHz) Gulf Coast 2009.0 2134.0 2142.0 2158.01 2166.0 2206.0 2366.0 2382.0 2430.0 2458.0 2466.0 2530.0 2538.0 2550.01 2558.0 2598.0 2450.0 2482.0 2572.0 2506.0 Great Lakes2 2118.0 2158.0 2206.0 2514.0 2550.0 2582.0 Alaska 2131.0 2134.0 2237.0 2240.0 2309.0 2312.0 2397.0 2400.0 Hawaii 2134.0 2530.0 Caribbean 2009.0 2086.03 2134.0 2506.0 2585.0 2530.0 Guam 2009.0 2506.0 Above frequencies are not programmed. Contact a FURUNO representative. 1 = Unlimited use December 15 to April 1 2 = 2206 kHz for distress only 3 = Limited to pep of 150 W AP-5 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES MF band SSB working carrier frequencies CH NO Ship Receive (kHz) Ship Transmit (kHz) CH NO Ship Receive (kHz) Ship Transmit (kHz) 241 242 243 244 245 1635 1638 1641 1644 1647 2060 2063 2066 2069 2072 271 272 273 274 275 1725 1728 1731 1734 1737 2069 2072 2075 2078 2081 246 247 248 249 250 1650 1653 1656 1659 1662 2075 2078 2081 2084 2087 276 277 278 279 280 1740 1743 1746 1749 1752 2084 2087 2090 2093 2096 251 252 253 254 255 1665 1668 1671 1674 1677 2090 2093 2096 2099 2102 281 282 283 284 285 1755 1758 1761 1764 1767 2099 2102 2105 2108 2111 256 257 258 259 260 1680 1683 1686 1689 1692 2105 2108 2111 2114 2117 286 287 288 289 290 1770 1773 1776 1779 1782 2114 2117 2120 2123 2126 261 262 263 264 265 1695 1698 1701 1704 1707 2120 2123 2126 2129 2132 291 292 293 294 295 1785 1788 1791 1794 1797 2129 2132 2135 2138 2060 266 267 268 269 270 1710 1713 1716 1719 1722 2135 2138 2060 2063 2066 AP-6 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES 4/6 MHz ITU SSB carrier frequencies (ITU RR Appendix 16) 4 MHz SSB (J3E) ITU CH NO Ship RX 401 4357 402 4360 403 4363 404 4366 405 4369 4372 406 4375 407 4378 408 4381 409 4384 410 4387 411 4390 412 4393 413 4396 414 4399 415 4402 416 4405 417 4408 418 4411 419 4414 420 421 4417 4420 422 423 4423 4426 424 425 4429 4432 426 4435 427 4351 428 4354 429 4146 430 4149 431 4000 432 (01) 4003 433 (02) 4006 434 (03) 4009 435 (04) 4012 436 (05) 4015 437 (06) 4018 438 (07) 4021 439 (08) 4024 440 (09) 4027 441 (10) 4030 442 (11) 4033 443 (12) 4036 444 (13) 4039 445 (14) 4042 446 (15) 4045 447 (16) 4048 448 (17) 4051 449 (18) 4054 450 (19) 4057 451 (20) 4060 452 (21) Ship TX 4065 4068 4071 4074 4077 4080 4083 4086 4089 4092 4095 4098 4101 4104 4107 4110 4113 4116 4119 4122 4125 4128 4131 4134 4137 4140 4143 4351 4354 4146 4149 4000 4003 4006 4009 4012 4015 4018 4021 4024 4027 4030 4033 4036 4039 4042 ITU CH NO 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 6 MHz SSB (J3E) Ship RX 6501 6504 6507 6510 6513 6516 6519 6522 6224 6227 6230 Ship TX 6200 6203 6206 6209 6212 6215 6218 6221 6224 6227 6230 These frequencies are factory programmed. CH NOs in ( ) are ITU NOs (RR Section C-1). 4045 4048 4051 4054 4057 4060 AP-7 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES 8 MHz ITU SSB carrier frequencies (ITU RR Appendix 16) 8 MHz SSB (J3E) - Duplex ITU CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 801 8719 8195 802 8722 8198 803 8725 8201 804 8728 8204 805 8731 8207 8210 8734 806 8737 8213 807 8740 8216 808 8743 8219 809 8222 8746 810 8225 8749 811 8228 8752 812 8231 8755 813 8234 8758 814 8237 8761 815 8240 8764 816 8243 8767 817 8246 8770 818 8249 8773 819 8252 8776 820 8255 821 8779 8258 8782 822 8261 823 8785 8264 8788 824 8267 825 8791 8270 826 8794 8273 827 8797 8276 828 8800 8279 829 8803 8282 830 8806 8285 8809 831 8288 8812 832 8291 8291 833 8707 834 8707 8710 8710 835 8713 836 8713 8716 837 8716 838 839 AP-8 8294 8297 8294 8297 8 MHz SSB (J3E) - Simplex ITU CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 8101 8101 840 (01) 8104 8104 841 (02) 8107 8107 842 (03) 8110 8110 843 (04) 8113 8113 844 (05) 8116 8116 845 (06) 8119 8119 846 (07) 8122 8122 847 (08) 8125 8125 848 (09) 8128 8128 849 (10) 850 (11) 8131 8131 851 (12) 8134 8134 852 (13) 8137 8137 853 (14) 8140 8140 854 (15) 8143 8143 855 (16) 8146 8146 856 (17) 8149 8149 857 (18) 8152 8152 858 (19) 8155 8155 859 (20) 8158 8158 860 (21) 8161 8161 861 (22) 8164 8164 862 (23) 8167 8167 863 (24) 8170 8170 864 (25) 8173 8173 865 (26) 8176 8176 866 (27) 8179 8179 867 (28) 8182 8182 868 (29) 8185 8185 869 (30) 8188 8188 870 (31) 8191 8191 CH NOs in ( ) are ITU NOs (RR Section C-1). APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES 12/16 ITU SSB carrier frequencies (ITU RR Appendix 16) 12 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 1201 13077 12230 1202 13080 12233 1203 13083 12236 1204 13086 12239 1205 13089 12242 1206 13092 12245 1207 13095 12248 1208 13098 12251 1209 13101 12254 1210 13104 12257 1211 13107 12260 1212 13110 12263 1213 13113 12266 1214 13116 12269 1215 13119 12272 1216 13122 12275 1217 13125 12278 1218 13128 12281 1219 13131 12284 1220 13134 12287 1221 13137 12290 1222 13140 12293 1223 13143 12296 1224 13146 12299 1225 13149 12302 1226 13152 12305 1227 13155 12308 1228 13158 12311 13161 1229 12314 13164 1230 12317 1231 13167 12320 1232 13170 12323 1233 13173 12326 1234 13176 12329 1235 13179 12332 12335 1236 13182 12338 1237 13185 12341 1238 13188 12344 1239 13191 12347 1240 13194 12350 1241 13197 12353 1242 12353 12356 1243 12356 12359 1244 12359 12362 1245 12362 12365 1246 12365 16 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 1601 17242 16360 1602 17245 16363 1603 17248 16366 1604 17251 16369 1605 17254 16372 1606 17257 16375 1607 17260 16378 1608 17263 16381 1609 17266 16384 1610 17269 16387 1611 17272 16390 1612 17275 16393 1613 17278 16396 1614 17281 16399 1615 17284 16402 1616 17287 16405 1617 17290 16408 1618 17293 16411 1619 17296 16414 1620 17299 16417 1621 17302 16420 1622 17305 16423 1623 17308 16426 1624 17311 16429 1625 17314 16432 1626 17317 16435 1627 17320 16438 1628 17323 16441 17326 1629 16444 17329 1630 16447 1631 17332 16450 1632 17335 16453 1633 17338 16456 1634 17341 16459 1635 17344 16462 16465 1636 17347 16468 1637 17350 16471 1638 17353 16474 1639 17356 16477 1640 17359 16480 1641 17362 16483 1642 17365 16486 1643 17368 16489 1644 17371 16492 1645 17374 16495 1646 17377 16498 1647 17380 16501 1648 17383 16504 1649 17386 16507 1650 17389 16 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 1651 17392 16510 1652 17395 16513 1653 17398 16516 1654 17401 16519 1655 17404 16522 1656 17407 16525 1657 16528 16528 1658 16531 16531 1659 16534 16534 1660 16537 16537 16540 1661 16540 16543 1662 16543 16546 1663 16546 Above is factory programmed. AP-9 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES 18/19, 22, 25/26 ITU SSB carrier frequencies (ITU RR Appendix 16) 18/19 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 1801 19755 18780 1802 19758 18783 1803 19761 18786 1804 19764 18789 1805 19767 18792 1806 19770 18795 1807 19773 18798 1808 19776 18801 1809 19779 18804 1810 19782 18807 19785 1811 18810 19788 1812 18813 19791 1813 18816 19794 1814 18819 19797 1815 18822 18825 1816 18825 1817 18828 18828 18831 1818 18831 18834 1819 18834 18837 1820 18837 1821 1822 AP-10 18840 18843 18840 18843 22 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 2201 22696 22000 2202 22699 22003 2203 22702 22006 2204 22705 22009 2205 22708 22012 2206 22711 22015 2207 22714 22018 2208 22717 22021 2209 22720 22024 2210 22723 22027 2211 22726 22030 2212 22729 22033 2213 22732 22036 2214 22735 22039 2215 22738 22042 2216 22741 22045 2217 22744 22048 2218 22747 22051 22750 2219 22054 22753 2220 22057 22756 2221 22060 22759 2222 22063 2223 22762 22066 2224 22765 22069 2225 22768 22072 22771 2226 22075 22774 2227 22078 2228 22777 22081 2229 22780 22084 22783 2230 22087 2231 22786 22090 2232 22789 22093 2233 22792 22096 2234 22795 22099 2235 22798 22102 22105 2236 22801 22108 2237 22804 22111 2238 22807 22114 2239 22810 22117 2240 22813 22120 2241 22816 22123 2242 22819 22126 2243 22822 22129 2244 22825 22132 2245 22828 22135 2246 22831 22138 2247 22834 22141 2248 22837 22144 2249 22840 22147 2250 22843 22 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 2251 22846 22150 2252 22849 22153 2253 22852 22156 2254 22159 22159 2255 22162 22162 2256 22165 22165 2257 22168 22168 2258 22171 22171 2259 22174 22174 2260 22177 22177 25/26 MHz SSB (J3E) CH NO Ship RX Ship TX 2501 26145 25070 2502 26148 25073 2503 26151 25076 2504 26154 25079 2505 26157 25082 25085 2506 26160 25088 2507 26163 25091 2508 26166 25094 2509 26169 25097 2510 26172 25100 2511 25100 25103 2512 25103 2513 25106 25106 2514 25109 25109 2515 25112 25112 2516 25115 25115 2517 25118 25118 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES MF band telex frequency table CH NO Ship TX (NBDP, DSC) Ship RX (NBDP, DSC) 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2142.0 2142.5 2143.0 2143.5 2144.0 1607.0 1607.5 1608.0 1608.5 1609.0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2144.5 2145.0 2145.5 2146.0 2146.5 1609.5 1610.0 1610.5 1611.0 1611.5 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2147.0 2147.5 2148.0 2148.5 2149.0 1612.0 1612.5 1613.0 1613.5 1614.0 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2149.5 2150.0 2150.5 2151.0 2151.5 1614.5 1615.0 1615.5 1616.0 1616.5 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2152.0 2152.5 2153.0 2153.5 2154.0 1617.0 1617.5 1618.0 1618.5 1619.0 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2154.5 2155.0 2155.5 2156.0 2156.5 1619.5 1620.0 1620.5 1621.0 1621.5 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2157.0 2157.5 2158.0 2158.5 2159.0 1622.0 1622.5 1623.0 1623.5 1624.0 2036 2159.5 1624.5 NBDP/DSC DSC AP-11 No. 4001 4002 4003 4004 4005 4006 4007 4008 4009 4010 4011 4012 4013 4014 4015 4016 4017 4018 4019 4020 4021 4022 4023 4024 4025 4026 4027 4028 4029 4030 4031 4032 4033 4 MHz BAND TX 4172.5 4173.0 4173.5 4174.0 4174.5 4175.0 4175.5 4176.0 4176.5 4177.0 4177.5 4178.0 4178.5 4179.0 4179.5 4180.0 4180.5 4181.0 4181.5 4202.5 4203.0 4203.5 4204.0 4204.5 4205.0 4205.5 4206.0 4206.5 4207.0 4207.5 4208.0 4208.5 4209.0 RX 4210.5 4211.0 4211.5 4212.0 4212.5 4213.0 4213.5 4214.0 4214.5 4215.0 4177.5 4215.5 4216.0 4216.5 4217.0 4217.5 4218.0 4218.5 4219.0 4202.5 4203.0 4203.5 4204.0 4204.5 4205.0 4205.5 4206.0 4206.5 4207.0 4207.5 4219.5 4220.0 4220.5 No. 6001 6002 6003 6004 6005 6006 6007 6008 6009 6010 6011 6012 6013 6014 6015 6016 6017 6018 6019 6020 6021 6022 6023 6024 6025 6026 6027 6028 6029 6030 6031 6032 6033 6034 6035 6036 6037 6038 6039 6040 6041 6042 6043 6044 6045 6046 6047 6048 6049 6050 6051 6052 6053 6054 6055 6056 6057 6058 6059 6060 6061 6 MHz BAND TX 6263.0 6263.5 6264.0 6264.5 6265.0 6265.5 6266.0 6266.5 6267.0 6267.5 6268.0 6268.5 6269.0 6269.5 6270.0 6270.5 6271.0 6271.5 6272.0 6272.5 6273.0 6273.5 6274.0 6274.5 6275.0 6275.5 6281.0 6281.5 6282.0 6282.5 6283.0 6283.5 6284.0 6284.5 6300.5 6301.0 6301.5 6302.0 6302.5 6303.0 6303.5 6304.0 6304.5 6305.0 6305.5 6306.0 6306.5 6307.0 6307.5 6308.0 6308.5 6309.0 6309.5 6310.0 6310.5 6311.0 6311.5 6312.0 6312.5 6313.0 6313.5 RX 6314.5 6315.0 6315.5 6316.0 6316.5 6317.0 6317.5 6318.0 6318.5 6319.0 6268.0 6319.5 6320.0 6320.5 6321.0 6321.5 6322.0 6322.5 6323.0 6323.5 6324.0 6324.5 6325.0 6325.5 6326.0 6326.5 6327.0 6327.5 6328.0 6328.5 6329.0 6329.5 6330.0 6330.5 6300.5 6301.0 6301.5 6302.0 6302.5 6303.0 6303.5 6304.0 6304.5 6305.0 6305.5 6306.0 6306.5 6307.0 6307.5 6308.0 6308.5 6309.0 6309.5 6310.0 6310.5 6311.0 6311.5 6312.0 6331.0 6331.5 6332.0 No. 8001 8002 8003 8004 8005 8006 8007 8008 8009 8010 8011 8012 8013 8014 8015 8016 8017 8018 8019 8020 8021 8022 8023 8024 8025 8026 8027 8028 8029 8030 8031 8032 8033 8034 8035 8036 8037 8038 8039 8040 8041 8042 8043 8044 8045 8046 8047 8048 8049 8050 8051 8052 8053 8054 8055 8056 8057 8058 8059 8060 8061 8062 8063 8064 8065 8 MHz BAND TX 8376.5 8377.0 8377.5 8378.0 8378.5 8379.0 8379.5 8380.0 8380.5 8381.0 8381.5 8382.0 8382.5 8383.0 8383.5 8384.0 8384.5 8385.0 8385.5 8386.0 8386.5 8387.0 8387.5 8388.0 8388.5 8389.0 8389.5 8390.0 8390.5 8391.0 8391.5 8392.0 8392.5 8393.0 8393.5 8394.0 8394.5 8395.0 8395.5 8396.0 8396.5 8397.0 8397.5 8398.0 8398.5 8399.0 8399.5 8400.0 8400.5 8401.0 8401.5 8402.0 8402.5 8403.0 8403.5 8404.0 8404.5 8405.0 8405.5 8406.0 8406.5 8407.0 8407.5 8408.0 8408.5 RX 8376.5 8417.0 8417.5 8418.0 8418.5 8419.0 8419.5 8420.0 8420.5 8421.0 8421.5 8422.0 8422.5 8423.0 8423.5 8424.0 8424.5 8425.0 8425.5 8426.0 8426.5 8427.0 8427.5 8428.0 8428.5 8429.0 8429.5 8430.0 8430.5 8431.0 8431.5 8432.0 8432.5 8433.0 8433.5 8434.0 8434.5 8435.0 8435.5 8436.0 8396.5 8397.0 8397.5 8398.0 8398.5 8399.0 8399.5 8400.0 8400.5 8401.0 8401.5 8402.0 8402.5 8403.0 8403.5 8404.0 8404.5 8405.0 8405.5 8406.0 8406.5 8407.0 8407.5 8408.0 8408.5 No. 12001 12002 12003 12004 12005 12006 12007 12008 12009 12010 12011 12012 12013 12014 12015 12016 12017 12018 12019 12020 12021 12022 12023 12024 12025 12026 12027 12028 12029 12030 12031 12032 12033 12034 12035 12036 12037 12038 12039 12040 12041 12042 12043 12044 12045 12046 12047 12048 12049 12050 12051 12052 12053 12054 12055 12056 12057 12058 12059 12060 12061 12062 12063 12064 12065 12 MHz BAND TX RX 12477.0 12579.5 12477.5 12580.0 12478.0 12580.5 12478.5 12581.0 12479.0 12581.5 12479.5 12582.0 12480.0 12582.5 12480.5 12583.0 12481.0 12583.5 12481.5 12584.0 12482.0 12584.5 12482.5 12585.0 12483.0 12585.5 12483.5 12586.0 12484.0 12586.5 12484.5 12587.0 12485.0 12587.5 12485.5 12588.0 12486.0 12588.5 12486.5 12589.0 12487.0 12589.5 12487.5 12590.0 12488.0 12590.5 12488.5 12591.0 12489.0 12591.5 12489.5 12592.0 12490.0 12592.5 12490.5 12593.0 12491.0 12593.5 12491.5 12594.0 12492.0 12594.5 12492.5 12595.0 12493.0 12595.5 12493.5 12596.0 12494.0 12596.5 12494.5 12597.0 12495.0 12597.5 12495.5 12598.0 12496.0 12598.5 12496.5 12599.0 12497.0 12599.5 12497.5 12600.0 12498.0 12600.5 12498.5 12601.0 12499.0 12601.5 12499.5 12602.0 12500.0 12602.5 12500.5 12603.0 12501.0 12603.5 12501.5 12604.0 12502.0 12604.5 12502.5 12605.0 12503.0 12605.5 12503.5 12606.0 12504.0 12606.5 12504.5 12607.0 12505.0 12607.5 12505.5 12608.0 12506.0 12608.5 12506.5 12609.0 12507.0 12609.5 12507.5 12610.0 12508.0 12610.5 12508.5 12611.0 12509.0 12611.5 No. 16001 16002 16003 16004 16005 16006 16007 16008 16009 16010 16011 16012 16013 16014 16015 16016 16017 16018 16019 16020 16021 16022 16023 16024 16025 16026 16027 16028 16029 16030 16031 16032 16033 16034 16035 16036 16037 16038 16039 16040 16041 16042 16043 16044 16045 16046 16047 16048 16049 16050 16051 16052 16053 16054 16055 16056 16057 16058 16059 16060 16061 16062 16063 16064 16065 16 MHz BAND TX RX 16683.5 16807.0 16684.0 16807.5 16684.5 16808.0 16685.0 16808.5 16685.5 16809.0 16686.0 16809.5 16686.5 16810.0 16687.0 16810.5 16687.5 16811.0 16688.0 16811.5 16688.5 16812.0 16689.0 16812.5 16689.5 16813.0 16690.0 16813.5 16690.5 16814.0 16691.0 16814.5 16691.5 16815.0 16692.0 16815.5 16692.5 16816.0 16693.0 16816.5 16693.5 16817.0 16694.0 16817.5 16694.5 16818.0 16695.0 16695.0 16695.5 16818.5 16696.0 16919.0 16696.5 16819.5 16697.0 16820.0 16697.5 16820.5 16698.0 16821.0 16698.5 16821.5 16999.0 16822.0 16999.5 16822.5 16700.0 16823.0 16700.5 16823.5 16701.0 16824.0 16701.5 16824.5 16702.0 16825.0 16702.5 16825.5 16703.0 16826.0 16703.5 16826.5 16704.0 16827.0 16704.5 16827.5 16705.0 16828.0 16705.5 16828.5 16706.0 16829.0 16706.5 16829.5 16707.0 16830.0 16707.5 16830.5 16708.0 16831.0 16708.5 16831.5 16709.0 16832.0 16709.5 16832.5 16710.0 16833.0 16710.5 16833.5 16711.0 16834.0 16711.5 16834.5 16712.0 16835.0 16712.5 16835.5 16713.0 16836.0 16713.5 16836.5 16714.0 16837.0 16714.5 16837.5 16715.0 16838.0 16715.5 16838.5 18/19 MHz BAND No. TX RX 18001 18870.5 19681.0 18002 18871.0 19681.5 18003 18871.5 19682.0 18004 18872.0 19682.5 18005 18872.5 19683.0 18006 18873.0 19683.5 18007 18873.5 19684.0 18008 18874.0 19684.5 18009 18874.5 19685.0 18010 18875.0 19685.5 18011 18875.5 19686.0 18012 18876.0 19686.5 18013 18876.5 19687.0 18014 18877.0 19687.5 18015 18877.5 19688.0 18016 18878.0 19688.5 18017 18878.5 19689.0 18018 18879.0 19689.5 18019 18879.5 19690.0 18020 18880.0 19690.5 18021 18880.5 19691.0 18022 18881.0 19691.5 18023 18881.5 19692.0 18024 18882.0 19692.5 18025 18882.5 19693.0 18026 18883.0 19693.5 18027 18883.5 19694.0 18028 18884.0 19694.5 18029 18884.5 19695.0 18030 18885.0 19695.5 18031 18885.5 19696.0 18032 18886.0 19696.5 18033 18886.5 19697.0 18034 18887.0 19697.5 18035 18887.5 19698.0 18036 18888.0 19698.5 18037 18888.5 19699.0 18038 18889.0 19699.5 18039 18889.5 19700.0 18040 18890.0 19700.5 18041 18890.5 19701.0 18042 18891.0 19701.5 18043 18891.5 19702.0 18044 18892.0 19702.5 18045 18892.5 19703.0 18046 18893.0 18893.0 18047 18893.5 18893.5 18048 18894.0 18894.0 18049 18894.5 18894.5 18050 18895.0 18895.0 18051 18895.5 18895.5 18052 18896.0 18896.0 18053 18896.5 18896.5 18054 18897.0 18897.0 18055 18897.5 18897.5 18056 18898.0 18898.0 18057 18898.5 19703.5 18058 18899.0 19704.0 18059 18899.5 19704.5 ITU TELEX FREQUENCY TABLE (1/4) No. 22001 22002 22003 22004 22005 22006 22007 22008 22009 22010 22011 22012 22013 22014 22015 22016 22017 22018 22019 22020 22021 22022 22023 22024 22025 22026 22027 22028 22029 22030 22031 22032 22033 22034 22035 22036 22037 22038 22039 22040 22041 22042 22043 22044 22045 22046 22047 22048 22049 22050 22051 22052 22053 22054 22055 22056 22057 22058 22059 22060 22061 22062 22063 22064 22065 22 MHz BAND TX RX 22284.5 22376.5 22285.0 22377.0 22285.5 22377.5 22286.0 22378.0 22286.5 22378.5 22287.0 22379.0 22287.5 22379.5 22288.0 22380.0 22288.5 22380.5 22289.0 22381.0 22289.5 22381.5 22290.0 22382.0 22290.5 22382.5 22291.0 22383.0 22291.5 22383.5 22292.0 22384.0 22292.5 22384.5 22293.0 22385.0 22293.5 22385.5 22294.0 22386.0 22294.5 22386.5 22295.0 22387.0 22295.5 22387.5 22296.0 22388.0 22296.5 22388.5 22297.0 22389.0 22297.5 22389.5 22298.0 22390.0 22298.5 22390.5 22299.0 22391.0 22299.5 22391.5 22300.0 22392.0 22300.5 22392.5 22301.0 22393.0 22301.5 22393.5 22302.0 22394.0 22302.5 22394.5 22303.0 22395.0 22303.5 22395.5 22304.0 22396.0 22304.5 22396.5 22305.0 22397.0 22305.5 22397.5 22306.0 22398.0 22306.5 22398.5 22307.0 22399.0 22307.5 22399.5 22308.0 22400.0 22308.5 22400.5 22309.0 22401.0 22309.5 22401.5 22310.0 22402.0 22310.5 22402.5 22311.0 22403.0 22311.5 22403.5 22312.0 22404.0 22312.5 22404.5 22313.0 22405.0 22313.5 22405.5 22314.0 22406.0 22314.5 22406.5 22315.0 22407.0 22315.5 22407.5 22316.0 22408.0 22316.5 22408.5 25/26 MHz BAND No. TX RX 25001 25173.0 26101.0 25002 25173.5 26101.5 25003 25174.0 26102.0 25004 25174.5 26102.5 25005 25175.0 26103.0 25006 25175.5 26103.5 25007 25176.0 26104.0 25008 25176.5 26104.5 25009 25177.0 26105.0 25010 25177.5 26105.5 25011 25178.0 26106.0 25012 25178.5 26106.5 25013 25179.0 26107.0 25014 25179.5 26107.5 25015 25180.0 26108.0 25016 25180.5 26108.5 25017 25181.0 26109.0 25018 25181.5 26109.5 25019 25182.0 26110.0 25020 25182.5 26110.5 25021 25183.0 26111.0 25022 25183.5 26111.5 25023 25184.0 26112.0 25024 25184.5 26112.5 25025 25185.0 26113.0 25026 25185.5 26113.5 25027 28186.0 26114.0 25028 25186.5 26114.5 25029 25187.0 26115.0 25030 25187.5 26115.5 25031 25188.0 26116.0 25032 25188.5 26116.5 25033 25189.0 26117.0 25034 25189.5 26117.5 25035 25190.0 26118.0 25036 25190.5 26118.5 25037 25191.0 26119.0 25038 25191.5 26119.5 25039 25192.0 26120.0 25040 25192.5 26120.5 25041 25193.0 25193.0 25042 25193.5 25193.5 25043 25194.0 25194.0 25044 25194.5 25194.5 25045 25195.0 25195.0 25046 25195.5 25195.5 25047 25196.0 25196.0 25048 25196.5 25196.5 25049 25197.0 25197.0 25050 25197.5 25197.5 25051 25198.0 25198.0 25052 25198.5 25198.5 25053 25199.0 25199.0 25054 25199.5 25199.5 25055 25200.0 25200.0 25056 25200.5 25200.5 25057 25201.0 25201.0 25058 25201.5 25201.5 25059 25202.0 25202.0 25060 25202.5 25202.5 25061 25203.0 25203.0 25062 25203.5 25203.5 25063 25204.0 25204.0 25064 25204.5 25204.5 25065 25205.0 25205.0 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES ITU Telex frequency table (1/4) AP-12 No. 4 MHz BAND TX RX No. 6 MHz BAND TX RX No. 8066 8067 8068 8069 8070 8071 8072 8073 7074 8075 8076 8077 8078 8079 8080 8 MHz BAND TX 8409.0 8409.5 8410.0 8410.5 8411.0 8411.5 8412.0 8412.5 8413.0 8413.5 8414.0 8414.5 8415.0 8415.5 8416.0 RX 8409.0 8409.5 8410.0 8410.5 8411.0 8411.5 8412.0 8412.5 8413.0 8413.5 8414.0 8414.5 8436.5 8437.0 8437.5 No. 12066 12067 12068 12069 12070 12071 12072 12073 12074 12075 12076 12077 12078 12079 12080 12081 12082 12083 12084 12085 12086 12087 12088 12089 12090 12091 12092 12093 12094 12095 12096 12097 12098 12099 12100 12101 12102 12103 12104 12105 12106 12107 12108 12109 12110 12111 12112 12113 12114 12115 12116 12117 12118 12119 12120 12121 12122 12123 12124 12125 12126 12127 12128 12129 12130 12 MHz BAND TX RX 12509.5 12612.0 12510.0 12612.5 12510.5 12613.0 12511.0 12613.5 12511.5 12614.0 12512.0 12614.5 12512.5 12615.0 12513.0 12615.5 12513.5 12616.0 12514.0 12616.5 12514.5 12617.0 12515.0 12617.5 12515.5 12618.0 12516.0 12618.5 12516.5 12619.0 12517.0 12619.5 12517.5 12620.0 12518.0 12620.5 12518.5 12621.0 12519.0 12621.5 12519.5 12622.0 12520.0 12520.0 12520.5 12622.5 12521.0 12623.0 12521.5 12623.5 12522.0 12624.0 12522.5 12624.5 12523.0 12625.0 12523.5 12625.5 12524.0 12626.0 12524.5 12626.5 12525.0 12627.0 12525.5 12627.5 12526.0 12628.0 12526.5 12628.5 12527.0 12629.0 12527.5 12629.5 12528.0 12630.0 12528.5 12630.5 12529.0 12631.0 12529.5 12631.5 12530.0 12632.0 12530.5 12632.5 12531.0 12633.0 12531.5 12633.5 12532.0 12634.0 12532.5 12634.5 12533.0 12635.0 12533.5 12635.5 12534.0 12636.0 12534.5 12636.5 12535.0 12637.0 12535.5 12637.5 12536.0 12638.0 12536.5 12638.5 12537.0 12639.0 12537.5 12639.5 12538.0 12640.0 12538.5 12640.5 12539.0 12641.0 12539.5 12641.5 12540.0 12642.0 12540.5 12642.5 12541.0 12643.0 12541.5 12643.5 No. 16066 16067 16068 16069 16070 16071 16072 16073 16074 16075 16076 16077 16078 16079 16080 16081 16082 16083 16084 16085 16086 16087 16088 16089 16090 16091 16092 16093 16094 16095 19096 16097 16098 16099 16100 16101 16102 16103 16104 16105 16106 16107 16108 16109 16110 16111 16112 16113 16114 16115 16116 16117 16118 16119 16120 16121 16122 16123 16124 16125 16126 16127 16128 16129 16130 16 MHz BAND TX RX 16716.0 16839.0 16716.5 16839.5 16717.0 16840.0 16717.5 16840.5 16718.0 16841.0 16718.5 16841.5 16719.0 16842.0 16719.5 16842.5 16720.0 16843.0 16720.5 16843.5 16721.0 16844.0 16721.5 16844.5 16722.0 16845.0 16722.5 16845.5 16723.0 16846.0 16723.5 16846.5 16724.0 16847.0 16724.5 16847.5 16725.0 16848.0 16725.5 16848.5 16726.0 16849.0 16726.5 16849.5 16727.0 16850.0 16727.5 16850.5 16728.0 16851.0 16728.5 16851.5 16729.0 16852.0 16729.5 16852.5 16730.0 16853.0 16730.5 16853.5 16731.0 16854.0 16731.5 16854.5 16732.0 16855.0 16732.5 16855.5 16733.0 16856.0 16733.5 16856.5 16739.0 16857.0 16739.5 16857.5 16740.0 16858.0 16740.5 16858.5 16741.0 16859.0 16741.5 16859.5 16742.0 16860.0 16742.5 16860.5 16743.0 16861.0 16743.5 16861.5 16744.0 16862.0 16744.5 16862.5 16745.0 16863.0 16745.5 16863.5 16746.0 16864.0 16746.5 16864.5 16747.0 16865.0 16747.5 16865.5 16748.0 16866.0 16748.5 16866.5 16749.0 16867.0 16749.5 16867.5 16750.0 16868.0 16750.5 16868.5 16751.0 16869.0 16751.5 16869.5 16752.0 16870.0 16752.5 16870.5 16753.0 16871.0 No. ITU TELEX FREQUENCY TABLE (2/4) 18/19 MHz BAND TX RX No. 22066 22067 22068 22069 22070 22071 22072 20073 22074 22075 22076 22077 22078 22079 22080 22081 22082 22083 22084 22085 22086 22087 22088 22089 22090 22091 22092 22093 22094 22095 22096 22097 22098 22099 22100 22101 22102 22103 22104 22105 22106 22107 22108 22109 22110 22111 22112 22113 22114 22115 22116 22117 22118 22119 22120 22121 22122 22123 22124 22125 22126 22127 22128 22129 22130 22 MHz BAND TX RX 22317.0 22409.0 22317.5 22490.5 22318.0 22410.0 22318.5 22410.5 22319.0 22411.0 22319.5 22411.5 22320.0 22412.0 22320.5 22412.5 22321.0 22413.0 22321.5 22413.5 22322.0 22414.0 22322.5 22414.5 22323.0 22415.0 22323.5 22415.5 22324.0 22416.0 22324.5 22416.5 22325.0 22417.0 22325.5 22417.5 22326.0 22418.0 22326.5 22418.5 22327.0 22419.0 22327.5 22419.5 22328.0 22420.0 22328.5 22420.5 22329.0 22421.0 22329.5 22421.5 22330.0 22422.0 22330.5 22422.5 22331.0 22423.0 22331.5 22423.5 22332.0 22424.0 22332.5 22424.5 22333.0 22425.0 22333.5 22425.5 22334.0 22426.0 22334.5 22426.5 22335.0 22427.0 22335.5 22427.5 22336.0 22428.0 22336.5 22428.5 22337.0 22429.0 22337.5 22429.5 22338.0 22430.0 22338.5 22430.5 22339.0 22431.0 22339.5 22431.5 22340.0 22432.0 22340.5 22432.5 22341.0 22433.0 22341.5 22433.5 22342.0 22434.0 22342.5 22434.5 22343.0 22435.0 22343.5 22435.5 22344.0 22436.0 22344.5 22436.5 22345.0 22437.0 22345.5 22437.5 22346.0 22438.0 22346.5 22438.5 22347.0 22439.0 22347.5 22439.5 22348.0 22440.0 22348.5 22440.5 22349.0 22441.0 25/26 MHz BAND No. TX RX 25066 25205.5 25205.5 25067 25206.0 25206.0 25068 25206.5 25206.5 25069 25207.0 25207.0 25070 25207.5 25207.5 25071 25208.0 25208.0 25072 25208.5 26121.0 25073 25209.0 26121.5 25074 25209.5 26122.0 APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES ITU Telex frequency table (2/4) AP-13 No. 4 MHz BAND TX RX No. 6 MHz BAND TX RX No. 8 MHz BAND TX RX No. 12131 12132 12133 12134 12135 12136 12137 12138 12139 12140 12141 12142 12143 12144 12145 12146 12147 12148 12149 12150 12151 12152 12153 12154 12155 12156 12157 12158 12159 12160 12161 12162 12163 12164 12165 12166 12167 12168 12169 12170 12171 12172 12173 12174 12175 12176 12177 12178 12179 12180 12181 12182 12183 12184 12185 12186 12187 12188 12189 12190 12191 12192 12193 12194 12 MHz BAND TX RX 12542.0 12644.0 12542.5 12644.5 12543.0 12645.0 12543.5 12645.5 12544.0 12646.0 12544.5 12646.5 12545.0 12647.0 12545.5 12647.5 12546.0 12648.0 12546.5 12648.5 12547.0 12649.0 12547.5 12649.5 12548.0 12650.0 12548.5 12650.5 12549.0 12651.0 12549.5 12651.5 12555.0 12652.0 12555.5 12652.5 12556.0 12653.0 12556.5 12653.5 12557.0 12654.0 12557.5 12654.5 12558.0 12655.0 12558.5 12655.5 12559.0 12656.0 12559.5 12656.5 12560.0 12560.0 12560.5 12560.5 12561.0 12561.0 12561.5 12561.5 12562.0 12562.0 12562.5 12562.5 12563.0 12563.0 12563.5 12563.5 12564.0 12564.0 12564.5 12564.5 12565.0 12565.0 12565.5 12565.5 12566.0 12566.0 12566.5 12566.5 12567.0 12567.0 12567.5 12567.5 12568.0 12568.0 12568.5 12568.5 12569.0 12569.0 12569.5 12569.5 12570.0 12570.0 12570.5 12570.5 12571.0 12571.0 12571.5 12571.5 12572.0 12572.0 12572.5 12572.5 12573.0 12573.0 12573.5 12573.5 12574.0 12574.0 12574.5 12574.5 12575.0 12575.0 12575.5 12575.5 12576.0 12576.0 12576.5 12576.5 12577.0 12577.0 12577.5 12657.0 12578.0 12657.5 12578.5 12658.0 No. 16131 16132 16133 16134 16135 16136 16137 16138 16139 16140 16141 16142 16143 16144 16145 16146 16147 16148 16149 16150 16151 16152 16153 16154 16155 16156 16157 16158 16159 16160 16161 16162 16163 16164 16165 16166 16167 16168 16169 16170 16171 16172 16173 16174 16175 16176 16177 16178 16179 16180 16181 16182 16183 16184 16185 16186 16187 16188 16189 16190 16191 16192 16193 16194 16195 16 MHz BAND TX RX 16753.5 16871.5 16754.0 16872.0 16754.5 16872.5 16755.0 16873.0 16755.5 16873.5 16756.0 16874.0 16756.5 16874.5 16757.0 16875.0 16757.5 16875.5 16758.0 16876.0 16758.5 16876.5 16759.0 16877.0 16759.5 16877.5 16760.0 16878.0 16760.5 16878.5 16761.0 16879.0 16761.5 16879.5 16762.0 16880.0 16762.5 16880.5 16763.0 16881.0 16763.5 16881.5 16764.0 16882.0 16764.5 16882.5 16765.0 16883.0 16765.5 16883.5 16766.0 16884.0 16766.5 16884.5 16767.0 16885.0 16767.5 16885.5 16768.0 16886.0 16768.5 16886.5 16769.0 16887.0 16769.5 16887.5 16770.0 16888.0 16770.5 16888.5 16771.0 16889.0 16771.5 16889.5 16772.0 16890.0 16772.5 16890.5 16773.0 16891.0 16773.5 16891.5 16774.0 16892.0 16774.5 16892.5 16775.0 16893.0 16775.5 16893.5 16776.0 16894.0 16776.5 16894.5 16777.0 16895.0 16777.5 16895.5 16778.0 16896.0 16778.5 16896.5 16779.0 16897.0 16779.5 16897.5 16780.0 16898.0 16780.5 16898.5 16781.0 16899.0 16781.5 16899.5 16782.0 16900.0 16782.5 16900.5 16783.0 16901.0 16783.5 16901.5 16784.0 16902.0 16784.5 16902.5 16785.0 16785.0 16785.5 16785.5 No. ITU TELEX FREQUENCY TABLE (3/4) 18/19 MHz BAND TX RX No. 22131 22132 22133 22134 22135 22136 22137 22138 22139 22140 22141 22142 22143 22144 22145 22146 22147 22148 22149 22150 22151 22152 22153 22154 22155 22156 22157 22158 22159 22160 22161 22162 22163 22164 22165 22166 22167 22168 22169 22170 22171 22172 22173 22174 22175 22176 22177 22178 22179 22180 22181 22182 22183 22 MHz BAND TX RX 22349.5 22441.5 22350.0 22442.0 22350.5 22442.5 22351.0 22443.0 22351.5 22443.5 22352.0 22352.0 22352.5 22352.5 22353.0 22353.0 22353.5 22353.5 22354.0 22354.0 22354.5 22354.5 22355.0 22355.0 22355.5 22355.5 22356.0 22356.0 22356.5 22356.5 22357.0 22357.0 22357.5 22357.5 22358.0 22358.0 22358.5 22358.5 22359.0 22359.0 22359.5 22359.5 22360.0 22360.0 22360.5 22360.5 22361.0 22361.0 22361.5 22361.5 22362.0 22362.0 22362.5 22362.5 22363.0 22363.0 22363.5 22363.5 22364.0 22364.0 22364.5 22364.5 22365.0 22365.0 22365.5 22365.5 22366.0 22366.0 22366.5 22366.5 22367.0 22367.0 22367.5 22367.5 22368.0 22368.0 22368.5 22368.5 22369.0 22369.0 22369.5 22369.5 22370.0 22370.0 22370.5 22370.5 22371.0 22371.0 22371.5 22371.5 22372.0 22372.0 22372.5 22372.5 22373.0 22373.0 22373.5 22373.5 22374.0 22374.0 22374.5 22444.0 22375.0 22444.5 22375.5 22445.0 No. 25/26 MHz BAND TX RX APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES ITU Telex frequency table (3/4) AP-14 No. 4 MHz BAND TX RX No. 6 MHz BAND TX RX No. 8 MHz BAND TX RX No. 12 MHz BAND TX RX No. 16196 16197 16198 16199 16200 16201 16202 16203 16204 16205 16206 16207 16208 16209 16210 16211 16212 16213 16214 16215 16216 16217 16218 16219 19220 16221 16222 16223 16224 16225 16226 16227 16228 16229 16230 16231 16232 16233 16234 16235 16236 16 MHz BAND TX RX 16786.0 16786.0 16786.5 16786.5 16787.0 16787.0 16787.5 16787.5 16788.0 16788.0 16788.5 16788.5 16789.0 16789.0 16789.5 16789.5 16790.0 16790.0 16790.5 16790.5 16791.0 16791.0 16791.5 16791.5 16792.0 16792.0 16792.5 16792.5 16793.0 16793.0 16793.5 16793.5 16794.0 16794.0 16794.5 16794.5 16795.0 16795.0 16795.5 16795.5 16796.0 16796.0 16796.5 16796.5 16797.0 16797.0 16797.5 16797.5 16798.0 16798.0 16798.5 16798.5 16799.0 16799.0 16799.5 16799.5 16800.0 16800.0 16800.5 16800.5 16801.0 16801.0 16801.5 16801.5 16802.0 16802.0 16802.5 16802.5 16803.0 16803.0 16803.5 16803.5 16804.0 16804.0 16804.5 16804.5 16805.0 16903.0 16805.5 16903.5 16806.0 16904.0 No. 18/19 MHz BAND TX RX ITU TELEX FREQUENCY TABLE (4/4) No. 22 MHz BAND TX RX No. 25/26 MHz BAND TX RX APPENDIX 2 FREQUENCY TABLES ITU Telex frequency table (4/4) AP-15 APPENDIX 3 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS Control unit Abbreviations Abbreviation ACK AGC ANT Term Acknowledge Automatic Gain Control Antenna Abbreviation LV MAR MMSI APP APR ATT AUG BRILL COMM DEC DSC Application April Attenuator August Brilliance Communication December Digital Selective Calling MSG NB NBDP NF NOV NR OCT PSTN DUP ENT EQUIP FEB FREQ GMDSS PWR REF RF RX S-DUP SEP SIMP Simplex INFO INTERCOM INTL JAN JUL JUN Duplex Enter Equipment February Frequency Global Maritime Distress and Safety System Global Navigation Satellite System Information Intercommunication System International January July June Term Level March Maritime Mobile Services Identity number Message Noise Blanker Narrow Band Direct Printing Notch Filter November Noise Reduction October Public Switched Telephone Networks Power Reference Radio Frequency Receive Semi-Duplex September SP SQ TLX TRX TX UTC LAT LON Latitude Longitude Speaker Squelch Telex Transmit and Receive Transmit Coordinated Universal Time/ Universal Time, Coordinated Watch Receiver GNSS AP-16 WR APPENDIX 3 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS Icons Icon Meaning Speaker ON Icon Meaning Noise blanker ON Speaker OFF Notch filter ON Unread message Number keys Send a distress alert of your ship. Name of the ship registerd in address book • Receive a distress alert from a ship in distress. • Send a distress relay on behalf of a ship in distress. Send a general (safety, urgency or routine) message. Auto ACK for individual message is ON. Receive a general (safety, urgency or routine) message. Unsolved error Communicate via radiotelephone Class of emission is SSB. Turn down the handset volume. Class of emission is TLX. Turn up the handset volume. Class of emission is AM. Squelch ON Class of emission is FAX. Noise reduction: NR1 (Low), NR2 (High) Data is being updated regularly. Attenuator ON Class of emission is NBDP. 1: Watch 2: Scan 3: Communication ENTER knob Telex (NBDP) Abbreviation ACK ADV AGN Alt Apr ARQ Aug BI (GS) BK Caps CFEC Meaning Acknowledge Advise Again Alternative April Automatic Repetition request August Good bye I cut off. Capital and Small Collective FEC Abbreviation CFM CH COL Comm Mode Comm Status CRV Ctrl Dec DER Dir DSC Meaning Confirm Channel Collation Communication Mode Communication Status How do you receive? Control December Out of order Direction Digital Selective Call AP-17 APPENDIX 3 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS Abbreviation DWN EEE Eng Esc Feb FEC FM Fn Freq Fri GA HR ID Jan JST Jul Jun Mar MNS MOM Mon msec MSG MUTI NA NBDP NC NCH Meaning Down Error English Escape February Forward Error Correcting From Function Frequency Friday Go ahead. Here is Identification Data January Japanese Standard Time July June March Minutes Wait (Waiting) Monday milli second Message Mutilated Correspondence to this subscriber is not admitted. Narrow Band Direct Print Abbreviation Over P (or 0) PLS (PSE) PPR Prt Scr R (RCD) RAP RD RE RPT Rus RX Sat ScrLk SD sec Sep SFEC SIO SMT SRY Sun SVP TAX TEST MSG Meaning Change-over Stop your transmission. Please Paper Print Screen Received I will call you again. Read Referring to Repeat Russian Receiving Saturday Scroll Lock Secure Digital second September Selective FEC Serial Input and Output Ship’s Mean Time Sorry Sunday Please What is the charge? Please send a test message? THRU Thu TKS (TNX) You are in communication with telex position. Thursday Thanks TLX T.op Tue Telex Timer Operation Tuesday NR Num NumLk No circuits Subscriber’s number has been changed. Non-Good November The called party is not or no longer is a subscriber. Indicate your call number. Number Numerical Key Lock TX USB UTC OCC Oct OK Subscriber is engaged. October Okey Ver Wed WRU Transmission Universal Serial Bus Coordinated Universal Time/ Universal Time, Coordinated Version Wednesday Who are you NG Nov NP AP-18 APPENDIX 4 DIGITAL INTERFACE (IEC 61162-1) I/O Sentences Input sentences (IEC 61162-1) GGA, GLL, ZDA, GNS, RMC Input sentence description • GGA - Global positioning system (GPS) fix data $**GGA,hhmmss.ss,llll.lll,a,yyyyy.yyy,a,x,xx,x.x,x.x,M,x.x,M,x.x,xxxx*hh2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1. UTC of position (000000.00 - 235959.99) 2. Latitude (0000.0000 - 9000.0000) 3. N/S 4. Longitude (00000.0000 - 18000.0000) 5. E/W 6. GPS quality indicator (1 - 7) 7. Number of satllite in use (no use) 8. Horizontal dilution of precision (no use) 9. Antenna altitude above/below mean sealevel (no use) 10. Unit, m 11. Geoidal separation (no use) 12. Unit, m 13. Age of differential GPS data (no use) 14. Differential reference station ID (no use) • GLL - Geographic position - latitude/longitude $**GLL,llll.lll,a,yyyyy.yyy,a,hhmmss.ss,a,x*hh 67 1 2 1. Latitude (0000.0000 - 9000.0000) 2. N/S 3. Longitude (00000.0000 - 18000.0000) 4. E/W 5. UTC of position (000000.00 - 235959.99) 6. Status (A=data valid V=data invalid) 7. Mode indicator (A=Autonomous D=Differential E=Estimated (dead reckoning) mode M=Manual input mode N=No fix S=Simulator mode • ZDA - Time and date $**ZDA,hhmmss.ss,xx,xx,xxxx,xx,xx*hh 2 3 4 5 6 1. UTC (000000.00 - 235959.99) 2. Day (01 - 31) 3. Month (01 -12) 4. Year (2000 - 2049) 5. Local zone, hours (no use) 6. Loca zone, minutes (no use) AP-19 APPENDIX 4 DIGITAL INTERFACE (IEC 61162-1) • GNS - GNSS fix data $**GNS,hhmmss.ss,llll.lll,a,IIIII.III,a,c--c,xx,x.x,x.x,x.x,x.x,x.x,a*hh 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 1. UTC of position (000000.00 - 235959.99) 2. Latitude (0000.0000 - 9000.0000) 3. N/S 4. Longitude (00000.0000 - 18000.0000) 5. E/W 6. Mode indicator N=No fix A=Autonomous D=Differential P=Precise R=Real Time Kinematic F=Float RTK E=Estimated Mode M=Manual Input Mode S=Simulator Mode 7. Total number of satellites in use (00 - 99) 8. HDOP (no use) 9. Antenna altitude, meters (no use) 10. Geoidal separation (no use) 11. Age of differential data (no use) 12. Differential reference station ID (no use) 13. Navigational status indicator (S=Safe C=Caution U=Unsafe V=Navigational status not valid) • RMC - Recommended minimum specific GNSS data $**RMC,hhmmss.ss,A,llll.ll,a,yyyyy.yy,a,x.x,x.x,ddmmyy,x.x,a,a,a*hh 2 3 4 6 7 8 10 11 12 13 1. UTC of position fix (000000.00 - 235959.99) 2. Status (A=data valid, V=navigation receiver warning) 3. Latitude (0000.0000 - 9000.0000) 4. N/S 5. Longitude (00000.0000 - 18000.0000) 6. E/W 7. Speed over ground, knots (no use) 8. Course over ground, degrees true (no use) 9. Date (010100 - 311249) 10. Magnetic variation, degrees (no use) 11. E/W 12. Mode indicator (A= Autonomous D= Differential E=Estimated (dead reckoning) mode F=Float RTK M=Manual input mode N=No fix P=Precise R=Real time kinematic S= Simulator mode 13. Navigational status indicator (S=Safe C=Caution U=Unsafe V=Navigational status not valid) AP-20 APPENDIX 4 DIGITAL INTERFACE (IEC 61162-1) Output sentences (IEC 61162-1) DSC, DSE Output sentence description • DSC - Digital selective calling information $CTDSC,xx,xxxxxxxxxx,xx,xx,xx,x.x,x.x,xxxxxxxxxx,xx,a,a*hh 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 1. Format specifier (2 digits) 2. Address (10 digits) 3. Category (2 digits or NULL) 4. Nature of Distress or first telecommand (2 digits or NULL) 5. Type of Communication or second telecommand (2 digits) 6. Position or Channel /Frequency (Max. 4 digits) 7. Time or Tel. No. (Max. 16 digits) 8. MMSI of ship in distress (10 digits or NULL) 9. Nature of distress (2 digits or NULL) 10. Acknowledgement (R=Acknowledge request B=Acknowledgement S=Neither (end of sequence) 11. Expansion indicator (E or NULL) • DSE - Expanded digital selective calling $CTDSE,x,x,a,xxxxxxxxxx,xx,c--c,..........,xx,c--c*hh 123 5 6 7 8 9 1. Total number of sentences (fixed value) 2. Sentence number (fixed value) 3. Query/reply flag (fixed value A=Automatic) 4. Vessel MMSI (10 digits) 5. Data set ‘1’ (code field, fixed value 00) 6. Data set ‘1’ (data field, Enhanced position resolution, Max. 8 characters) 7. Additional data sets 8. Data set ‘n’ (code field) 9. Data set ‘n’ (data field) : This equipment outputs only “Data set 1”. AP-21 APPENDIX 4 DIGITAL INTERFACE (IEC 61162-1) P - sentences pireq (input), pidat (output) P - sentence description • PFEC,pireq - Equipment information request $ PFEC, pireq *hh When this sentence is input, the equipment outputs the PFEC,pidat sentence. • PFEC,pidat - Equipment information $ PFEC,pidat, 0, FS-xxxx *hh 1. ID (fixed value) 2. Model name (FS-1575, FS-2575, FS-5075) $ PFEC,pidat, 1, 01.01 *hh 1. ID (fixed value) 2. Software version (00.00 - 99.99) $ PFEC,pidat, 4, 0000, 0000, 4000, 0000, 0000, 0000, 0000, 0000 *hh 1. ID (fixed value) 2 to 9. Unit division code (fixed value) $ PFEC,pidat, 5, 0, *hh 1 2 1. ID (fixed value) 2. Browser control (fixed value) Schematic diagram T-IF 05P0861 MOT 05P0860 J7 J1 TB6 U3 6 SN65HVD10DR 2 FL5 TD-A TD-B FL6 10 FL7 RD-A RD-B 11 FL9 12 R254 470Ω U6 PC400 CR4 C240 1SS355 100pF Load requirements as a listener Isolation: Optocoupler AP-22 Input impedance: 470Ω Max. voltage: ±15 V Threshold: 4 mA APPENDIX 5 PARTS LIST This equipment contains complex modules in which fault diagnosis and repair down to component level are not practical (IMO A.694(17)/8.3.1). Only some discrete components are used. FURUNO Electric Co., Ltd. Believes identifying these components is of no value for shipboard maintenance; therefore, they are not listed in this manual. Major modules can be located on the parts location photos on pages AP-25 thru AP-27. Transceiver unit FS-1575T ELECTRICAL PARTS LIST PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD Model FS-1575 Unit Transceiver Unit FS-1575T Code No. 05P0868, PA 05P0874, PWR 05P0864, LF 05P0871, P-SW 05P0847A, WR1 05P0847B, WR2 05P0856, TX 05P0842, RX 05P0862B, RX-FIL 05P0876A, TX-FIL 05P0861, T-IF 05P0860, MOT 05P0859, T-CPU AP-23 APPENDIX 5 PARTS LIST Transceiver unit FS-2575T ELECTRICAL PARTS LIST Model FS-2575 Unit Transceiver Unit FS-2575T Code No. PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD 05P0867B, PA 05P0874, PWR 05P0866B, DRV 05P0873, SW-REG 05P0871, P-SW 05P0864, PA-IF 05P0847A, WR1 05P0847B, WR2 05P0856, TX 05P0842, RX 05P0862B, RX-FIL 05P0870B, TX-FIL 05P0861, T-IF 05P0860, MOT 05P0859, T-CPU Transceiver unit FS-5075T ELECTRICAL PARTS LIST PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD 05P0866A, DRV 05P0873, SW-REG 05P0869, COMB 05P0872, FET 05P0871, P-SW 05P0867A, PA 05P0874, PWR 05P0864, PA-IF 05P0847A, WR1 05P0847B, WR2 05P0856, TX 05P0842, RX 05P0863, DUP-FIL 05P0862A, RX-FIL 05P0870A, TX-FIL 05P0861, T-IF 05P0860, MOT 05P0859, T-CPU AP-24 Model FS-5075 Unit Transceiver Unit FS-5075T Code No. APPENDIX 5 PARTS LIST Control unit FS-2575C ELECTRICAL PARTS LIST Model FS-1575, FS-2575, FS-5075 Unit Control Unit FS-2575C Code No. PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD 05P0844, PANEL 05P0853, C-IF 05P0852, C-CPU Antenna Coupler AT-1575 ELECTRICAL PARTS LIST Model FS-1575 Unit Antenna Coupler AT-1575 Code No. PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD 05P0883, COUP Antenna Coupler AT-5075 ELECTRICAL PARTS LIST PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD Model FS-2575, FS--5075 Unit Antenna Coupler AT-5075 Code No. 05P0875, COUP AP-25 APPENDIX 6 PARTS LOCATION Transceiver unit FS-1575T 05P0868 150WPA 05P0876 150WTX-FIL 05P0847B WR2 05P0847A WR1 05P0874 PWR 05P0871 P-SW 05P0864A PA-IF 05P0856 TX Rear side 05P0860 MOT 05P0859 T-CPU 05P0842 RX AP-26 05P0862B 05P0861A T-IF RX-FIL APPENDIX 6 PARTS LOCATION Transceiver unit FS-2575T 05P0870B TX-FIL 05P0873 SW-REG 05P0866B 05P0867B DRV PA 05P0874 PWR 05P0871 P-SW 05P0864 PA-IF 05P0847A 05P0856 05P0847B WR1 TX WR2 Rear side 05P0860 MOT 05P0859 T-CPU 05P0842 RX 05P0862B 05P0861 T-IF RX-FIL AP-27 APPENDIX 6 PARTS LOCATION Transceiver unit FS-5075T 05P0870A TX-FIL 05P0867A 05P0866A DRV PA 05P0873 05P0869 SW-REG COMB 05P0874 PWR 05P0872 FET 05P0847B WR2 05P0847A WR1 05P0867A PA 05P0871 P-SW 05P0873 SW-REG 05P0864 PA-IF 05P0856 TX Rear side 05P0860 MOT 05P0842 RX AP-28 - 05P0863 DUP-FIL - 05P0862A RX-FIL (underneath DUP-FIL Board) 05P0861 T-IF 05P0859 T-CPU APPENDIX 6 PARTS LOCATION Control unit FS-2575C 05P0844 (PANEL) 05P0853 (C-IF) 05P0852 (C-CPU) Antenna coupler AT-1575 05P0883 COUP AP-29 APPENDIX 6 PARTS LOCATION Antenna coupler AT-5075 05P0875 COUP AP-30 FURUNO FS-1575/2575/5075 SPECIFICATIONS OF SSB RADIOTELEPHONE FS-1575/2575/5075 MF/HF DIGITAL RADIOTELEPHONE 1.1 GENERAL 1.1.1 Communication system FS-1575/2575 Semi-duplex or simplex FS-5075 Full-duplex (option required), semi-duplex or simplex 1.1.2 Class of emission J3E: Telephone F1B (J2B): DSC and NBDP H3E: reception only A1A, F3C: requires settings for communications 1.1.3 Number of channel User programmable: 256 TX/RX pairs All ITU channels incorporated (include DSC/NBDP), SSB, TLX, CW 1.1.4 Warming up 1 minute approx. (oven 15 minutes approx.) 1.2 TRANSMITTER 1.2.1 Frequency range 1.2.2 RF output power FS-1575 FS-2575 FS-5075 1.2.3 Frequency stability 1.2.4 MIC in sensitivity 1.2.5 Line in sensitivity 1.2.6 Audio frequency range 1,605 kHz to 27.5 MHz (100 Hz step) MF/HF: 150 Wpep MF/HF: 250 Wpep MF: 400 Wpep, HF: 500 Wpep ±10 Hz 1 kHz, 94 dBA maximum power: -9 dB to -3 dB 1 kHz, -16 dBm maximum power: -9 dB to -3 dB 350 Hz to 2.7 kHz (within 6dB) 1.3 RECEIVER 1.3.1 Receiving system Double-conversion superheterodyne 1.3.2 Frequency range 100 kHz-29,999.99 kHz (10 Hz step) 1.3.3 Sensitivity (SINAD 20 dB) 1.3.4 Frequency Range 100 kHz to 300 kHz 300 kHz to 1.6 MHz 1.6 MHz to 4.0 MHz 4.0 MHz to 30 MHz Intermediate frequency 1st: 53.964 kHz, 2nd: 36 kHz 1.3.5 1.3.6 Spurious response Audio output power J3E 35 dBµV 25 dBµV 13 dBµV 7 dBµV Better than 60 dB Speaker: 3 W/4 ohm Handset: 10 mW/150 ohm Line output: 0 dBm/600 ohm 1.3.7 Standard features AGC, Noise blanker, Voice-activated squelch, Noise reduction, Notch filter, Attenuator SP - 1 E5678S01G-M FURUNO FS-1575/2575/5075 DSC/WATCH KEEPING RECEIVER 2.1 DIGITAL SELECTIVE CALLING 2.1.1 Frequency shift Mark: F-85Hz, Space: F+85 Hz (F: assigned frequency) 2.1.2 Baud rate 100 bps ± 30 x 10-6 2.1.3 Protocol ITU-R Rec.493-13, 541-9 2.1.4 Modulation FSK 2.2 DSC/WATCH RECEIVER (DISTRESS) 2.2.1 Frequency range 2187.5/ 4207.5/ 6312.0/ 8414.5/ 12577.0/ 16804.5 kHz 2.2.2 Class of emission F1B (J2B) 2.2.3 Antenna impedance 50 ohm 2.2.4 Sensitivity 0 dBμV or less 2.2.5 Intermediate frequency 1st: 35.964 MHz, 2nd: 36 kHz 2.2.6 Frequency stability ±10 Hz 2.2.7 Output power for preamp 12 VDC: 0.15 A max. 2.2.8 Spurious response Better than 60 dB 2.3 DSC/WATCH RECEIVER (GENERAL FREQUENCY, OPTION) 2.3.1 Frequency range 1605 kHz to 27.5 MHz 2.3.2 Class of emission F1B (J2B) 2.3.3 Antenna impedance 50 ohm 2.3.4 Sensitivity 0 dBμV or less 2.3.5 Intermediate frequency 1st: 44.964 MHz, 2nd: 36 kHz 2.3.6 Output power for preamp 12 VDC: 0.15 A max. 2.3.7 Spurious response Better than 60 dB 3.1 3.2 3.3 NBDP FUNCTION (OPTION) Communication mode ARQ, FEC Protocol ITU-R M625-3, M476-5, M490, M491-1, M492-6 Modulation FSK 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 CONTROL UNIT Display system Pixel Brilliance Built-in speaker Alarm volume Visible distance 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 ANTENNA COUPLER Tuning system Frequency range Input impedance Antenna 4.3-inch color dot matrix 480 x 272 dots 18 steps (off to maximum brightness) 4 ohms 80 to 85 dB(A) 0.7 m nominal CPU controlled fully automatic tuning system 1605 kHz to 27.5 MHz 50 ohm 10 m to 18 m wire or 10 m whip, or 8 m whip + horizontal feeder 2 m or more SP - 2 E5678S01G-M FURUNO FS-1575/2575/5075 5.5 Tuning time 6.1 TERMINAL UNIT (OPTION) Display IB-583 10.4” color TFT LCD, 640 x 480 dots (VGA) IB-585 10.4” color TFT LCD, 800 x 600 dots (SVGA) Brilliance IB-583: 8 steps, IB-585: 11 steps External memory IB-583 3.5” floppy disk IB-585 SD card: 2 GB max. Visible distance 0.7 m nominal 6.2 6.3 6.4 7.1 7.2 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 INTERFACE Input data sentences Ship’s Position (L/L) Time LAN Within 15 seconds IEC 61162-1 Ed.4 (2010-11) GGA, GLL, GNS, RMC ZDA Ethernet 10Base-T/100Base-TX POWER SUPPLY Transceiver/control unit FS-1575 24 VDC: 5A (RX), 20 A max. (TX) FS-2575 24 VDC: 5A (RX), 40 A max. (TX) FS-5075 24 VDC: 5A (RX), 60 A max. (TX) Terminal unit 24 VDC: 0.6 A (IB-583), 12-24 VDC: 0.5-0.3 A (IB-585) Printer (PP-510, option) 24 VDC: 1.5 A AC/DC power supply unit PR-300 (for FS-1575, option) 100/110/200/220VAC, 1 phase, 50/60 Hz PR-850A (for FS-2575/5075, option) 100/110/120/200/220/240VAC, 1 phase, 50/60 Hz ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITION Ambient temperature Antenna coupler -25°C to +55°C Indoor units -15°C to +55°C Relative humidity 93% or less at 40°C Degree of protection Antenna coupler IP56 Transceiver unit IP22 (bulkhead mount only) Terminal unit IP22 Control unit IP20 (IP22: option required) Vibration IEC60945 Ed.4 10 COATING COLOR 10.1 Antenna coupler N9.5 (white) 10.2 Transceiver/control unit N3.0 SP - 3 E5678S01G-M INDEX Abbreviation ..........................................AP-16 Address book deleting...................................................6-15 editing.....................................................6-14 list...........................................................6-13 registration .............................................6-13 Alarm lists ................................................6-24 Antenna selection ....................................6-11 Area message receiving.................................................5-14 sending...................................................5-12 Attenuator ..................................................2-6 Audio alarms ..............................................3-2 Auto ACK setting......................................6-21 Brilliance ....................................................1-4 Channel setting ..........................................2-2 Clarifier setting .........................................6-11 Class of emission .......................................2-1 Control description .....................................1-1 Daily test ..................................................11-1 Date and time setting .................................6-9 Digital interface .....................................AP-19 Distress alert canceling ................................................4-15 receiving...................................................4-6 sending.....................................................4-1 Distress relay receiving.................................................4-14 sending...................................................4-11 DSC frequency setting ...............................5-2 DSC message............................................3-1 DSC scan screen .......................................1-3 Error message .........................................11-4 External alarm setting ..............................6-12 FAX setting ..............................................6-10 Frequency setting ......................................2-2 Frequency table ......................................AP-3 Group message receiving.................................................5-11 sending...................................................5-10 Group message preparation ....................6-18 Icon .......................................................AP-17 IN-1 Individual message receiving...................................................5-6 sending.....................................................5-1 Individual message preparation ...............6-17 Intercom .....................................................1-6 Key assignment .........................................6-7 Log file deleting.....................................................6-6 opening ....................................................6-5 Maintenance ............................................11-3 Medical message receiving.................................................5-18 sending...................................................5-17 MENU screen open/close ..........................6-1 Menu tree ................................................AP-1 NBDP .........................................................7-1 abbreviation.........................................AP-18 answerback code registration ..................8-1 ARQ mode .............................................10-3 automatic telex .....................................10-15 creating file...............................................9-1 deleting file ...............................................9-7 Edit menu .................................................7-5 editing file .................................................9-3 enaming file..............................................9-7 FEC mode ..............................................10-5 File menu .................................................7-4 ID code registration ..................................8-2 macrofile...............................................10-10 maintenance...........................................11-6 menu tree ..............................................AP-2 Operate menu ..........................................7-5 printing file................................................9-8 reception mode ......................................10-5 saving file .................................................9-2 saving file under new name .....................9-7 scan channel group..................................8-6 scanning.................................................10-9 station list .................................................8-3 Station menu ............................................7-6 System menu ...........................................7-7 timer operation .......................................10-8 timer programming ...................................8-5 user channel.............................................8-2 Window menu ..........................................7-6 Network setting ........................................6-12 INDEX Neutral message receiving ................................................ 5-16 sending.................................................. 5-14 Noise blanker ............................................ 2-5 Noise reduction ......................................... 2-5 Notch filter ................................................. 2-6 Parst list ................................................AP-23 Parst location ........................................AP-26 Polling request message......................... 5-19 Position message eceiving ................................................. 5-22 sending.................................................. 5-20 Position setting.......................................... 6-8 Power on/off .............................................. 1-2 Printing message ...................................... 6-8 Priority ....................................................... 1-5 PSTN message receiving ................................................ 5-25 sending.................................................. 5-23 PSTN message preparation.................... 6-18 RF gain...................................................... 2-5 RT screen.................................................. 1-2 Scanning frequency ......................... 1-4, 6-22 Session ..................................................... 1-7 S-meter ..................................................... 2-5 Sound setting .......................................... 6-23 Speaker..................................................... 1-4 Special message..................................... 6-22 Squelch ..................................................... 2-6 Squelch frequency .................................... 6-7 Test call................................................... 11-5 Test message preparation ...................... 6-19 Timeout setting........................................ 6-10 Tone test ................................................. 11-2 Transmission power .................................. 2-3 Troubleshooting ...................................... 11-4 TX self test .............................................. 11-2 User channel deleting.................................................... 6-4 editing...................................................... 6-3 list ............................................................ 6-2 registration .............................................. 6-2 Working channel setting............................ 5-3 Working frequency setting......................... 5-3 IN-2
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