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| Available in Three Configurations |
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| [Powerdial
Standard] [Powerdial Cellular]
[Powerdial Cross Band] |
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| Powerdial: Standard Configuration
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| 1. |
In standard configuration, the Powerdial base
station can be made up of a full duplex transceiver (eg TAIT,
SIMOCO, KEY, MOTOROLA, YAESU) a Model 45 or Model 35 phone patch
(modified by Tascom International) and a Powerdial control unit,
housed in a neat, transportable 19" cabinet. |
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| 2. |
The whole base station is taken to the site requiring
radio coverage and plugged into a mains power source (or 12V
d.c.) and a telephone network socket (eg. a standard BT phone
socket). |
| 3. |
The operator then dials the number of the network
socket from any DTMF (touchtone) telephone - even a cellular
or DECT phone. The base station responds with a short dialling
tone then silence, during which the operator keys in a security
access code. |
| 4. |
On receiving the correct code, a connection is
made to the mobiles in range of the base station. Mobiles can
talk to the operator and vice-versa. This means you can set
up a control or incident room anywhere there is a telephone
or cellphone. |
| 5. |
The operator can change channels, turn talkthrough
on and off (so that mobiles can talk to other mobiles) and perform
other functions, with user friendly voice prompts coming back
down the line to confirm the operators commands. This is done
by keying in numbers on the telephone. eg. Operator dials "50
123" - Powerdial changes the base station to channel 123 and
a voice is heard saying "Channel 123, talkthrough off, priority
off". |
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| [back to top] |
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| [Powerdial
Standard] [Powerdial Cellular]
[Powerdial Cross Band] |
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| TASCOM Products -
Designed and built in the UK |
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