USER'S GUIDE
COMMAND SUMMARY
PK232UG Rev. B 9/86
6-69
171
USERS
n
Mnemonic:
US
Default: 1
MODE: Packet
Parameters:
n
-
0 to 10 specifies the number of active simultaneous connections that can be
established with your PK-232.
USERS
only affects the way that incoming connect requests are handled It does not affect the
number of connections you initiate with your PK-232. For example:
USERS 0
allows incoming connections on any free logical channel
USERS 1
allows incoming connections on logical channel 0 only
USERS 2
allows incoming connections on logical channels 0 and 1
USERS 3
allows incoming connections on logical channels 0, 1 and 2, and so on, through
USERS 10.
USOS
ON|OFF
Mnemonic:
USO
Default: OFF
Mode: Baudot RTTY
Parameters:
ON -
Letters (LTRS) case IS forced after a space character.
OFF - Letters (LTRS) is NOT forced after a space character.
Use the
USOS
Command when you want your PK-232 to automatically change from figures to let-
ters after receiving a space character.
When using Baudot RTTY in poor HF receiving conditions, a received character can be incorrectly
interpreted as a FIGURES-SHIFT character, forcing the received data into the wrong case. Many
otherwise good characters received after this will be interpreted as figures (numbers and punctua-
tion), not as the letters sent by the distant station.
USOS
ON helps reduce these receiving errors.
NOTE:
Some weather, commercial, point-to-point and utility stations use Baudot RTTY to
send consecutive groups of numbers separated by spaces.
USOS
ON produces un-
acceptable results by forcing the system into letters case when the originator may
have intended the information to be in figures case.
VHF
ON|OFF
Mnemonic:
V
Default: ON
Mode: Packet
Parameters:
ON -
Packet tones are shifted 1000 Hz.
OFF - Packet tone are shifted 200 Hz.
Use the
VHF
Command for immediate software control of the PK-232's modem tones. Changing
components or switch settings is not required.
Set
VHF OFF
for HF packet operation.
Set
VHF ON
for VHF operation.
NOTE:
Be sure to change
HB
to 300 bauds when operating below 28 MHz.