Section 7. Quick Reference
7-5
5/6-TONE FREQUENCIES AND TIMINGS
Table 7-7 Five-Tone Groups and Timings
Tone Number
EIA
CCIR
ZVEI
EEA
0
600
1981
2400
1981
1
741
1124
1060
1124
2
882
1197
1160
1197
3
1023
1275
1270
1275
4
1164
1358
1400
1358
5
1305
1446
1530
1446
6
1446
1540
1670
1540
7
1587
1640
1830
1640
8
1728
1747
2000
1747
9
1869
1860
2200
1860
2nd Address X
2010
2247
2796
1055
Repeat R
459
2110
2600
2110
Timing
Preamble
690
690
690
690
Gap
65
65
65
100
Tone
33
100
70
40
X Tone
65
100
70
40
Note: All tone frequencies are in hertz and all tone timings are in milliseconds.
5/6-Tone Format
CAPCODE ENTRY:
Five Tone
xxxxx e
(one or more x may be strapped)
Six Tone
p xxxxx e
(p and one or more x may be strapped)
p
= preamble digit 0-9
*
= preamble tone omitted
xxxxx = address, digits 0-9
e
= extra address digit 1 or 2 (if used)
Three addressing modes are available for the Model 15 5/6 Tone formats. Single addressing
always instructs pagers to give a 1st address beep alert. Dual addressing sends single address
tones for even numbered pager entries and sends the extra dual address tone for odd
numbered pager entries. The actual address sent is always even, however. With this option
all of the user's pagers are required to be even numbered, reducing the call capacity by half.
Extra digits addressing requires an extra function digit to be entered after the pager number,
1=first address, 2=second address. This scheme requires an extra keystroke but allows all
100,000 addresses to be sent.