8. When the first character is correct, press
ENT-1W/25W
button. The cursor moves to the next character. Enter the remaining
11 characters of the name. If the name is shorter than 12 characters, press and hold
ENT-1W/25W
to complete the name entry.
(If you press and hold
ENT-1W/25W
without entering a name, the radio uses the MMSI number in the directory list.) If you
make a mistake while entering a number, press
CLR-SCAN
to erase the wrong number and the cursor is moved to left digit.
9. When you finish entering the name, the radio displays the new MMSI number and name and asks you to confirm. To save this
directory entry, select
Yes
; to cancel this directory entry, select
No
. The radio returns to the directory list.
10. To change an existing directory entry, select the entry you want to change.
11. To delete the directory entry, select
Delete
. To edit the code, select
Edit
, then use
CHANNEL UP
and
CHANNEL DOWN
to
edit the MMSI number and the name.
12. When you are satisfied with the directory list, select
Exit
to close the menu screen.
Making DSC Calls
There are essentially four different types of DSC voice calls:
Call type
What it does
When to use it
Distress
Alerts all stations that you need assistance and sends them your
current position.
In an emergency only.
Individual
Calls a single station using the User MMSL.
Any time you want to talk to another station.
Group
Calls all the stations that have the same Group MMSL as yours.
Any time you want with the whole group you are
traveling with at the same time.
All Ships
Calls all stations within range of your radio.
Safety warnings (e.g., debris in the water) or any
urgent situation.
Suppose you are coordinating safety for a sailboat race. Before the race starts, you instruct all the racers to enter your group MMSI
number into their radios. During the race:
• Throughout the race, you use group calling to update the racers on the time, race status, and any course corrections.
• A power boat full of spectators comes a little too close to the race path. You use individual calling to contact the power boat and
advise them to stay clear of the race.
• You see a rowboat entering the area, but since it doesn’t have a radio, you can’t communicate with the rowboat. You use all ships
calling to alert all the other boats in the area of the possible danger.
VHF490 RADIO
1-800-BOATING
15
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