"Trunked" radio systems differ from "conventional"
radio systems in that a conventional radio system uses a dedicated channel
(frequency) for each individual group of users, while "trunking"
radio systems use a pool of channels which are available for a great many
different groups of users.[2]
For example, if police communications are configured in such a way that
twelve conventional channels are required to permit citywide dispatch based
upon geographical patrol areas, during periods of slow dispatch activity, much
of that channel capacity is idle. In a trunked system, the police units in a
given geographical area are not assigned a dedicated channel, but instead are
members of a talk-group entitled to draw upon the common resources of a smaller
pool of channels.
Advantages of trunking
Trunked radio takes advantage of the probability that with any given
number of user units, not everyone will need channel access at the same time,
therefore fewer discrete radio channels are required. From another perspective,
with a given number of radio channels, a much greater number of user groups can
be accommodated. In the example of the police department, this additional
capacity could then be used to assign individual talk groups to specialized
investigative, traffic control, or special-events groups which might otherwise
not have the benefit of individual private communications.
To the user, a trunking radio looks just like an "ordinary"
radio: there is a "channel switch" for the user to select the
"channel" that they want to use. In reality though, the "Channel
switch" is not switching frequencies as in a conventional radio but when
changed, it refers to an internal software program which causes a talkgroup
affiliation to be transmitted on the control channel. This identifies the
specific radio to the system controller as a member of a specific talkgroup,
and that radio will then be included in any conversations involving that
talkgroup.
This also allows great flexibility in radio usage - the same radio model
can be used for many different types of system users (i.e. Police, Public
Works, Animal Control, etc.) simply by changing the software programming in the
radio itself.
Since the talkgroups are constantly transmitting on different
frequencies, trunked radio systems makes it more difficult for a scanner
listener without a programmed trunk tracking scanner to keep up with the
conversation.
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