14-13
RLC-4 V1.79 Copyright © 1998 Link Communications Inc. 9/18/98
142: Set Frequency and Offset or Recall Memory
This command allows you change the frequency of the radios connected to the Doug Hall RBI-1 or
RLC-ICM. After entering the command name (default is 142), you can just enter the frequency the
way you would say it (ignoring the decimal point). To go to 147.38MHz, you could just enter "142
14738" and unkey. You do not need to enter 0's at the end unless you want to change the offset, in
which case you have to enter three digits after the assumed decimal point before the digit that
specifies the offset. For example, "142 1473801" would select a positive offset (using format 0, see
command 140). The controller will determine what band the frequency is in and send the
information to the remote base interface. The remote base interface figures out which radio handles
that band's information and sends the frequency to that radio. If you enter a ‘*’ as a “megahertz
point”, like “142 147*38", the CW response will be simply ‘F’.
<142> mm Recall Radio Memory “mm”
(RBI-1 only)
<142> 29xxf o 10 meter
<142> 5xxf o 50 Mhz
<142> 14xxxf o 144 Mhz
<142> 22xxxf o 220 Mhz
<142> 43xxxf o 430 Mhz
<142> 44xxxf o 440 Mhz
<142> 124xxxf o 1240 Mhz
<142> 125xxxf o 1250 Mhz
<142> 126xxxf o 1260 Mhz
<142> 127xxxf o 1270 Mhz
<142> 128xxxf o 1280 Mhz
<142> 129xxxf o 1290 Mhz
Parameters:
- 142 is the default command name.
- XXX is the new frequency (Mhz, 100Khz, 10Khz)
- F (optional) is the 5 Khz entry
- O (optional) is the new offset (see Command 141 for the format). You can omit this digit
if you don’t want to change the offset.
- MM is the memory to go to (1..20, or as supported by the radio). Memories must be set
manually on the radio, as there is no way to set them using the RBI-1. This feature
is not supported on the RLC-ICM.