Digital private mobile radio

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dPMR or digital private mobile radio, is a Common Air Interface (CAI) for digital mobile communications. dPMR is an open, non-proprietary standard that was developed by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and published under the reference ETSI TS 102 658.

A simplified version of the dPMR protocol intended for licence-free applications was also published by ETSI under the reference TS 102 490.

dPMR is very similar to NXDN protocol implementation by Kenwood and Icom; both now offer dual-standard equipment (July 2013).

dPMR, NXDN and DMR were all launched at around the same time and there was considerable speculation around the industry as to which standard would "prevail", with many people expecting it to be a Betamax -vs- VHS type war. In reality DMR has seen the greatest uptake, due to the lower infrastructure costs (two voice paths for one base station). In response the dPMR manufacturers have considerably cut infrastructure costs such that for small scale systems dPMR is more cost effective to deploy.

In reality the vast majority of systems deployed are DMR. dPMR however does have a niche market with the advocates citing the greater range offered by the true 6.25khz channel spacing and the better spectral efficiency for congested areas. Therefore neither system has "won" the market, with DMR having a large market share, but dPMR looks like it will be around for many years to come.

Specifications

  • Access method: FDMA
  • Transmission rate: 4,800 bit/s
  • Modulation: four-level FSK

What is significant is that dPMR achieves all this in a 6.25 kHz channel.

Because the emission mask is so tight, two 6.25 kHz dPMR signals can be used next to each other within a 12.5 kHz channel without causing interference to each other or adjacent channels. Compliance with EN301 166 at 6.25 kHz for current equipment is one measure of guarantee that interference issues are no different from at 12.5 kHz or 25 kHz. Frequency co-coordinators in the USA have even made recommendations to the FCC about setting up new 6.25 kHz systems adjacent to existing systems, outlining parameters to avoid harmful interference.

dPMR equipment complies with the relevant European standard ETSI EN 301 166 as well as the FCC emission mask applicable for operation in the US.

dPMR functionality

dPMR446

dPMR446 radios are licence-free products for use in the 446.1–446.2 MHz band within Europe.

These are fully digital versions of PMR446 radios.

dPMR446 radios comply with the ETSI TS 102 490[1] open standard and are limited to 500 mW RF power with fixed antennas per ECC Decision (05)12.[2] They are ideally suited to recreational and professional users who do not need wide area coverage with base stations and repeaters.

dPMR446 equipment is capable of voice, data and voice+data modes of operation.

This means that dPMR446 can provide voice calls, text messaging (SMS), status and embedded data such as GPS position etc.

dPMR Mode 1

This is the peer to peer mode of dPMR (without repeaters or infrastructure) but without the limitations of the licence-free counterpart. It can operate all typical licensed PMR frequency bands and without the RF power limits of dPMR446. As well as offering voice and data, dPMR446 Mode 1 also supports combined voice+data so it is possible to embed data into a voice call or automatically append it at the end of a call.

dPMR Mode 2

dPMR Mode 2 operations include repeaters and other infrastructure. This brings extra functionality such as analogue or digital network interfaces which can be IP based. Inclusion of repeaters and base stations means that wide area coverage is possible even more so when multiple repeaters are used. Such multiple repeaters can be managed by dynamic channel selection or they can be part of a co-channel wide area network.

dPMR Mode 3

dPMR Mode 3 can offer multichannel, multisite trunked radio networks. This ensures optimum use of spectrum and optimum density of radio traffic.

Management of the radio network starts from the authentication of radios that wish to connect. Calls are set up by the infrastructure when both parties have responded to the call request ensuring optimum use of the radio resource. Calls may be diverted to other radios, landline numbers or even IP addresses. The infrastructure managing these beacon channels would be capable of placing a call to another radio whether that radio is using the same site or another site within the network.

Interoperability

With all forms of technology it is vital that products from any manufacturer will interoperate without conflict. To ensure that this will be the case, ETSI has also developed and published a range of European standards for compliance and interoperability testing.

These standards are the ETSI TS 102 587 series for dPMR446 and the ETSI TS 102 726 series for licensed dPMR Mode1, 2 and 3 products.

Implementations

  • Icom IDAS [3]
  • Kenwood NEXEDGE

The dPMR Association

A dPMR Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) group was created in 2007 by a group of companies who wished to support the latest digital PMR radio technology known as dPMR. The group currently includes radio and silicon manufacturers, protocol, software and systems developers. Members have agreed to work for the common aims of interoperability, compliance and success of dPMR. In 2011 the group was renamed the dPMR Association. Current members[citation needed] of the dPMR Association include:

See also

References

External links