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This is how to talk on a radio or walkie talkie for business or group use.
Steps
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1First, decide who your dispatcher or secretary is. The dispatcher is the person who sends out the calls to a person for what ever event. Label or Nick-Name this person BASE. This Will come in handy later.
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2Give all the users a radio and a Nick-Name. By Nick-Name, do not label people Momma-bear or Papa-Bear. Remember, you are trying to sound Professional.Advertisement
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3When you want to call BASE, you simply say "[your nick-name] to BASE." Example: "Packaging Dept. to BASE."
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4When your nick-name is being called, you say : "Go Ahead".
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5The Calling person says or asks what they want to say/ask.
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6After the conversation is done, the person who called the other person has the option to say and ONLY SAY: "Clear" The other person can repeat this ONLY once.
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7To call someone other than BASE, just say something like this: [Packaging Dept to Josh] - Josh will then say ["Go Ahead'].
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8Go Ahead simply means "I'm ready to hear what you want to say".
Example
Community Q&A
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QuestionOn a radio or walkie-talkie, what does "over" mean?Community AnswerYou say "over" when you are finished with a statement so the other person knows when you are finished. Example: Tim: "I need you to do this. Over." Lisa: "Roger. I will be able to do that in a few minutes. Over."
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QuestionHow do I speak to one person at a time without the others hearing?Community AnswerDesignate a separate channel that you and your friend can switch to so that no one else can hear.
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QuestionWhat channel should I use for an emergency?Community AnswerWhile channel 9 is sometimes still monitored by emergency services on CB radios, there is no established emergency channel for walkie-talkies. Each manufacturer has the ability to shift which frequency applies to which channel in order to prevent overlap with their own (or competitors') similar devices.
Warnings
- The FCC defined additional frequencies for GMRS, primarily to talk to repeaters. A GMRS license is needed for use of a GMRS radio to transmit on FRS or GMRS frequencies. Also, if your radio with FRS/GMRS channels has a detachable antenna or a power level that exceeds 2 watts, it is not an approved FRS radio and you would need a GMRS license to transmit on any channel.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Don't Cuss. It's Not Professional and may be prohibited by law.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- The channel and license rules recently changed in the USA. On 22-channel (dual-service) handheld radios, channels 1 through 7 and 15 through 22 were defined as GMRS channels. In the United States, the use of these higher-power (2 watt) channels required a GMRS license that could be purchased from the FCC for a fee. In 2017 the FCC re-defined all 22 channels as "Family Radio Service" (FRS) and no license is needed for transmission on any of the 22 channels.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Transmitting without a license may result in penalties if the FCC enforces this rule. In Canada, GMRS channels can be used freely without a license. For more information on GMRS licensing, see https://www.fcc.gov/general/general-mobile-radio-service-gmrs⧼thumbs_response⧽
Things You'll Need
- Radios for all of the staff.
- Clips for all of the staff.
- Charger for all the radios.
- Your Receipt in case a radio is lost, stolen or damaged.