Gampawayne wrote:
The primary thing I see re radio is that people can use them to open Amateur Radio Repeaters. I would presume in these cases the keypad on the radio would issue a tone similar to that of a telephone keypad.
Sounds like you're describing DTMF (Dual Tone Multi Frequency). It's the same as on your phone. There are some ham repeaters that have a phone patch. This means you can use your ham radio as a telephone. To tell the repeater that you need to activate the phone, it's usually necessary to send some tones to the repeater. For example, a user might send #3 to enable the patch.
PL tones are interference reducers. Copying from Wikipedia here:
On Wikipedia, some people wrote:
CTCSS is often called PL tone (for Private Line, a trademark of Motorola), or simply tone. General Electric's implementation of CTCSS is called Channel Guard (or CG). Vintage RCA radios called their implementation Quiet Channel. Kenwood radios call the feature Quiet Talk or QT. There are many other company-specific names used by radio vendors to describe compatible options. Any CTCSS system that has compatible tones is interchangeable. Old and new radios with CTCSS and radios across manufacturers are compatible.
Simply put, PL tones prevent you from hearing others. It does not prevent others from hearing you.
Many people don't understand this second point. Most of these people are the ones using FRS radios. The "privacy codes" are CTCSS tones. You won't hear anyone else that isn't using the same code, but if anyone within range chooses not to restrict their reciever to any specific PL tone, they'll hear everyone on the same frequency.
There's also DPLs, or DCS (Digital-Coded Squelch). It does the same thing as CTCSS, but works in a different way. Read about it
here. Also, read about CTCSS
here.
Why would you use it? Let's say two stores in the mall are both using 467.50. If neither used PL tones, they'd both hear the communications from both stores. If store A decided to use a PL tone of 114.8 (both for transmitting and recieving, and on ALL of their radios) then they would only hear their own communications. But store B would still hear A's communications, because their radios are still recieving all signals on 467.5. If store B then programs its radios for PL 100.0, then neither store will hear the other. However, range is greatly reduced if they are both transmitting at the same time (especially if they're in close proximity). Depending on how the radios are programmed (and the repeater if one's being used) users may or may not be able to transmit while someone else is.
I've heard repeaters where two different people are talking at the same time on different tones. I'd never set things up that way, but if you only have a couple frequencies or just 1, sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do.
I think the 245 doesn't do PL tones. I'm not positive, but I bet it would list that feature if it could do it. Check your manual to be sure.