For example, if Ohio did not consider the transmission
satisfactory, Ohio might reply:
Alabama, THIS IS Ohio, WEAK And
DISTORTED, OVER.
A station that wishes to inform another station of
signal strength and readability does so by means of a
short report of actual reception. A short report maybe
Weak but readable or Weak with interference. Such
reports as Five by or Four by four are not authorized
and are not indicative of signal strength and quality of
reception.
COMMUNICATIONS CONDITIONS
Situations exist where atmospheric conditions and
interference do not present problems to successful
communications. During good conditions, message
parts need only be transmitted once, and, depending
upon the operational situation, preliminary calls are
sometimes optional.
At other times, conditions are anything but ideal
and can present problems to even an experienced
operator. Normal operating procedure requires an
operator to transmit all call signs twice when
communications conditions are bad. During bad
conditions, phrases, words, or groups to be transmitted
twice are indicated by the use of the proword WORDS
TWICE. Reception may be verified by use of the
proword READ BACK. For example, if bad
communications conditions exist and Tecumseh has a
message for Kamehameha that reads Moor Starboard
Side Tender, the transmission would be:
Kamehameha, Kamehameha, THIS IS,
Tecumseh, Tecumseh, WORDS TWICE, WORDS
TWICE, Moor Starboard Side Tender Moor
Starboard Side Tender, OVER.
Upon receipt of the message, Kamehameha would
communications conditions, Tecumseh could have
ended the above transmission with the proword READ
BACK, sent twice. This would require Kamehameha to
read back the message verbatim in WORDS TWICE
form, thus ensuring that the message was properly
received.
Another method of using the READ BACK
procedure is to do so without using WORDS TWICE. If
Tecumseh wanted Kamehameha to read back the
message to ensure reception but did not want to use the
WORDS TWICE procedure, Tecumsehs transmission
would be:
2-18
Kamehameha, THIS IS Tecumseh, READ BACK
Text, BREAK, Moor Starboard Side Tender,
OVER.
Kamehameha would then answer:
Tecumseh, THIS IS Kamehameha, I READ
BACK Text, Moor Starboard Side Tender, OVER.
Satisfied that Kamehameha has properly received the
message, Tecumseh would then send:
Kamehameha, THIS IS Tecumseh, That Is
Correct, OUT.
If Kamehameha repeated back the message incorrectly,
Tecumseh would have used the proword WRONG,
followed by the correct version. Kamehameha would
then repeat back the necessary portions until the entire
message was correctly received.
When using the WORDS TWICE or READ BACK
procedure, you should remember several rules. First,
the prowords THIS IS and OVER are not repeated twice
when using the WORDS TWICE procedure. These
prowords are not spoken twice in the original
transmission nor in the repeat back version. Second, the
proword ROGER is not necessary to indicate receipt of
the message in the READ BACK procedure. If the
message is correct in its repeated back version, you
would use the phrase THAT IS CORRECT, OUT.
In a collective call where only some of the stations
represented are to read back, those stations should be
specified by transmitting their appropriate call signs
preceding the proword READ BACK. When the order
to read back is given, only those stations directed to do
so will read back. The remaining stations called will
keep silent unless directed by the calling station to
receipt. When not preceded by identifying call signs,
the proword READ BACK means that all stations are to
read back if the call is a collective one.
CORRECTIONS
When a transmitting operator makes an error, the
operator uses the proword CORRECTION to correct it.
The operator then repeats the last word, group, proword,
or phrase correctly sent, corrects the error, and proceeds
Tecumseh made a mistake in the message to
Kamehameha. The method Tecumseh uses to correct
that mistake is:
Kamehameha, THIS IS Tecumseh, Moor
Outboard Side, CORRECTION, Moor Starboard
Side Tender, OVER.
ROGER for it. To ensure reception during bad
with the message. For example, let's assume that