Knowledge (XXG)

Motorola Minitor

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set the alert duration longer than the second tone. The user must be cautious, however, as setting the alert tone duration too high may cover some voice information. Also, some units may have the volume knob set to control the sound output of the audible alert as well. The user may have the volume turned down to an undetectable level either by accident or by carelessness, thus missing the page. A factory option for "Fixed Alert" (the only option on the earlier Minitor I), however, lets the alert tone override the volume and sound at maximum volume regardless of the volume knob's position. It is possible to program the pager to always vibrate when an alert is received, giving the possibility of either a silent (vibrating) alert or audible and vibrating alerts. Minitor I and II do not have vibrating capabilities standard).
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The vibrating motor in the newer (IV and V) Minitor pagers is quite strong in order to be felt in varying conditions, such as when performing heavy work. It is not uncommon for the vibrating motor in a pager, placed in a charger overnight and left in vibrate mode, to "walk" the pager and charger off
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There are six versions of Minitor pagers. The first was the original Minitor, followed by the Minitor II(1992), Minitor III(1999), Minitor IV, and the Minitor V released in late 2005. The Minitor VI was released in early 2014. The Minitor III, IV, and V used the same basic design, while the original
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The audible alarm on the Minitor lasts only for the duration of the second activation tone. If there is bad reception, the pager may only sound a quick beep, and the user may not be alerted properly. This can be changed by editing the codeplug's "Alert Duration" from STD to Fixed, the user can then
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Newer Minitor pagers can scan two channels by selecting that function via a rotary knob on the pager; in this mode when using a Minitor III or IV the user will hear all traffic, even without the correct tones being sent. If the activation tones are transmitted in this monitor mode, the pager alerts
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case design. Similar voice pagers released by Motorola were the Keynote and Director pagers. They were essentially stripped down versions of the Minitor and never gained widespread use, though the Keynotes were much more common in Europe because they could decode 5/6 tone alert patterns in addition
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conditions can affect the Minitor's ability to receive transmissions. In fact, a remote transmitter hundreds, even thousands of miles away belonging to a separate agency, can activate a Minitor (and also block it) unknowingly if the atmospheric conditions let the signal propagate that far. This is
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or filters that are tuned to a specific audible tone frequency, and must physically be replaced if alert tones are changed. For two-tone sequential paging, there are two reeds, the first tone passes through the first reed, and the second tone passes through the second reed, thereby activating the
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Control examples - For example, function A may be selective call mode, while function B is the vibrate function. Function C monitors channel 2. D is the mode that is similar to a scanner. When the pager is turned on, eight short beeps are heard along with flashing of both LEDs. Holding down the
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Controls - Physical controls (specifically on the Minitor III) include an "A, B, C, D" function knob, a power/volume knob, reset button, voice playback button, external speaker jack, and an amber and red LED. Depending on the model, the selection on the function knobs may do different
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Accessories - Official Motorola accessories for the Minitor pagers include (including some listed above): Desktop Battery Charger, Desktop Battery Charger/Amplifier with Antenna and Relay, Vehicular Charger-Amp with Relay, Earpieces, Extra Loud Lapel Speaker, and Nylon Carrying
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to alert their members to an emergency, since the members were not based at the station. The earliest methods of sounding an alarm would typically be by ringing a bell either at the fire station or the local church. As electricity became available, most fire departments used
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or whistles to summon volunteers (many fire departments still use outdoor sirens and horns along with pagers to alert volunteers). Other methods included specialized phones placed inside the volunteer firefighter's home or business or by base radios or scanners.
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Alert tones - The default, and most common alert is the continuous beeping (sounds like "beep-beep-beep-beep...etc.)". Other alarms can include a steady high pitched tones, and the newest Minitor V's can even have musical tones for general non-emergency
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Newer generation Minitor pagers can simultaneously scan up to two channels and have multiple activation tones. This can be very helpful if a user belongs to several emergency services, or the emergency service has different alarms for different
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Although the Minitor is primarily used by emergency personnel, other agencies such as utilities and private contractors also use the pager. Unlike conventional alphanumeric pagers and cell phones, Minitors are operated on an
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pager. Beginning with the Minitor III series, these physical reeds or filters are no longer necessary, as the pagers now feature all solid-state electronics, and various tone sequences can be programmed via computer
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Field Programmable - Some models have field programmable options such as Non- Priority Scan, Alert Duration, Priority Alert, On/Off Duty, Reset Options, and Push-To-Listen. Many Minitor pagers can be hooked up to a
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Amplified base unit - An optional "Charger/Amplifier" base can be bought. Bigger than the standard charging stand, the "Charger/Amplifier" base not only charges the pager, but has an external antenna for increased
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as normal. Minitor Vs have the option to remain in monitor mode or in selective call mode when scanning two channels. Minitor IIIs and IVs only have the option to remain in monitor mode when scanning two channels.
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Belt Clip - A spring-loaded clip is attached to the back of each Minitor to allow the user to clip the pager onto a pocket or belt. Also, carrying cases and covers are also made to protect the pager.
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Minitor pagers are powered by battery which will eventually run down if not charged (a flashing red LED and audible alarm is used as a warning of low battery power). As the Minitor is portable, its
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network that is generally restricted to a particular agency in a given geographical area. The Minitor is the most common voice pager used by emergency services in the United States. However,
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to activate external devices along with the pager. Some uses for this relay include: Turning on lights in a building such as a fire station, activating an external audio/visual alarm, etc.
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2-way pagers that can display alpha-numeric characters can overcome some of the limitations of voice only pagers, are now starting to replace the Minitor pagers in certain applications.
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without sounding an alarm tone. This is particularly useful in churches, schools, meetings, etc. where a loud noise would be disruptive. This feature is known as "VIBRA-Page".
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Note - most all of the features below refer to the Minitor pagers III and up, the original Minitor and Minitor II pagers may not have some of the listed features
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on that channel until the unit is reset back into selective call mode either manually, or automatically after a set period of time, depending on programming.
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is often used to improve paging coverage, as it can be located for better range than the dispatch center where the page originates from.
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Durability - Unlike older models, the Minitor V is "rainproof" as it meets "Military Standard 810, Procedure 1 for driving rain".
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button in selective call mode will monitor the channel for any transmission on that channel at that time, or pure static as the
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aren't as sensitive as set top or base radios and are usually less able to pick up weak or distant signals.
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alerting the user of a situation. After activation, the pager remains in monitor mode much like a
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Indian Creek Fire Department (Fayetteville, IN) paging tones activating Motorola Minitor pager.
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Charging - Minitor pagers come standard with a charging stand and two rechargeable batteries.
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Minitor pagers, depending on the model and application, can operate in the
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Older Minitor pagers (both the Minitor I and Minitor II series) have tone
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communications, it was difficult for emergency services such as volunteer
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The range of the Minitor's operating distance depends on the strength ("
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VIBRA-Page - For silent alarm activation, most Minitor pagers can also
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to the more popular two tone sequential used in the United States.
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frequency ranges. They are alerted by using two-tone sequential
26: 518: 57:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 164:personnel (both volunteer and career) to alert of 210:Minitor and Minitor II use their own rectangular 489: 487: 475: 473: 471: 8: 505:http://www.mepin.com/Minitor%20III%20MAN.pdf 480:http://www.mepin.com/MINITOR%20III%20MAN.pdf 354:Voice Record - Many Minitor pagers can also 144:is a portable, analog, receive only, voice 382:with a special cable and options changed. 117:Learn how and when to remove this message 467: 7: 55:adding citations to reliable sources 305:conditions, low battery, and even 133:Front view of the Minitor V pager. 25: 297:") of the paging transmitter. A 31: 42:needs additional citations for 524:MINITOR Information on Batlabs 1: 494:MOT_Combo_MinitorBrch_R5.indd 325:, and thus cannot transmit. 188:In the times before modern 150:civil defense organizations 560: 266:and set to alert for 879 539:Firefighting equipment 243: 134: 18:Motorola MINITOR pager 241: 148:typically carried by 132: 51:improve this article 184:Purpose and History 310:commonly known as 244: 135: 66:"Motorola Minitor" 442:Selective calling 317:The Minitor is a 260:Selective calling 239: 127: 126: 119: 101: 16:(Redirected from 551: 507: 502: 496: 491: 482: 477: 240: 194:fire departments 122: 115: 111: 108: 102: 100: 59: 35: 27: 21: 559: 558: 554: 553: 552: 550: 549: 548: 529: 528: 515: 510: 503: 499: 492: 485: 478: 469: 465: 438: 414: 331: 235: 233: 186: 176:, and monitors 123: 112: 106: 103: 60: 58: 48: 36: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 557: 555: 547: 546: 541: 531: 530: 527: 526: 521: 514: 513:External links 511: 509: 508: 497: 483: 466: 464: 461: 460: 459: 454: 449: 447:Radio receiver 444: 437: 434: 421:of a table or 413: 410: 409: 408: 404: 392: 389: 386: 383: 375: 363: 359: 352: 345: 344:announcements. 341: 330: 327: 232: 229: 185: 182: 125: 124: 39: 37: 30: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 556: 545: 542: 540: 537: 536: 534: 525: 522: 520: 517: 516: 512: 506: 501: 498: 495: 490: 488: 484: 481: 476: 474: 472: 468: 462: 458: 455: 453: 450: 448: 445: 443: 440: 439: 435: 433: 431: 426: 424: 418: 412:Disadvantages 411: 405: 402: 398: 393: 390: 387: 384: 381: 376: 373: 369: 364: 360: 357: 353: 350: 346: 342: 338: 337: 336: 335: 328: 326: 324: 320: 315: 313: 308: 304: 300: 296: 291: 287: 285: 280: 275: 273: 269: 265: 261: 257: 253: 252:VHF High Band 249: 230: 228: 226: 222: 216: 213: 207: 205: 200: 195: 191: 183: 181: 179: 178:transmissions 175: 171: 167: 163: 159: 155: 151: 147: 143: 141: 131: 121: 118: 110: 107:February 2012 99: 96: 92: 89: 85: 82: 78: 75: 71: 68: –  67: 63: 62:Find sources: 56: 52: 46: 45: 40:This article 38: 34: 29: 28: 19: 500: 427: 419: 415: 374:is bypassed. 340:emergencies. 333: 332: 321:unit, not a 319:receive-only 316: 292: 288: 276: 248:VHF Low Band 245: 217: 208: 187: 138: 136: 113: 104: 94: 87: 80: 73: 61: 49:Please help 44:verification 41: 457:Dispatching 430:electronics 323:transceiver 307:atmospheric 212:proprietary 199:fire sirens 166:emergencies 533:Categories 463:References 423:nightstand 312:radio skip 231:Activation 170:dispatcher 77:newspapers 397:reception 519:Motorola 452:Plectron 436:See also 380:computer 329:Features 299:repeater 284:software 204:Plectron 152:such as 140:Motorola 372:squelch 362:things. 349:vibrate 303:Weather 295:wattage 274:power. 272:battery 225:digital 174:scanner 142:Minitor 91:scholar 544:Pagers 356:record 254:, and 160:, and 158:rescue 93:  86:  79:  72:  64:  407:Case. 401:relay 368:reset 279:reeds 190:radio 146:pager 98:JSTOR 84:books 154:fire 137:The 70:news 264:MHz 256:UHF 162:EMS 53:by 535:: 486:^ 470:^ 425:. 314:. 286:. 268:Hz 250:, 221:RF 156:, 202:" 120:) 114:( 109:) 105:( 95:· 88:· 81:· 74:· 47:. 20:)

Index

Motorola MINITOR pager

verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Motorola Minitor"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message

Motorola
pager
civil defense organizations
fire
rescue
EMS
emergencies
dispatcher
scanner
transmissions
radio
fire departments
fire sirens
Plectron
proprietary
RF
digital

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