Ask any radio monitor what information they consider important during any
monitoring session, and usually two items will top their list: frequencies and
call signs. If you can hear activity on a particular frequency, unless you can
fully identify the participants transmitting on that frequency, you can’t fully
appreciate or document the traffic you are hearing.
With
millions of radio stations furnishing a variety of communication services
throughout the world, it is necessary that their transmissions carry
distinctive call signs or identifiers. Call signs have a four-fold purpose:
They may identify the nationality of the station, the agency operating a
particular station, the type of station, and the identity of each individual
station being heard on the monitored frequency.
The
need for station identifications/call signs can easily be illustrated here in
the United States, which leads all other countries in the use of the radio
spectrum, that now has some 85 different kinds of radio services operated by
the government, military and civilians entities, providing air, sea, land and
space communication services. There are hundreds of thousands of stations on
the air and call signs and other forms of identification help the radio monitor
sort through the various stations that are heard.
A
call sign is defined as any combination of alphanumeric characters or phonetically
pronounceable characters (trigraph), which identifies a communications
facility, a command, an authority, an activity or unit. To aid the radio
monitor in their listening endeavors, the International
Call Sign Handbook series of books/e-books has been published.
Teak Publishing is pleased to
announce their latest Kindle e-book -- the
fourth edition of International Call Sign Handbook. This e-book
represents the most comprehensive collection of military and government station
identifications ever published for the radio listening hobby. It is the result
of year’s research, study and monitoring the HF/VHF/UHF radio spectrum, by the
author. Many different radio monitoring disciplines have been used to compile
the listings in this book. If you monitor the HF, VHF or UHF radio spectrum,
there is something in this book for you.
The
information presented in this book has also been gathered through personal
correspondence, material published in the former Monitoring Times
magazine, various radio publications, newsletters, public domain government and
private internet web sites, but most have been gathered the old fashioned way
via on-the-air monitoring. In addition, we have received generous support and
contributions from many individuals in the radio hobby.
In
addition to international and military/government tactical call signs, other
types of identifiers such as Automatic Link Establishment (ALE) and Mode-S aircraft
addresses have been included in this e-book. There is a chapter that had basic
introductory material, as well as chapters devoted to call sign / words used by
the Department of Defense including the US. Air Force, U.S. Army, U.S. Navy and
Marine Corps. There are sections that cover the various Military Auxiliary
Radio Services and the U.S. Air Force Civil Air Patrol auxiliary service.
There
is also a chapter that covers call signs and ALE identifiers for the U.S. Coast
Guard service. Sections in that chapter include a Coast Guard aircraft fleet
list, miscellaneous U.S. coast guard calls, and also their international call
signs.
Another
large chapter covers various U.S. Government call signs. Sections in this
chapter include the U.S. Custom and Border Patrol COTHEN radio system and ALE
address list, plus call signs from the following department and agencies -
Department of Commerce (DOC), Department of Energy (DOE), Department of
Homeland Security (DHS), Department of the Interior (DOI), Department of the
Interior (DOI) Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of Justice (DOJ),
Department of State, Department of Transportation, Department of Veterans
Affairs (DVA), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Environmental Protection
Agency, Federal Aviation Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI),
Federal Communications Commission, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA),
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), General Services Administration (GSA),
Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development Department (HUD), Miscellaneous
Listings, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National
Communications System (NCS), and U.S. Marshal Service (USMS) service.
One
of the larger chapters is devoted to an international / worldwide call signs
list. We have a sampling of government and military call signs from 75 counties
and international agencies.
The
latest craze in aircraft military is decoding Mode-S/ICAO24 radio signals and
is included in this book. Our list in this edition covers primarily government
/ military aircraft and introductory material on Mode-S monitoring.
The
last chapter of this book contains a large list of resource information, useful
in interpreting the individual entries listed in the book. Sections on U.S.
Navy ship/squadron classifications; U.S. Coast Guard cutter designators; a
massive list of abbreviations and acronyms that appear in the book; a
comprehensive country abbreviation list; and the latest Table of Allocations of
International Call signs from the International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
are included in the last chapter on the e-book.
The
Teak
Publishing 4th International Call Sign Handbook is now
available for purchase worldwide from Amazon.com at http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00VV7NR1U. The price for this e-Book
edition is US$6.99. This book is being released internationally. Amazon
customers in the United Kingdom, Germany, France Spain, Italy, Japan, India,
Canada, Brazil, Mexico and Australia can order the e-Book from Amazon websites
directly servicing these countries. All other countries can use the regular
Amazon.com website.
You
do not need to own a Kindle reader to read Amazon e-book publications. You can
read any Kindle book with Amazon’s free reading apps. There are free Kindle
reading apps for the Kindle Cloud Reader, Smartphones (iPhone, iTouch, Android,
Windows Phone and Blackberry); computer platforms (Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 8
and Mac); Tablets (iPad, Android and Windows 8), and, of course, all of the
Kindle family of readers including the Kindle Fire series. A Kindle e-book
allows you to buy your book once and read it anywhere. You can find additional
details on these apps at this link on the Amazon website at www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000493771.
For
additional information on this and other Teak Publishing radio hobby books,
monitor the company sponsored Internet blogs – The Military Monitoring Post (http://mt-milcom.blogspot.com/), The Btown Monitor Post (http://monitor-post.blogspot.com/) and The Shortwave Central (http://mt-shortwave.blogspot.com/) for availability of
additional e-books that are currently in production.
Information
on other publications by the author is available on the author’s page at Amazon
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B00G1QMO4C.
About the Author
In
1971 Larry joined the U.S. Navy and served on U.S. naval warships and in the
naval aviation community until his retirement in 1993. He retired in New
Orleans with the rank of Chief Petty Officer.
He
was first licensed as an amateur radio operator in 1973 with the call sign
WH6INU. Later, Larry upgraded to General Class and spent his early ham days
operating out of the famed KH6SP ham shack in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, with his
his ham mentor and friend Butch Weber, WA4GIF, chasing DX and contesting.
Now
a licensed Extra Class ham, holding the call sign N5FPW, Larry enjoys operating
digital modes, contesting and chasing DX. Other aspects of the radio hobby that
he enjoys include monitoring military communications (throughout the radio
spectrum), federal government monitoring, chasing HF utility communications,
satellite monitoring, and AM, FM and TV broadcast DXing.
Larry
worked for Grove Enterprises in Brasstown, North Carolina, the publisher of Monitoring
Times and Satellite Times magazines. His job on the MT staff was the magazines assistant / technical editor and staff
journalist. He wrote for Monitoring Times magazine as a
freelance writer and full-time staffer for over 30 years until that publication
closed in 2013. Larry was the creative force behind a new publication Satellite
Times magazine, and was the magazine’s managing editor, a position he
held for more than five years.
He
has written dozens of radio equipment reviews and several monthly columns in
the pages of the former Monitoring Times including the Signals from Space, Utility World, Fedcom – Federal Monitoring column, Milcom- a military monitoring column,
GlobalNet, First Look/MT Equipment/Book
Reviews. Service Search, Ask Larry, and the magazine’s Whats New column.
Over
the years Larry has also written 10 radio hobby books (some with multiple
editions), dozens of magazine features, and numerous technical articles for a
wide variety of communications publications and radio hobby club newsletters.
He
currently resides in western North Carolina, with his wife Gayle W4GVH. They
have one son, Loyd W4LVH, who is married and lives in South Carolina.
Larry
is the founder and president of the Teak Publishing Company based in western
North Carolina. His first e-book published under the Teak Publishing banner,
the North American Enroute Aviation
Guide, was an immediate Amazon #1 Best Selling Kindle eBook.