HTX-202 (190-1120) Features Faxback Doc. # 15718 The Radio Shack HTX-202 Two-Meter Handheld Transceiver offers both the newly licensed Tech and the experienced amateur some of the most advanced features ever presented in a handheld transceiver. NOTE: You must have a Technician Class or higher Amateur Radio Operator's License and a call sign issued by the FCC to legally transmit using this transceiver. Transmitting without a license carries heavy penalties. Getting a license is easier than ever. True FM Modulation - provides a more natural-sounding signal, with high clarity and better performance with packet systems. 16 Frequency Memories - include one calling-frequency memory, three priority-frequency memories, and 12 standard memories. Individually Programmable Repeater - let you program a different repeater Offsets offset frequency for each memory, and default repeater offset for manually- tuned frequencies. Sub-audible Tone Transmit and - let you transmit the Sub-audible tone Decode (CTCSS) required by some repeaters, and also lets you set a Sub-audible tone that your transceiver must receive to open squelch. Touch-Tone Page - lets you set a sequence of up to five touch-tones your transceiver must receive to sound an alert tone to open the squelch. 16-Digit DTMF Memory Sequences - lets you transmitt all touch tones (0-9, #, *, and A-D). Dual Power Transmitter - lets you select between 1-Watt and 6-Watt to preserve battery power. Five DTMF Memory Sequences - lets you store five touch-tone sequences of up to 15 digits each so that you can quickly transmit the sequences you commonly used to activate repeaters or autopatches, or other stations equipped with touch- tone page. Multi-Function Scanning - lets you scan the standard memories, priority frequency memories, or a frequency range, and automatically resume scanning when the carrier drops, resume scanning after 10 seconds, or stop scanning when carrier is detected. Programmable Frequency Step - lets you set the frequency step for tuning or scanning to 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, or 100 kHz. (/all-06/22/95)