Old EDACS system off the air
Old EDACS system off the air
Looks like the old MA/COM EDACS system is off the air now. No more control channels heard or seen in the 866-868 range.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
Already? God I was hoping at least until the start of July.brandon wrote:Looks like the old MA/COM EDACS system is off the air now. No more control channels heard or seen in the 866-868 range.
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Re: Old EDACS system off the air
Probably a good thing at this point. Nothing more to be heard anyway, so I can now delete these freqs and use that bank of channels for something else.
<>< Mike
<>< Mike
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
Good idea. That is exactly what I did. Just hope they have a fallback in mind.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
The "fallback" is failsoft mode. They also have all the repeated RSO VHF mutual aid channels in their radios that can be utilized as a fallback system. If worse comes to worse, all the VHF and 800 Mhz mutual aid frequencies are in the radios as well, in addition to many conventional VHF and 800 systems run by allied agencies in the County.
The old EDACS system belongs to Sprint now. The frequencies and equipment was sold to them as part of the rebanding settlement between the County and Sprint / Nextel. Stand by for some major changes coming to 800 mhz as re-banding is implemented in this region in the next year or two.
The old EDACS system belongs to Sprint now. The frequencies and equipment was sold to them as part of the rebanding settlement between the County and Sprint / Nextel. Stand by for some major changes coming to 800 mhz as re-banding is implemented in this region in the next year or two.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
I remember reading here once that they aren't using their conventional frequency set anymore.CQPSK wrote:The "fallback" is failsoft mode. They also have all the repeated RSO VHF mutual aid channels in their radios that can be utilized as a fallback system. If worse comes to worse, all the VHF and 800 Mhz mutual aid frequencies are in the radios as well, in addition to many conventional VHF and 800 systems run by allied agencies in the County.
The old EDACS system belongs to Sprint now. The frequencies and equipment was sold to them as part of the rebanding settlement between the County and Sprint / Nextel. Stand by for some major changes coming to 800 mhz as re-banding is implemented in this region in the next year or two.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
cvrules90 wrote:I remember reading here once that they aren't using their conventional frequency set anymore.CQPSK wrote:The "fallback" is failsoft mode. They also have all the repeated RSO VHF mutual aid channels in their radios that can be utilized as a fallback system. If worse comes to worse, all the VHF and 800 Mhz mutual aid frequencies are in the radios as well, in addition to many conventional VHF and 800 systems run by allied agencies in the County.
The old EDACS system belongs to Sprint now. The frequencies and equipment was sold to them as part of the rebanding settlement between the County and Sprint / Nextel. Stand by for some major changes coming to 800 mhz as re-banding is implemented in this region in the next year or two.
~Probably because the EDACS radios were 800 Mhz only. Now they have VHF in all the HT's and mobiles.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
I'm getting a very strong control channel on 868.7625 in Hemet/San Jacinto area, don't think it is coming from Orange County, it's too strong. It is one of the EDACS Central system freqs, so I'm guessing that is still active, although I have not heard FICC for a month or so from my location.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
Maybe they're taking it down region by region.sp1989 wrote:I'm getting a very strong control channel on 868.7625 in Hemet/San Jacinto area, don't think it is coming from Orange County, it's too strong. It is one of the EDACS Central system freqs, so I'm guessing that is still active, although I have not heard FICC for a month or so from my location.
Re: Old EDACS system off the air
The fallback plan was EDACS. After a certain period of time that the new system is up and running, then the need for a fallback plan diminishes. Any future failures are dealt with, not rolled back to the old system being replaced. That only makes sense for the first couple of weeks after a cutover. Then, you've got to move on.cvrules90 wrote:...Just hope they have a fallback in mind.
Given the level of planning and testing that took place on that system, if management decides to shut down EDACS and cancel any roll back contingency plans, it was probably a rational and sound decision. At least as rational and sound as it's reasonably possible to do.