QSA and QRK radio signal reports

The QSA code and QRK code are interrelated and complementary signal reporting codes for use in wireless telegraphy (Morse code). An enhanced format, SINPO code, was published in the ITU Radio Regulations, Geneva, 1959,[1] but is longer and unwieldy for use in the fast pace of Morse code communications.

Current format

The current definition of the QSA and QRK codes are officially defined in ITU Radio Regulations 1990, Appendix 13: Miscellaneous Abbreviations and Signals to Be Used in Radiotelegraphy Communications Except in the Maritime Mobile Service, and are also described identically in ACP131(F),:[2]

SignalQuestionAnswer, Advice, or Order
QSAWhat is the strength of my signals (or those of...)?The strength of your signals (or those of...) is...
  1. scarcely perceptible
  2. weak
  3. fairly good
  4. good
  5. very good
QRKWhat is the intelligibility of my signals (or those of...)?The intelligibility of your signals (or those of...) is...
  1. bad
  2. poor
  3. fair
  4. good
  5. excellent

Historical development

The QSK code is one of the earliest signal reporting formats and is a part of the Q code used for commercial radiotelegraph communication, appearing as one of the twelve Q Codes listed in the 1912 International Radiotelegraph Convention Regulations, and was later adopted by other radio services, especially amateur radio. The QSA code was mandated by the Madrid Convention (Appendix 10, General Regulations) sometime prior to 1936, and specified the following reporting format, as found in the 1936 edition of the ARRL's The Radio Amateur's Handbook[3] and Radiotelegraph & Radiotelephone Codes, Prowords, and Abbreviations.[1]

Request from first station Response from receiving station Meaning
QRK (replaced earlier QJS) QSA1 Hardly perceptible, unreadable
QSA2 Weak, readable now and then
QSA3 Fairly good, readable but with difficulty
QSA4 Good, readable
QSA5 Very good, perfectly readable

The book goes on to note that "Some of the definitions, however, appear to confuse audibility or signal strength with readability, which may be impaired even when signals are strong, by atmospherics, interference, a noisy receiver, etc.", and that because of this Amateurs supplemented the QSA system reports with a readability scale, called the R-System, which used a scale of 1 to 9. The book describes the QSA- and R-systems immediately after describing the R-S-T system, and notes that the R-S-T report format, because it is three digits long, cannot be confused with either of the earlier systems. The book does not clarify the method for requesting an R-S-T report instead of a QSA report.[3]

The U.S. Navy's Communications Instructions of 1929 prescribed a different set of codes for the response:[4] However, for joint Army-Navy operations, the K signal was replaced with the S signal, with exactly the same definitions.[5]

1929 U.S. Navy readability responses
Response from receiving station Meaning
R1 Unreadable
R2 Poor but readable—send each character twice.
R3 Fair—readable at slow speed, send code twice.
R4 Good—readable at moderate speed.
R5 Easily readable.
1929 U.S. Navy strength of signals responses
Response from receiving station Meaning
K1 Very weak—hardly audible.
K2 Moderately weak.
K3 Medium strength.
K4 Moderately strong.
K5 Strong.

An expanded QRK code was first defined to go along with the earlier QSA code in the ITU Radio Regulations Cairo, 1938.[1]

Request from first station Response from receiving station Meaning
QSA (replaced earlier QJS) QSA1 Hardly perceptible, unreadable
QSA2 Weak, readable now and then
QSA3 Fairly good, readable but with difficulty
QSA4 Good, readable
QSA5 Very good, perfectly readable
Request from first station Response from receiving station Meaning
QRK R1 Unreadable
R2 Occasional words distinguishable
R3 Readable with difficulty
R4 Readable with almost no difficulty
R5 Perfectly readable

FM 24-6 Radiotelegraph signal report format

The 1945 U.S. Army Radio Operator's Manual, FM 24-6 defines the radiotelegraph signal report format as follows:[6]

Report Readability Signal Strength
1 Unreadable Scarcely perceptible
2 Readable now and then Weak
3 Readable but with difficulty Fairly good
4 Readable Good
5 Perfectly readable Very good

FM 24-6 further states, "Readability and signal strength reports indicate the desired method of transmission and should be used in that sense. Readability and signal strength reports are not exchanged unless "3" or less, lack of any report being assumed to indicate satisfactory communications."

The report example given below uses military call signs and the obsolete Q Code of QJS for readability instead of the current QRK:

StationTransmission
MB63MY V MB6 QJS 3 K
3MYMB6 V 3MY INT QJS K
MB63MY V MB6 QJS 4 AR
MB6S7P V MB6 INT QJS INT QSA K
S7PMB6 V S7P QJS 3 QSA 3 AR

CCB signal strength and readability

The 1943–1945 Combined Communications Board Publications, including CCBP 3-2: Combined Radiotelephone (R/T) Procedure,[7] describe a slightly newer radiotelephony version of the radiotelegraph procedure described in the U.S. Army Radio Operator's Manual, FM 24-6:

(a) A station is understood to have good readability unless otherwise notified. Strength of signals and readability will not be exchanged unless one station cannot clearly hear another station.

(b) The response to "How do you hear me?" will be a short concise report of actual reception such as "Weak but readable," "Strong but distorted," "Loud and clear," "Strength Four," etc.

At least in CCBP 3–2, no additional detail is given about what the range of the numeric scale is, or the complete list of strength and readability code words are.

See also

References

  1. Alcorn, John W. (1997). Radiotelegraph & Radiotelephone Codes, Prowords, and Abbreviations for the Summerland Radio Club DE VK2JWA (PDF). Lismore, NSW: Southern Cross University Press. ISBN 9781863844246. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2019. Retrieved 2018-05-08. Alt URL
  2. Combined Communications-Electronics Board (April 2006). "ACP 131(F) - Communications Instructions Operating Signals" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 6, 2012.
  3. The Radio Amateur's Handbook (PDF). Newington, CT: American Radio Relay League. 1936. p. 364.
  4. Communication Instructions (PDF). Vol. Part II: RADIO. Washington: United States Government Printing Office. 1929.
  5. Communication Instructions (PDF). Vol. Part IV: PROCEDURE AND EXAMPLES. Washington: United States Government Printing Office. 1929.
  6. United States War Department (1945). Radio Operator's Manual. Field Manual. Fort Monroe, VA: Army Field Printing Plant, CAS. FM24-6.
  7. Myers, G. B.; Charles, B. P. (1945-02-14). CCBP 3-2: Combined Radiotelephone (R/T) Procedure. Washington, D. C.: Combined Communications Board. pp. 1, 2.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.