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In telecommunication, a combat-net radio (CNR) is a radio operating in a network that (a) provides a half-duplex circuit and (b) uses either a single radio frequency or a discrete set of radio frequencies when in a frequency hopping mode.
CNRs are primarily used for push-to-talk-operated radio nets for
In the United States, two military standards govern the use of combat net radios and the host applications that communicate over the network - MIL STD 188-220 and MIL STD 2045-47001. In addition to IETF RFCs governing UDP, TCP, and IPv4/IPv6, all seven layers of the OSI communications architecture are addressed. MIL STD 2045-47001 covers layer 7 (application), while MIL STD 188-220 covers layers 1 through 3 (physical, data link, and network).
Examples
See also
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References
This article incorporates public domain material from the General Services Administration document "Federal Standard 1037C" (in support of MIL-STD-188).
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