Project 25

What is Project 25?
Project 25 (P25) is the standard for interoperable digital two-way
wireless communications products and systems. Developed under state,
local and federal government guidance and Telecommunications Industry
Association (TIA) governance, P25 is gaining worldwide acceptance for
public safety, security, public service, and commercial applications.
The published P25 standards suite is administered by the TIA in their
Mobile and Personal Private Radio Standards Committee (TR-8). Equipment
that demonstrates compliance with P25 is able to meet a set of minimum
requirements to fit the needs of public safety. These include the ability
to interoperate with other P25 equipment, for example so that users
on different systems can talk via direct radio contact.
The P25 standard was created by and for public safety professionals.
What Are the Benefits of P25?
What is Required for P25 Compliance?
At a minimum, a P25 radio system must provide interoperability with
these two mandatory P25 Standard interface components:
· The Common Air Interface (CAI)
· The Improved Multi-Band Excitation (IMBE) vocoder
The CAI enables P25 radios to interoperate and communicate digitally
across P25 networks and directly. This portion of the P25 standard suite
was selected to meet the unique radio system needs of the public safety
environment; coverage reliability, system design flexibility, and inter-vendor
compatibility.
The IMBE vocoder sets a uniform standard for converting speech into
the digital bitstream. IMBE was selected as the coding scheme most successful
at making male and female voices audible against background noises such
as moving vehicles, sirens, gunshots, and traffic noise – the
conditions of public safety use.
These two components, when used together enable P25 users to interoperate
and communicate digitally directly between units and across networks,
agencies, and vendors.
P25 has also defined standard modes of operation to enable multi-vendor
interoperability for additional system functions: trunking, encryption,
over-the-air rekeying, to name a few.
Project 25 also continues to develop a set of defined system interfaces
allow the P25 system elements to communicate with host computers, data
terminals and the public switched telephone network (PSTN). These interfaces
are critical to assure that P25 systems maintain compatibility with
the evolving telecommunications and data-communications world.
From the beginning, P25 has targeted four primary
objectives:
1. Allow effective, efficient, and reliable intra-agency and inter-agency
communications
… so organizations can easily implement interoperable and seamless
joint communication in both routine and emergency circumstances.
2. Ensure competition in system life cycle procurements
… so agencies can choose from multiple vendors and products,
ultimately saving money and gaining the freedom to select from the widest
range of equipment and features.
3. Provide user-friendly equipment
… so users can take full advantage of their radios’ lifesaving
capabilities on the job – even under adverse conditions –
with minimal training.
4. Improve radio spectrum efficiency
… so systems will have enough capacity to handle calls and allow
room for growth, even in areas where the spectrum is crowded and it
is difficult for agencies to obtain licenses for additional radio frequencies.
The clear statement of these four objectives at the onset of the project
has focused the standard directly at the needs of the public safety
community. This “needs-based” approach to standards development
assures that, when implemented, the system will succeed at meeting these
objectives.
What is the Status of P25 Today?
P25 systems are available today and being deployed globally. Many organizations
have mandated that new land mobile radio system purchases follow P25
standards. P25 is ongoing. The standard continues to evolve as the needs
of users and the capabilities of technology advance. Both users and
manufacturers have an important role to play in shaping P25.
Looking to the Future.
There are two phases of P25 development:
Phase 1 specifies the CAI and vocoder requirements for 12.5 kHz bandwidth
operation, along with several additional functions. Phase 1 is now complete
and many systems are being implemented using these technologies.
Phase 2 is currently in development. Phase 2 will specify additional
air interface specifications to provide 6.25 kHz equivalent bandwidth
operation to allow better spectrum efficiency.
Since Phase 2 will continue to maintain the focus on the four primary
objectives, you can be assured of compatibility with Phase 1 systems
for interoperation and migration.