fbpx
Wikipedia

APCO radiotelephony spelling alphabet

The APCO phonetic alphabet, a.k.a. LAPD radio alphabet, is the term for an old competing spelling alphabet to the ICAO radiotelephony alphabet, defined by the Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials-International[1] from 1941 to 1974, that is used by the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) and other local and state law enforcement agencies across the state of California and elsewhere in the United States. It is the "over the air" communication used for properly understanding a broadcast of letters in the form of easily understood words. Despite often being called a "phonetic alphabet", it is not a phonetic alphabet for transcribing phonetics.

In 1974, APCO adopted the ICAO Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet, making the APCO alphabet officially obsolete; however, it is still widely used, and relatively few police departments in the U.S. use the ICAO alphabet.[citation needed]

Development

The APCO first suggested that its Procedure and Signals Committee work out a system for a "standard set of words representing the alphabet should be used by all stations" in its April 1940 newsletter.[2][3] By this point, APCO President Herb Wareing "came out in favor of a standard list of words for alphabet letters, preferably suitable for both radiophone and radiotelegraph use."[4]

The list was based on the results of questionnaires sent out by the Procedures Committee to all zone and interzone police radio stations. The questionnaire solicited suggestions, but also included the existing Western Union and Bell Telephone word lists, plus another list then in general use by a number of police stations. Lists used by military services were excluded because of a lack of permission to reproduce. The resulting final list differs from the Bell Telephone word list by only five words, and from the Western Union word list by only eight words.[5]

Replacement with international spelling alphabet

In 1974, APCO adopted the ICAO International Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet,[6] replacing the Adam-Boy-Charlie alphabet APCO first published in 1940. However, most police departments nationwide have kept using the 1940 APCO spelling alphabet, with those using the 1974 APCO spelling alphabet being the exception, rather than the rule. A partial list of police departments using the modern APCO/ICAO spelling alphabet includes:

  • Saint Paul, Minnesota Police Department[7]

LAPD usage history

At some point in the early history of emergency service mobile radio systems,[when?] the LAPD adopted the APCO radio spelling alphabet for relaying precise information on individual letters. For example, the license plate "8QXG518" might be read by a civilian as "eight cue ex gee five eighteen" but with accuracy being paramount, the police dispatcher would say "eight queen x-ray george five one eight." Despite the development in 1941 of the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet and its replacement, circa 1956, by the NATO phonetic alphabet (currently used by all NATO armed forces, civil aviation, telecommunications, and some law enforcement agencies), the LAPD and other law enforcement and emergency service agencies throughout the United States continue to use their traditional system.[citation needed]

APCO's Project 14 updated the definition of Ten-codes, and also adopted the international radiotelephony spelling alphabet for use by law enforcement nationwide.[8]

Comparison of U.S. law enforcement radiotelephony spelling alphabets

The APCO radiotelephony spelling alphabet and its variations represent the letters of the English alphabet using words as follows:

Law enforcement phonetic spelling alphabets
Letter APCO Procedure Committee 1941[5] APCO Project 2

1967[9]

LAPD code word[10] CHP code word[11] LVMPD code word[12] APCO Project 14 (1974)[6] Present ICAO code words[13]
A Adam Adam Adam Adam Adam ALPHA Alfa
B Boy Boy Boy Boy Baker BRAVO Bravo
C Charles Charles Charles Charles Charlie CHARLIE Charlie
D David David David David David DELTA Delta
E Edward Edward Edward Edward Easy ECHO Echo
F Frank Frank Frank Frank Frank FOXTROT Foxtrot
G George George George George George GOLF Golf
H Henry Henry Henry Henry Henry HOTEL Hotel
I Ida Ida Ida Ida Ida INDIA India
J John John John John John JULIETTE Juliett
K King King King King King KILO Kilo
L Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln LIMA Lima
M Mary Mary Mary Mary Mary MIKE Mike
N Nora (North was the original proposal)[14] Nora Nora Nora Nora NOVEMBER November
O Ocean Ocean Ocean Ocean Ocean OSCAR Oscar
P Paul Paul Paul Paul Paul PAPA Papa
Q Queen Queen Queen Queen Queen QUEBEC Quebec
R Robert Robert Robert Robert Robert ROMEO Romeo
S Sam Sam Sam Sam Sam SIERRA Sierra
T Tom Tom Tom Tom Tom TANGO Tango
U Union Union Union Union Union UNIFORM Uniform
V Victor Victor Victor Victor Victor VICTOR Victor
W William William William William William WHISKEY Whiskey
X Xray X-ray X-ray X-ray X-ray XRAY X-ray
Y Young Young Young[15] Yellow Yellow YANKEE Yankee
Z Zebra Zebra Zebra Zebra Zebra ZULU Zulu
0 ZERO (with a strong Z and a short RO) Zero Zero
1 WUN (with a strong W and N) One Wun
2 TOO (with a strong and long OO) Two Too
3 TH-R-EE (with a slightly rolling R and long EE) Three Tree
4 FO-WER (with a long O and strong W and final R Four Fower
5 VIE-YIV (with a long I changing to short and strong Y and V) Five Fife
6 SIKS (with a strong S and KS) Six Six
7 SEV-VEN (with a strong S and V and well-sounded VEN) Seven Seven
8 ATE (with a long A and strong T) Eight Eight
9 NI-YEN (with a strong N at the beginning, a long I and a well sounded YEN) Niner Niner
. Decimal
00 Hundred
000 Thousand

There are several local variations of this system in use. The Metropolitan Police Department (Washington DC), uses the APCO alphabet,[16] however the California Highway Patrol, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department,[citation needed] San Jose Police Department,[citation needed] San Francisco Police Department,[citation needed] and other agencies across the West Coast and Southwestern United States, as well as the[citation needed] use versions that allocate Yellow to "Y" and other agencies' versions allocate Baker or Bravo to "B", or use variations that include Nancy instead of Nora for "N", Easy instead of Edward for "E", or Yesterday for "Y".

With the ultimate goal of clarity, especially in circumstances where signals can be garbled, the use of the word Ocean seems to be advantageous in the radio communication of the letter "O" because it begins with the long, clear vowel "O". The phonetic words Ida and Union feature this same advantage. However, spelling alphabets seem to rarely use initial long vowels. With the exception of Uniform, none of the initial vowels in the NATO alphabet is like this. In an earlier U.S. military alphabet, "A" was indicated by Able, which does start with a long "A", but has since been changed to Alpha (also spelled Alfa, particularly outside the English-speaking countries). In like manner, for clarity, the use of "niner" instead of "nine" for the numeral 9 prevents confusion with the numeral 5, which can sound similar, especially when communications are garbled.[citation needed]

Popular culture

The origin of the name Adam-12 from the television series of the same title comes from this alphabet. The LAPD still calls its basic two-man patrol car an "A" unit, and the letter "A" is spoken as "Adam" in the spelling alphabet. The entire callsign "1-Adam-12" translates to [Division] One (LAPD Central Division) Two Man Patrol Car (Adam unit) in patrol car 12. The 12 refers to what is called "The Basic Car Plan". That is, the patrol area within the precinct. Specialized units use the last numbers as designating the officers. An example would be 6U2, Hollywood Division report writing unit. The patrol car, in LAPD jargon, is called a "black-and-white", owing to the colors. The number that is on the car is called the shop number and is only used for identifying the vehicle.

In the American television series CHiPs from 1977 to 1983, motorcycle units are identified with the letter "M", such as 7M4 (Seven Mary Four) for Officer Frank Poncherello (portrayed by Erik Estrada). His partner, Officer Jon Baker (portrayed by actor Larry Wilcox), is identified as 7M3 (Seven Mary Three). In these callsigns, "7" designates the patrol beat, "M" designates a motorcycle unit, and "3" is the unit number.

Hunter from 1984 to 1991 had actor Fred Dryer as Rick Hunter identify as "1 Wiliam 1 Paul 156" as his call sign where W is "William" and P is "Paul" when he was with the LAPD.

Also, since many police, fire department, and rescue squad TV programs and movies are set in Los Angeles, the words of the LAPD phonetic alphabet have become familiar in the United States, Canada and English-speaking countries around the world[citation needed] due to the wide reach of American entertainment media. When used by workers such as telephone operators speaking to "civilians" who may be unfamiliar with the use of a phonetic alphabet, both the everyday letter and its phonetic alphabet equivalent are spoken, such as "B as in boy", "V as in Victor", etc.

On early seasons of Wheel of Fortune, a close variant of the LAPD phonetic alphabet was used. Players would be encouraged to say things like "I'll have B as in boy" when choosing letters.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Public Safety Communications Standard Operating Procedure Manual, (APCO Project Two, 1967)". U.s.govt.printing Office. 1968. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
  2. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2015. Retrieved May 7, 2015.
  3. ^ "Backscatter Journal" (PDF).
  4. ^ "Page Sixteen, The APCO Bulletin April 1940" (PDF).
  5. ^ a b "New Word List for CW and Phone" (PDF).
  6. ^ a b "APCO Project 14 report, exhibit No. 8, International Phonetic Alphabet" (PDF).
  7. ^ "Saint Paul Police Department Manual, Section 441.04 Radio Procedures".
  8. ^ "APCO Projects".
  9. ^ "A NATIONAL TRAINING MANUAL AND PROCEDURAL GUIDE FOR POLICE AND PUBLIC SAFETY RADIO COMMUNICATIONS PERSONNEL". U.s.govt.printing Office. 1968.
  10. ^ "LAPD Manual Volume 4 Line Procedures".
  11. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 21, 2016.
  12. ^ "Code Card" (PDF).
  13. ^ "Annex 10 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation: Aeronauticatl Telecommunications; Volume II Communication Procedures including those with PANS status" (PDF). Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  14. ^ "Send Code Word Ideas" (PDF).
  15. ^ LAPD Academy 2015
  16. ^ Metropolitan Police Department Form 234, "Radio Transmission and the Standard Phonetic Alphabet".

References

  • "APCO Phonetics". Los Angeles County Disaster Communications Service. 2008. Provides the LASD and LACDCS APCO Phonetic alphabet

apco, radiotelephony, spelling, alphabet, apco, phonetic, alphabet, lapd, radio, alphabet, term, competing, spelling, alphabet, icao, radiotelephony, alphabet, defined, association, public, safety, communications, officials, international, from, 1941, 1974, th. The APCO phonetic alphabet a k a LAPD radio alphabet is the term for an old competing spelling alphabet to the ICAO radiotelephony alphabet defined by the Association of Public Safety Communications Officials International 1 from 1941 to 1974 that is used by the Los Angeles Police Department LAPD and other local and state law enforcement agencies across the state of California and elsewhere in the United States It is the over the air communication used for properly understanding a broadcast of letters in the form of easily understood words Despite often being called a phonetic alphabet it is not a phonetic alphabet for transcribing phonetics In 1974 APCO adopted the ICAO Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet making the APCO alphabet officially obsolete however it is still widely used and relatively few police departments in the U S use the ICAO alphabet citation needed Contents 1 Development 2 Replacement with international spelling alphabet 3 LAPD usage history 4 Comparison of U S law enforcement radiotelephony spelling alphabets 5 Popular culture 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesDevelopment EditThe APCO first suggested that its Procedure and Signals Committee work out a system for a standard set of words representing the alphabet should be used by all stations in its April 1940 newsletter 2 3 By this point APCO President Herb Wareing came out in favor of a standard list of words for alphabet letters preferably suitable for both radiophone and radiotelegraph use 4 The list was based on the results of questionnaires sent out by the Procedures Committee to all zone and interzone police radio stations The questionnaire solicited suggestions but also included the existing Western Union and Bell Telephone word lists plus another list then in general use by a number of police stations Lists used by military services were excluded because of a lack of permission to reproduce The resulting final list differs from the Bell Telephone word list by only five words and from the Western Union word list by only eight words 5 Replacement with international spelling alphabet EditIn 1974 APCO adopted the ICAO International Radiotelephony Spelling Alphabet 6 replacing the Adam Boy Charlie alphabet APCO first published in 1940 However most police departments nationwide have kept using the 1940 APCO spelling alphabet with those using the 1974 APCO spelling alphabet being the exception rather than the rule A partial list of police departments using the modern APCO ICAO spelling alphabet includes Saint Paul Minnesota Police Department 7 LAPD usage history EditAt some point in the early history of emergency service mobile radio systems when the LAPD adopted the APCO radio spelling alphabet for relaying precise information on individual letters For example the license plate 8QXG518 might be read by a civilian as eight cue ex gee five eighteen but with accuracy being paramount the police dispatcher would say eight queen x ray george five one eight Despite the development in 1941 of the Joint Army Navy Phonetic Alphabet and its replacement circa 1956 by the NATO phonetic alphabet currently used by all NATO armed forces civil aviation telecommunications and some law enforcement agencies the LAPD and other law enforcement and emergency service agencies throughout the United States continue to use their traditional system citation needed APCO s Project 14 updated the definition of Ten codes and also adopted the international radiotelephony spelling alphabet for use by law enforcement nationwide 8 Comparison of U S law enforcement radiotelephony spelling alphabets EditThe APCO radiotelephony spelling alphabet and its variations represent the letters of the English alphabet using words as follows Law enforcement phonetic spelling alphabets Letter APCO Procedure Committee 1941 5 APCO Project 2 1967 9 LAPD code word 10 CHP code word 11 LVMPD code word 12 APCO Project 14 1974 6 Present ICAO code words 13 A Adam Adam Adam Adam Adam ALPHA AlfaB Boy Boy Boy Boy Baker BRAVO BravoC Charles Charles Charles Charles Charlie CHARLIE CharlieD David David David David David DELTA DeltaE Edward Edward Edward Edward Easy ECHO EchoF Frank Frank Frank Frank Frank FOXTROT FoxtrotG George George George George George GOLF GolfH Henry Henry Henry Henry Henry HOTEL HotelI Ida Ida Ida Ida Ida INDIA IndiaJ John John John John John JULIETTE JuliettK King King King King King KILO KiloL Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln Lincoln LIMA LimaM Mary Mary Mary Mary Mary MIKE MikeN Nora North was the original proposal 14 Nora Nora Nora Nora NOVEMBER NovemberO Ocean Ocean Ocean Ocean Ocean OSCAR OscarP Paul Paul Paul Paul Paul PAPA PapaQ Queen Queen Queen Queen Queen QUEBEC QuebecR Robert Robert Robert Robert Robert ROMEO RomeoS Sam Sam Sam Sam Sam SIERRA SierraT Tom Tom Tom Tom Tom TANGO TangoU Union Union Union Union Union UNIFORM UniformV Victor Victor Victor Victor Victor VICTOR VictorW William William William William William WHISKEY WhiskeyX Xray X ray X ray X ray X ray XRAY X rayY Young Young Young 15 Yellow Yellow YANKEE YankeeZ Zebra Zebra Zebra Zebra Zebra ZULU Zulu0 ZERO with a strong Z and a short RO Zero Zero1 WUN with a strong W and N One Wun2 TOO with a strong and long OO Two Too3 TH R EE with a slightly rolling R and long EE Three Tree4 FO WER with a long O and strong W and final R Four Fower5 VIE YIV with a long I changing to short and strong Y and V Five Fife6 SIKS with a strong S and KS Six Six7 SEV VEN with a strong S and V and well sounded VEN Seven Seven8 ATE with a long A and strong T Eight Eight9 NI YEN with a strong N at the beginning a long I and a well sounded YEN Niner Niner Decimal00 Hundred000 ThousandThere are several local variations of this system in use The Metropolitan Police Department Washington DC uses the APCO alphabet 16 however the California Highway Patrol Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department citation needed San Jose Police Department citation needed San Francisco Police Department citation needed and other agencies across the West Coast and Southwestern United States as well as the citation needed use versions that allocate Yellow to Y and other agencies versions allocate Baker or Bravo to B or use variations that include Nancy instead of Nora for N Easy instead of Edward for E or Yesterday for Y With the ultimate goal of clarity especially in circumstances where signals can be garbled the use of the word Ocean seems to be advantageous in the radio communication of the letter O because it begins with the long clear vowel O The phonetic words Ida and Union feature this same advantage However spelling alphabets seem to rarely use initial long vowels With the exception of Uniform none of the initial vowels in the NATO alphabet is like this In an earlier U S military alphabet A was indicated by Able which does start with a long A but has since been changed to Alpha also spelled Alfa particularly outside the English speaking countries In like manner for clarity the use of niner instead of nine for the numeral 9 prevents confusion with the numeral 5 which can sound similar especially when communications are garbled citation needed Popular culture EditThe origin of the name Adam 12 from the television series of the same title comes from this alphabet The LAPD still calls its basic two man patrol car an A unit and the letter A is spoken as Adam in the spelling alphabet The entire callsign 1 Adam 12 translates to Division One LAPD Central Division Two Man Patrol Car Adam unit in patrol car 12 The 12 refers to what is called The Basic Car Plan That is the patrol area within the precinct Specialized units use the last numbers as designating the officers An example would be 6U2 Hollywood Division report writing unit The patrol car in LAPD jargon is called a black and white owing to the colors The number that is on the car is called the shop number and is only used for identifying the vehicle In the American television series CHiPs from 1977 to 1983 motorcycle units are identified with the letter M such as 7M4 Seven Mary Four for Officer Frank Poncherello portrayed by Erik Estrada His partner Officer Jon Baker portrayed by actor Larry Wilcox is identified as 7M3 Seven Mary Three In these callsigns 7 designates the patrol beat M designates a motorcycle unit and 3 is the unit number Hunter from 1984 to 1991 had actor Fred Dryer as Rick Hunter identify as 1 Wiliam 1 Paul 156 as his call sign where W is William and P is Paul when he was with the LAPD Also since many police fire department and rescue squad TV programs and movies are set in Los Angeles the words of the LAPD phonetic alphabet have become familiar in the United States Canada and English speaking countries around the world citation needed due to the wide reach of American entertainment media When used by workers such as telephone operators speaking to civilians who may be unfamiliar with the use of a phonetic alphabet both the everyday letter and its phonetic alphabet equivalent are spoken such as B as in boy V as in Victor etc On early seasons of Wheel of Fortune a close variant of the LAPD phonetic alphabet was used Players would be encouraged to say things like I ll have B as in boy when choosing letters See also EditSpelling alphabet Allied Military Phonetic Spelling Alphabet ICAO NATO phonetic alphabet International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO phonetic alphabet also used in the NATO Language specific spelling alphabets Greek spelling alphabet German spelling alphabet Dutch spelling alphabet Russian spelling alphabet Cockney alphabetNotes Edit Public Safety Communications Standard Operating Procedure Manual APCO Project Two 1967 U s govt printing Office 1968 Retrieved April 27 2015 The APCO Bulletin April 1940 PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 23 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Backscatter Journal PDF Page Sixteen The APCO Bulletin April 1940 PDF a b New Word List for CW and Phone PDF a b APCO Project 14 report exhibit No 8 International Phonetic Alphabet PDF Saint Paul Police Department Manual Section 441 04 Radio Procedures APCO Projects A NATIONAL TRAINING MANUAL AND PROCEDURAL GUIDE FOR POLICE AND PUBLIC SAFETY RADIO COMMUNICATIONS PERSONNEL U s govt printing Office 1968 LAPD Manual Volume 4 Line Procedures CHP Pursue Your Future PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 21 2016 Code Card PDF Annex 10 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation Aeronauticatl Telecommunications Volume II Communication Procedures including those with PANS status PDF Retrieved November 1 2017 Send Code Word Ideas PDF LAPD Academy 2015 Metropolitan Police Department Form 234 Radio Transmission and the Standard Phonetic Alphabet References Edit APCO Phonetics Los Angeles County Disaster Communications Service 2008 Provides the LASD and LACDCS APCO Phonetic alphabet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title APCO radiotelephony spelling alphabet amp oldid 1131423402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.