Transmit-after-receive Time Delay

In telecommunication, transmit-after-receive time delay is the time interval from removal of rf energy at the local receiver input until the local transmitter is automatically keyed on and the transmitted rf signal amplitude has increased to 90% of its steady-state value. An Exception: High-frequency (HF) transceiver equipment is normally not designed with an interlock between receiver squelch and transmitter on-off key. The transmitter can be keyed on at any time, independent of whether or not a signal is being received at the receiver input. Source: From Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
terminal adapter
terminal equipment
ternary signal
thermodynamic temperature
third order intercept point
threshold
time assignment speech interpolation
time code ambiguity
minimum spanning tree
time division multiplexing
time domain reflectometer
time out
time scale
t interface
toll switching trunk
total harmonic distortion
traffic flow security
traffic intensity
transceiver
transcoding
transmission
transmission block
transmission coefficient
transmission level point
transmission line
transmission medium
transmit flow control
transmitter attack time delay
transparency
transponder
transposition
transverse redundancy check
tree structure
troposphere
tropospheric wave
truncated binary exponential backoff
trunk
trusted computing base
turnkey
two out of five code
type 1 encryption
type 2 encryption
u interface
unavailability