Using Direct Kill To Kill Your Own Radio; Radio Inhibit; Location - Motorola APX 8000HXE 3.5 User Manual

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MN004482A01-AN
Chapter 7: Advanced Features
2. Press the Menu Select button directly below Kill.
The display shows Enter Password.
3. Use the keypad to enter your Tactical Inhibit Encode Password.
4. Press the Menu Select button directly below Ok .
The display shows the radio Contact IDs.
5. Perform one of the following actions:
or
to the required ID.
Press the Menu Select button directly below LNum to go to the last number dialed.
Use the keypad to enter the required ID.
Press the Menu Select button directly below Send to initiate command.
If the receiving radio received the command, your radio display shows Ack received.
If the receiving radio does not have encryption key to decrypt the received encrypted command, your
radio display shows Decrypt failed.
If the receiving radio is powered off or already killed, your radio display shows No Acknowledgment.
Result: Once the receiving radio received the command, its screen turns blank, the killed radio is inoperable.
7.20.2.2

Using Direct Kill to Kill Your Own Radio

When and where to use: Direct Kill allows you to make your own radio inoperable.
Procedure:
Press and hold the Top Side button then press the Orange button until the display turns blank and
becomes inoperable.
7.21

Radio Inhibit

This feature allows the system administrator to put a radio into a nonfunctional state when the radio is
missing or in an unknown hand. The radio stays in this state regardless of its power changes.
NOTE:
If the radio has Intersystem roaming capability, the system administrator is able to put the radio into a
nonfunctional state when the missing radio roams to another system.
The radio can only be uninhibited by receiving an uninhibited command from the system administrator.
7.22

Location

The Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) in the radio integrates information from the Global
Positioning System (GPS) and the Global Navigation Satellite System (GLONASS) to determine the
approximate geographical location of your radio.
NOTE: The Location feature is addressed as Global Positioning System (GPS) across the manual as
the naming convention of the buttons and strings remain the same as the legacy feature of GPS.
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