Radio Common Carrier or RCC was a service introduced in the
1960s by independent telephone companies to compete against AT&T's IMTS.
RCC systems used paired UHF 454/459 MHz and VHF 152/158 MHz frequencies near
those used by IMTS. RCC based services were provided until the 1980s when
cellular AMPS systems made RCC equipment obsolete.
Some RCC systems were designed to allow customers of
adjacent carriers to use their facilities, but equipment used by RCCs did not
allow the equivalent of modern "roaming" because technical standards
were not uniform. For example, the phone of an Omaha, Nebraska–based RCC
service would not be likely to work in Phoenix, Arizona. Roaming was not
encouraged, in part, because there was no centralized industry billing database
for RCCs. Signaling formats were not standardized. For example, some systems
used two-tone sequential paging to alert a mobile of an incoming call. Other
systems used DTMF. Some used Secode 2805, which transmitted an interrupted 2805
Hz tone (similar to IMTS signaling) to alert mobiles of an offered call. Some
radio equipment used with RCC systems was half-duplex, push-to-talk LOMO
equipment such as Motorola hand-helds or RCA 700-series conventional two-way
radios. Other vehicular equipment had telephone handsets, rotary or pushbutton
dials, and operated full duplex like a conventional wired telephone. A few
users had full-duplex briefcase telephones (radically advanced for their day)
At the end of RCC's existence, industry associations were
working on a technical standard that would have allowed roaming, and some
mobile users had multiple decoders to enable operation with more than one of
the common signaling formats (600/1500, 2805, and Reach). Manual operation was
often a fallback for RCC roamers.
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