Mobile radio telephone
Mobile radio telephone systems were mobile telephony systems that preceded modern cellular network technology. Since they were the predecessors of the first generation of cellular telephones, these systems are sometimes retroactively referred to as pre-cellular systems. Technologies used in pre-cellular systems included the push-to-talk, Mobile Telephone Service, Improved Mobile Telephone Service, and Advanced Mobile Telephone System systems. These early mobile telephone systems can be distinguished from earlier closed radiotelephone systems in that they were available as a commercial service that was part of the public switched telephone network, with their own telephone numbers, rather than part of a closed network such as a police radio or taxi dispatching system.
These mobile telephones were usually mounted in cars or trucks, although portable briefcase models were also made. Typically, the transceiver was mounted in the vehicle trunk and attached to the "head" mounted near the driver seat. They were sold through WCCs, RCCs, and two-way radio dealers.
Origins
Early examples of this technology include:- Motorola, in conjunction with the Bell System, operated the first commercial mobile telephone service in the US in 1946, as a service of the wireline telephone company.
- The A-Netz launched in 1952 in West Germany as the country's first public commercial mobile phone network.
- System 1, launched in 1959 in the United Kingdom as the 'Post Office South Lancashire Radiophone Service', covering South Lancashire and operated from a telephone exchange in Manchester, is cited as the country's first mobile phone network. However, it was manual and for several decades exercised very little coverage.
- The first automatic system was the Bell System's IMTS which became available in 1964, offering automatic dialing to and from the mobile.
- The "Altai" mobile telephone system launched into experimental service in 1963 in the Soviet Union, becoming fully operational in 1965; the first automatic mobile phone system in Europe.
- Televerket opened its first manual mobile telephone system in Norway in 1966. Norway was later the first country in Europe to get an automatic mobile telephone system.
- The Autoradiopuhelin launched in 1971 in Finland as the country's first public commercial mobile phone network.
- The Automatizovaný městský radiotelefon launched in 1978, fully operational in 1983, in Czechoslovakia as the first analog mobile radio telephone in the whole Eastern Bloc.
- The B-Netz launched in 1972 in West Germany as the country's second public commercial mobile phone network.
Radio Common Carrier
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 or handheld that a wired phone was trying to call them. Other systems used DTMF. Some used a system called Secode 2805 which transmitted an interrupted 2805 Hz tone to alert mobiles of an offered call. Some radio equipment used with RCC systems was half-duplex, push-to-talk equipment such as Motorola hand-helds or RCA 700-series conventional two-way radios. Other vehicular equipment had telephone handsets, rotary or push-button dialing, and operated full duplex like a conventional wired telephone. A few users had full-duplex briefcase telephones.
RCCs used paired UHF 454/459 MHz and VHF 152/158 MHz frequencies near those used by IMTS.