Kenwood TM-V7E Stereo System User Manual


 
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Situation 2:
While operating mobile on the way to work every morning,
you prefer a silent transceiver that does not interrupt the
morning calm. In addition, you feel that a bright display is
a waste of electricity in sunlight.
At night when driving home, you realize the Beep function
truly serves a purpose and you acknowledge it is nice to
see a bright display after dark.
Solution:
In two PM channels, store the same operating data such
as frequency, offset, DTSS code, etc., and store different
settings for the Display Dimmer and Beep functions. Then
you can quickly recall the best settings for day or night
operating.
Situation 3:
You cannot figure out how you can make the transceiver
exit the current mode.
Solution:
Simply recall PM channel 1 that contains an exact copy of
the transceiver default environment. You will not lose the
contents of any memory channels.
APPLICATION EXAMPLES
The following are examples of how you might use
Programmable Memory. These examples may not
represent applications useful to you, but you will
understand the flexibility of this function.
Situation 1:
You share your transceiver with other members in your
family or club. However, each individual has personal
preferences for how they like to set various functions. You
have to keep changing many settings each time you use
the transceiver.
Solution:
Because 4 PM channels are available, up to 4 persons can
separately program the transceiver and store their
customized environment. Then each person can quickly
change to his or her favorite settings, simply by recalling a
PM channel.
It is too much trouble to change the settings after
somebody else has reconfigured them. So this application
may avoid having a feature-rich transceiver but never using
many useful features.