As a Motorola premier gold partner, we are well-equipped with deep industry knowledge and powerful expertise.
Together with Motorola, we provide
unrivalled solutions and service to help customers generate value and
competitive gain, through the range of innovative and industry-leading
communication solutions and after-sales services targeted at diversified industries.
MotorolaWalkie talkie and two-way radios have the technology
you need to increase productivity and maximize your performance in today's
competitive business environment.
Professionals in today’s competitive
environment need to have strategic communication tools like Walkie talkie,
two-way radio and constantly use information systems to effectively manage
business activities.
Wireless system provides Sales and
service for Motorola Walkie talkies and two-way radios. We also carry
accessories and spares for Motorola two-way radios - Audio Accessories,
Battery, impress Battery, impress Single Unit Charger, Multi Unit Charger, impress
Multi Charger, Battery Maintenance System, Carry Case.
Many organizations across a wide range of
industries use two-way radios for internal communications between and among
personnel.
Our two way business radios are ideal for
use in the broad spectrum of Industries; But mainly in Construction, Oil and
gas, petrochemicals, Pharmaceutical, Restaurants, Outdoors, Government Offices,
Hospitals, Military and defiance applications, Manufacturing and Campus uses,
Theaters, event management, security.
Walkie talkies
are handheld portable radios that use radio waves to communicate wirelessly on
a single frequency band. They were first developed in the 1930s by a Canadian
inventor named Donald Higgs and, quite independently, by an American named
Alfred Gross. They were originally called two-way radios or pack sets, but as
the thing that made them really stand out from telephones was the fact that you
could both walk and talk at the same time, they became known as walkie talkies.
Each
battery-powered handset contains a transmitter (which doubles as a receiver),
an antenna for sending and receiving radio waves, a loudspeaker that also often
functions as a microphone, and a 'push-to-talk' button that, unsurprisingly,
you push to talk.
The
loudspeaker-cum-microphone works like an intercom system. Because speakers and
microphones contain what are essentially the same components – a magnet, a coil
of wire, and a cone made of paper or plastic to receive or generate sound –
they can be combined into a single device and the direction of the electrical
current determines which function is given precedence. These features are
separate in more sophisticated models.
Walkie talkies
are still widely used in various organizations and industries where
instantaneous and group communication is required. These include the emergency
services, security services, the military and transportation industries. They
are also used in construction, hospitality, manufacturing and in many other
sectors.
The fact that
they are hard-wearing and easy to use also makes them very popular with
families. Kids love using them when out and about and they're great for parents
to keep in touch with their kids when they're on a camping holiday, for
example.
Walkie talkies are powered by battery,
are made for transmitting and receiving messages and are manufactured to work
to specific radio frequencies. Radio waves are part of the electromagnetic
spectrum and are transmitted at the speed of light, or 186,000 miles per
second. Whilst a user is not speaking the unit will be issuing static as it is
in receiving mode, and you will hear a hissing noise just like you would with a
radio that isn’t tuned into a station.
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