MIL-188-141A Standard, also known as Automatic Link
Establishment (ALE), specified by the US Department of Defense in September 1988
and with two Change Notices in June 1992 and September 1993, is a procedure
whereby radio stations are able to automatically set up their link thus
eliminating the need for skilled operators - in fact the growing lack of trained
and experienced staff was a driving force behind the idea of ALE.
In March 1999 MIL-188-141A was integrated into the new
specification MIL-188-141B, Appendix A. The message protocol was thereby
extended slightly.
A station will transmit a link quality burst which may or
may not contain the address of another station on a series of pre-assigned
frequencies. The listening station(s) will continuously scan through these
frequencies. During scanning the receiving station will perform a link quality
analysis and measure signal to noise ratio and bit error ratio. These
measurements are used to set up a table in memory of link quality assessments
for each station and frequency.
Based on the values of the table, the best frequency
available is selected when the station wishes to transmit. When the ALE
controller of a receiving station hears its own address (or the address of the
group to which it belongs) it will stop the scanning and respond to the call.
The stations will then either switch to a low speed data exchange mode or to a
high speed data (FSK or PSK) modem or to voice mode.
The MIL-188-141A signal is an 8-tone MFSK signal in the
range 750 - 2500 Hz spaced 250 Hz apart. Each tone (symbol) is 8 ms long
corresponding to 125 Baud and represents three bits giving a bit rate of 375
bps.
The MIL-188-141A bit-stream is structured in 24-bit frame,
which includes three bits preamble for the frame type and three 7-bit ASCII characters or just 21 bits unformatted binary
data.
To increase robustness the 24-bit frame is Golay (24, 12)
encoded, and then interleaved giving a total frame length of 48 bits + 1 stuff
bit. Each 49-bit code word is transmitted three times one after another to
combat burst interference.
In both specifications, especially according to
MIL-188-141B Appendix B, the 21-bit ALE frame data can be encrypted before
transmission. This feature is named Link Protection. The data may be encrypted
according to different classified application levels: AL-1 to AL-4. Unencrypted
data is transmitted with AL-0.
Only unencrypted data can be displayed correctly with the
mode decoder. For protected application data – according to MIL-188-141B
Appendix B (Link Protection) – the display may be meaningless, because a user
specific key is necessary for data decryption.
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