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Yes, I was just going to say, with the RST system, which is just RS for voice comms, I think ask people, they're using the ask units, right? So that's actually not a qualitative assessment, right? You've got a radio that actually has a nice signal strength meter. You're going to tell them what signal strength you're actually getting. You have seven ask units, AAS use nine, and then people often do nine plus ten, which they mean plus ten dB. So those are the two scenarios that will show you that the scale is pegged off of nine, and you're getting even more signal after that, right? And then the one to five scale is basically the quality of their voice transmission. So five would be perfect, like it's like they're in the next room. So a five seven and a five nine plus ten sound the same to you. You're saying, hey, basically it sounds like they're standing right next door to me, but that's an interesting note from them, because they might be interested, like how well is their signal propagated, especially, let's say, with the SimplexNet tonight. They might want to know how strong is their signal in different areas of the region. And then you might drop them down to a four if they're still like, yeah, you can still understand them easily, but like now there's like some degradation in signal quality, like there's some static, there's some distortion. You can still easily understand them, but they're clearly not a five anymore, so you might give them whatever, four seven at that point, right? So it's good at graduations. I feel like they're fairly obvious and they do give the other side like a good sense of like how well you're hearing them. Over.

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