Introduction to APRS
APRS, or the Automatic Packet Reporting System, allows amateur radio operators to exchange position information, short messages, weather reports, telemetry and station-status data over radio. It is widely used for mobile tracking, public-service events, emergency communications and field operations.
APRS Is More Than Vehicle Tracking
Position reporting is its best-known function, but APRS is also a tactical information network supporting messages, weather data, objects, bulletins and telemetry.
What Is APRS?
A radio-based tactical data and position-reporting network.
Automatic Packet Reporting System
APRS stations transmit short digital packets containing location, identification, status or message information. Other stations can receive and display these packets directly.
The system was created for rapidly sharing tactical information among amateur radio operators without requiring a voice conversation for every update.
What Information Can Be Sent?
- GPS coordinates
- Speed and direction of travel
- Short text messages
- Weather-station readings
- Battery voltage and equipment status
- Event checkpoints and tactical objects
- Station comments and availability
Common Uses for APRS
Everyday, public-service and emergency applications.
Position Tracking
GPS-equipped stations can transmit their location for display on radios, computers and online maps.
- Mobile amateur stations
- Hikers and portable operators
- Search-and-rescue teams
- Event-support vehicles
- Emergency resources
Short Messaging
APRS supports short station-to-station messages, acknowledgments, bulletins and status updates.
Weather Reporting
Compatible weather stations can automatically transmit local environmental data.
- Temperature
- Wind speed and direction
- Rainfall
- Humidity
- Barometric pressure
Vehicle Tracking
APRS can help event managers and emergency coordinators monitor the location of vehicles and field resources.
- Command vehicles
- Event-support vehicles
- Emergency communications units
- Off-road and field teams
Public-Service Events
APRS is frequently used to create a live tactical display during organized activities.
- Marathons
- Bicycle events
- Parades
- Search operations
- Disaster exercises
Telemetry
Stations can transmit sensor and equipment information for remote monitoring.
- Battery voltage
- Solar charging status
- Generator condition
- Repeater status
- Environmental sensors
How APRS Works
Position and data packets move through radio and internet-connected systems.
Traditional Packet Operation
Most VHF APRS uses packet radio signaling. Older installations may use a separate TNC, while many modern radios include the packet modem and GPS receiver internally.
Direct and Relayed Reception
A nearby station may receive your packet directly. Digipeaters can relay it farther, and IGates can transfer received packets to internet-connected APRS services.
APRS Network Components
The stations and infrastructure used to move APRS packets.
APRS Station
A radio station that transmits or receives APRS data.
- Home station
- Mobile station
- Portable handheld
- Weather station
- Telemetry device
Digipeater
A digital repeater that receives APRS packets and retransmits them to extend radio coverage.
IGate
An internet gateway receives APRS packets over radio and forwards eligible information to APRS internet services.
- Uploads station positions
- Uploads weather data
- Supports online map displays
- May gate selected messages
Common APRS Frequencies
APRS frequencies vary by country and region.
| Region | Common Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States and Canada | 144.390 MHz | Primary VHF APRS frequency in much of North America |
| Europe | 144.800 MHz | Common APRS frequency in many European countries |
| Australia | 145.175 MHz | Commonly used for APRS operation |
APRS Callsign SSIDs
Numbers added after a callsign help distinguish multiple stations.
| SSID | Common Convention | Example |
|---|---|---|
| No SSID / -0 | Primary or home station | KO6OFK |
| -1 | Generic secondary station or infrastructure | KO6OFK-1 |
| -2 | Additional station or digipeater use | KO6OFK-2 |
| -3 | Additional station or weather-related use | KO6OFK-3 |
| -7 | Handheld or portable station | KO6OFK-7 |
| -9 | Mobile station | KO6OFK-9 |
| -10 | Internet gateway or other network function | KO6OFK-10 |
| -13 | Weather station convention | KO6OFK-13 |
| -14 | Truck or mobile convention | KO6OFK-14 |
| -15 | Additional or generic station | KO6OFK-15 |
APRS Map Symbols
Symbols visually identify the type or purpose of a station.
Mobile Station
Used for cars, trucks and other moving stations.
Home Station
Identifies a fixed residential or permanent operating location.
Portable Station
Used for handheld, field, camping or temporary operating positions.
Weather Station
Indicates an automated or operator-maintained weather-reporting station.
Emergency Resource
Symbols may identify fire, medical, emergency-management or public-service resources.
Aircraft or Balloon
Used for aircraft, high-altitude balloons and related tracking projects.
APRS-Capable Radios
Examples of radios with integrated GPS and APRS functions.
FT5DR
- Built-in GPS receiver
- APRS position beaconing
- Short message capability
- Station-list display
- Portable handheld operation
FTM-510DR ASP
- Built-in GPS
- APRS position beaconing
- APRS messaging
- Mobile station display
- SmartBeaconing support
TH-D75A
- Built-in GPS
- Integrated APRS and packet functions
- Messaging support
- Computer connectivity
- Advanced packet-radio capabilities
SmartBeaconing
Automatic beacon timing based on speed and direction changes.
How It Works
SmartBeaconing adjusts position-report timing based on how the station is moving.
- Beacons less often when stopped
- Beacons more often at higher speeds
- Can transmit when the vehicle makes a significant turn
- Creates more accurate tracks
- Reduces unnecessary channel use
Illustrative Beacon Behavior
| Condition | Possible Behavior |
|---|---|
| Parked | Longer beacon interval |
| Slow travel | Moderate interval |
| Highway speed | More frequent position updates |
| Major turn | Immediate or accelerated beacon |
Viewing APRS Activity Online
Internet-connected gateways make selected APRS data viewable online.
APRS.fi
APRS.fi is a widely used online map and search service for viewing APRS stations, tracks, weather data and other reported information.
- Search by callsign and SSID
- View recent station locations
- Review historical tracks when available
- Display weather-station information
- View nearby APRS activity
Example APRS Configurations
Starting-point examples for a mobile and handheld station.
Yaesu FTM-510DR ASP
Example mobile station:
Yaesu FT5DR
Example portable station:
APRS Creates a Live Tactical Picture
APRS helps operators see where stations and resources are located, exchange short updates and monitor conditions without relying entirely on voice traffic. Used responsibly, it is a valuable tool for everyday amateur radio, public-service events and emergency communications.
