RTTY
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: [RTTY] <CR> and off-freq observation comments

To: Chuck Brudtkuhl <chuck.brudtkuhl@yahoo.com>,rtty <rtty@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [RTTY] <CR> and off-freq observation comments
From: Bill Turner <dezrat1242@ispwest.com>
Date: Mon, 09 Jan 2006 06:58:59 -0800
List-post: <mailto:rtty@contesting.com>
ORIGINAL MESSAGE:

At 07:16 PM 1/8/2006, Chuck Brudtkuhl wrote:
>   The observations regarding off frequency responses.  I used to 
> think this was getting to be the norm .. that and the move to 200 
> hz shift due to the movement to TNCs.  This off-frequency response 
> (and wide shift) is VERY noticable when using a scope to 
> tune.  Often stations were so far off freq as to be out of my 
> narrow receive band-pass.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I've noticed it too. I'm sure it happens because of incorrect use of 
AFC. Here's how:

Station A has his AFC on while S&Ping, but is either not using NET or 
is using FSK, which does not respond to NET. As he tunes across the 
band, he finds station B calling CQ. He watches his tuning indicator 
and when it shows B correctly tuned, he stops turning the knob. 
Unknowingly, the AFC has "reached out" and tuned in station B before 
his transceiver is actually tuned to B's frequency. A calls B 
thinking he has him tuned in but A's TX is actually off frequency.

So how does A avoid this situation? Actually, there are two things to do:

1. Turn off AFC when S&Ping.
2. If using MMTTY, also click the "HAM" button to reset an changes 
AFC has made.

The last one is vitally important. With MMTTY, when AFC tunes in a 
signal, it changes the tune frequencies for MARK and SPACE. Just 
turning AFC off does NOT reset them to the defaults, so one could go 
merrily along tuning in stations off frequency and never notice it. 
Been there, done that myself. :-)

AFC is great when CQing, but should never be used during S&P unless 
one also uses NET. Note that NET only functions with AFSK, not with 
FSK. It would be great if turning off AFC would automatically reset 
the demodulator frequencies to the default. Perhaps I'll suggest that 
to the author.

Bill, W6WRT

_______________________________________________
RTTY mailing list
RTTY@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/rtty

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>