To: | rtty@contesting.com |
---|---|
Subject: | Re: [RTTY] Multi Computer SO2R with N1MM |
From: | Jay WS7I <ws7ik7tj@gmail.com> |
Reply-to: | ws7ik7tj@gmail.com |
Date: | Sat, 23 Feb 2013 07:55:59 -0800 |
List-post: | <rtty@contesting.com">mailto:rtty@contesting.com> |
If there is "any single time that their is 2 transmitted signals you are
in violation and are not a Single Operator. All SO#R operators need to
run a hardware device to preclude this situation. This is nothing new
at all. Just the over looking by the group that it isn't a problem. It
is quite easy to put a system in place and to find stations that are
running on two bands at once. 44 Ms of overlap means 2 signals and this
means you are illegal.
Also it depends a great deal what you are using for PTT and also what radios are interfaced and which modem you have selected to use. If the 20-40Ms gap is right then it needs to be controlled and at least 100Ms it sounds like from this study. But again. it should be absolute hardware control and not a software situation. 2-Signals EVER is illegal. On 2/22/2013 5:04 PM, Mark n2qt wrote: In W0YK's email on AA5AU's WPX notes in talking about using N1MM for multicomputer SO2R he stated: "I found that the interlock is very slow and 2-3 characters overlaptransmission from both radios. OTOH, no software interlocks can guaranteethe absence of two signals, if even for milli-seconds, so the operator is responsible via a hardware interlock to not transmit simultaneously." Since I had used this approach to operate SO#R I decided to measure any possible overlap. I would set one rig to cq and then interrupt it bytransmitting on the other rig. I did this where one rig was controlled bya networked computer and then with the more typical single computer N1MM SO2R. I used a storage scope to look at the rf output from the rigs. For the networked computer configuration the the worst case was 566msof overlap with typical overlaps of over 400 ms. As Ed stated this is long enough for several characters to be sent in violation of one signal at a time.Some other interlock is needed for rule compliance. However when using N1MM in its more typical single computer SO2R mode,it is obvious the programmers worked to eliminate this overlap. There typically was a 20 - 40 ms gap with NO RF emitted, between one rig's transmit signal dropping and the second rig's transmit coming up. After many sequences I did manage to get one series where there was just about 44ms of overlap. This is well less than one half character's worth of time. I personally feel good aboutthis performance. _______________________________________________ RTTY mailing list RTTY@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/rtty |
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