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[TenTec] CW tuning with Digipan

To: <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: [TenTec] CW tuning with Digipan
From: pcuellar@bright.net (Phil Cuellar)
Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2001 20:05:34 -0500
I've been doing something similar with Spectogram. Also helpful for setting
the sidetone on your rig to the desired frequency.

73 de KI8JQ - Phil

----- Original Message -----
From: Henry Mauro <hmauro@pacbell.net>
To: <tentec@contesting.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 20, 2001 7:49 PM
Subject: [TenTec] CW tuning with Digipan


>
> I've been using Digipan (the free PSK31 software program) for CW and
> RTTY tuning for a while and it really work great. It even helps on
> SSB.  Here's how:
>
> ON CW:  Digipan displays the complete audio spectrum coming from your
> receiver as a waterfall display.  When you engage a CW filter and tune
> to a spot in the band with noise and no signal you will see swath of
> blue that shows you exactly what audio frequencies are in the passband.
> Recent versions of Digipan let you place a marker (looks like a thin
> red line) at any audio frequency.  I put a marker at 600 hz (my
> preferred side-tone frequency).  CW signals appear like a dashed yellow
> line.  To get on frequency, you just tune until the yellow CW signal
> lines up with the red marker.  You are now dead-on frequency.  I find
> it much easier to do this visually than to match the CW tone with the
> spot tone in my head.
>
> There is the added benefit in that you can see just exactly where your
> PBT control is placing the passband.  For instance if you use a 250
> hz filter you can center the passband on 600 hz exactly.  If you cascade
> first and second IF filters you can see exactly what the result
> looks like.  Also for the first time, I find I can use the manual notch.
> It looks like a black snake that you move to cover up an interfering
> signal. Its much easier to get on target visually than by ear.
>
> ON RTTY: -- I put markers on the mark and space frequencies and center
> the 500 hz filter on them.  You tune the radio until the RTTY signal
> lines up with the markers.  This beats the display on my PK232 by far.
>
> ON SIDEBAND:  I have the INRAD 2.8 filters in both the 9mhz and 6 mhz
> IF.  With the waterfall display I can line them up perfectly for the
> widest (best sounding) response.
>
> Connecting the sound board to the radio was pretty easy with the OmniVI.
> No isolation transformers, attenuators or the like were required.  Just
> audio cable between the sound card and the radio. For receive only, the
> adjustment of the audio level was a snap.  Things got a bit tricky
> when adjusting levels so the VOX worked on transmit but not too bad.
>
> The only warning is that once you get the sound board hooked up to the
> radio there is seemingly no end to the software to check out...
> MFSK16 is the latest WOW.
>
> 73,  Henry,  W6GZ




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