The FlexRadio has an advantage over the Pegasus / Jupiter in that the Tayloe
detector produces both an I (in-phase) and Q (quadrature) signal which are
fed to the two channels of a stereo sound card. This actually allows you to
get 44 kHz Bandwidth with a 44 kHz sampling rate (normally, the maximum
bandwidth is half the sampling rate). With the Pegasus / Jupiter, we only
have one channel, so we ARE limited to half the sampling rate, but with a 44
kHz sampling rate (possible on most all sound cards as it is the sampling
rate of audio CDs), we can get 20 kHz of bandwith - which is probably all
the Pegasus passes through the roofing filter anyways. There's no reason
that DSP software using the IF from the Pegasus / Jupiter couldn't look as
good as that from the FlexRadio.
> I had a Flex SDR here for a while and it has the most beautifully
> defined bandscope I've ever seen It makes the ICOM PROs look like trash.
> It takes the I and Q signals from the "Tayloe" detector, which is just
> wideband audio, and plots a trace on the scope. Of course you are
> limited to 20khz but that is plenty. So really, this is a matter for the
> software engineers.
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