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"Lynn Coffelt" wrote in
: Ah heck! And here I thought CW was the granddaddy of digital. Lynn I have some old friends, even friends who operated CW on subs in WW2, who've just become enthralled with PSK31 digital mode. If your transceiver has VOX, you don't even need any interface box expense. A 10K pot to control drive from the soundcard to the mic jack is plenty. Hookup is almost too easy. I use Winwarbler, which can copy three simultaneous stations on slightly different frequencies. PSK is SUPERIOR to the finest CW station. It will copy a DX PSK station so far into the noise you can't even tell there are tones in the noise, much less copy Morse from it if he were sending in Morse. PSK stations, to reduce interference in the 3Khz bandwidth the gentlemen's agreement puts them on at 14.070, usually use only 10 or 20 watts of power, even on the other side of the planet. It's uncanny that a cheap little soundcard can pull those tones out of the noise with such accuracy. Ham radio hasn't done much "inventing" in the past 30 years, but PSK is a ham radio invention that should be enjoyed by all. Tune your HF to 14.070 SSB and listen for tiny warbling tones. Plug the headphone jack into the LINE IN on your computer and run the Winwarbler software you get from: http://www.qsl.net/winwarbler/ Point your mouse at any little trace in the waterfall display and click on it. Winwarbler starts decoding instantly in the current window. Click the next window and pick another signal trace. It's that easy...(c; Instructions for use and installation are on the webpage. Simply amazing mode of RTTY comms between stations, with the simplest of equipment. Pick a trace you can hardly make out in the display and click on it...watch it type...(c; -- Larry |
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