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- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 94 23:07:49 PST
- From: Info-Hams Mailing List and Newsgroup <info-hams@ucsd.edu>
- Errors-To: Info-Hams-Errors@UCSD.Edu
- Reply-To: Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu
- Precedence: Bulk
- Subject: Info-Hams Digest V94 #364
- To: Info-Hams
-
-
- Info-Hams Digest Fri, 1 Apr 94 Volume 94 : Issue 364
-
- Today's Topics:
- Hamfest List - Mid Atlantic States
- How phasing SSB Exciters Work (Was: RF and AF speech processors)
- passive satellites
- Repeater Voter Questions
- RF and AF speech processors. Was: FT-990 vs TS-850
- Time to lighten up.....
-
- Send Replies or notes for publication to: <Info-Hams@UCSD.Edu>
- Send subscription requests to: <Info-Hams-REQUEST@UCSD.Edu>
- Problems you can't solve otherwise to brian@ucsd.edu.
-
- Archives of past issues of the Info-Hams Digest are available
- (by FTP only) from UCSD.Edu in directory "mailarchives/info-hams".
-
- We trust that readers are intelligent enough to realize that all text
- herein consists of personal comments and does not represent the official
- policies or positions of any party. Your mileage may vary. So there.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: 31 Mar 1994 19:43:38 -0500
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!news.intercon.com!news1.digex.net!access.digex.net!not-for-mail@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Hamfest List - Mid Atlantic States
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- MID-ATLANTIC HAMFEST LISTING March 31, 1994
-
-
- The following is a listing of known hamfests in the MD/NJ/PA/VA area.
- I will update this list as necessary. Please send any additions or
- corrections to me at cps@access.digex.net so that others may benefit.
-
- Thanks,
-
- Chris Smolinski, N3JLY
-
-
- April 10, 1994:
-
- HAMCOMP '94 8AM-1PM, $5 adm, $12 tailgating, $20 table.
- Trenton State College, Rt 31, Ewing Township.
- Talk-In 146.67-, 146.52 simplex.
- Contact Don Write AA2F (609) 737-1723.
-
-
- May 15, 1994:
-
- HAMFEST '94, 7AM-2PM, $5 adm, $8 tailgating, $12 tables.
- Middletown Grange Fairgrounds, Penns Park Rd, Wrightstown, PA
- Talk-In 147.09/R, 146.52 simplex
- Contact: George Brechman N3HBT (215) 443-5656
-
-
- May 21, 1994:
-
- Cherryville Hamfest, 8AM-2PM, $6 admission, $10 tailgating, $15 tables
- Warren County Farmers Fairgrounds, Rt 518 North, Harmony, NJ I78-exit 3.
- Contact Keith Burt, KF5FK, (908) 788-4080 before 10PM
- VE Test Session Contact Marty Grozinski, NS2K, (908) 806-6944 before 9PM
- Talk-In 147.375+ & 146.820-
-
-
- May 22, 1994:
-
- Great Hagerstown Hamfest, 8AM-3:30PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $20 tables
- Hagerstown Jr COllege Rec Center, Exit 32B from I-70, right at Edgewood Rd
- Contact Page Pyne or Fred Bailey (301) 714-0688
- VE Exams 9AM contact Pat KQ8E at (304) 289-3576
- Talk-In 146.34+
-
-
- June 5, 1994:
-
- Ole Virgina Hamfest, 8AM-3PM
- Prince William County Fairgrounds, Manassas, VA
-
-
- June 19, 1994:
-
- Father's Day Hamfest, 8AM-3PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating
- Walkersville Fire Co, Walkersville, MD, rt 15 to rt 26 to rt 194
- Frederick Amateur Radio Club, PO Box 1260, Frederick, MD 21702
- Talk-In 146.52, 147.06+, 448.425-
-
-
- July 10, 1994:
-
- Maryland Hamfest, 8AM-?, tailgating opens at 6AM
- Timonium Fairgrounds, York Rd, I-695 to I-83 to Timonium Rd
- BRATS, PO BOx 5915, Baltimore, MD 21208
- VE Exams 10AM, Pre-registration required
- Talk-In 147.03+, 224.96-
-
-
- July 16, 1994:
-
- Red Rose Repeater Assn, 9AM-3PM $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $20 tables
- McCaskey High School, Reservoir & N Franklin Streets, Lancaster, PA
- Red Rose Repeater Assn, PO Box 8316, Lancaster, PA 17604
- Talk-In 147.015+
-
-
- August 7, 1994:
-
- Southern Patuxent Hamfest, 7AM-2PM, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $25 tables
- Prince George County Equestrian Center, Upper Marlboro, MD
- Rt 301/ Rt 4, exit 11-A (Rt 4 Pennsylvania Ave) from DC Beltway I-495
- Contact: Southern Patuxent ARC, PO Box 399, St Leonard, MD 20685
- (410) 586-2177
- Talk-In 147.15
-
- Hamfest 94, 8AM-?, $5 adm, $3 tailgating
- Bucks County Drive In Theater, rt 611, 6mi N of Pa Turnpike exit 27
- Mid Atlantic Radio Club, PO Box 352, Villanova, PA 19085
- Talk-In 147.06, 145.13
-
-
- August 14, 1994:
-
- SARA Carroll County Hamfest, 8AM-?, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $8 tables
- Carroll County Ag Center, Smith Ave, Westminster, MD
- Contact: Alan Parker, KS3L, (410) 859-1475
- SARA Hamfest, 607 Brentwood Rd, Linthicum, MD 21090
- Talk-In 146.52, 224.68, 224.64
-
-
- Hamfest & Computerfest, 8AM-?, $4 adm, $7 tailgating, $25 tables
- Career Institute of Technology, Easton, PA
- Delaware-Lehigh ARC, RR 4 Greystone Bldg, Nazareth, PA 18064-9211
- (610) 820-9110
- Talk-In 146.70
-
-
- September 9 & 10, 1994:
-
- Queen Wilhelmina State Park, Mena, Arkansas. $2 park entrance fee, $5 adm.
- Contact Gerald Wallis, N5KKD, (501) 524-3094
-
-
- September 17&18, 1994:
-
- Virginia Beach Hamfest $6 adm, $15 tailgating, $30 tables, $125 booths
- Virginia BEach Pavillion
- Manny Steiner, K4DOR, 3512 Olympia Lane, Virginia Beach, VA 23452
- (804) HAM-FEST
-
-
- September 18,1994
-
- South Jersey Radio Assn, 8AM-3PM, $5 admission, $5 tailgating
- Pennsauken High School Parking Lot, near US rt 130 / NJ rt 73
- Contact Diane Nafis, N2LCQ, (609) 227-6281, (609) 228-8088
- VEC Test Session registration at 9:30 AM
- Talk-In 145.290-
-
-
- October 30, 1994:
- Mason Dixon Hamfest 8AM-?, $5 adm, $5 tailgating, $15 tables
- Carroll County Ag Center, Westminster, MD
- Mason Dixon Hamfest, PO Box 763, Hanover, PA 17331
- VE exams $5.60, 9AM, reg 8AM, Page Evans NE3P, (717) 359-7610
- Talk-In 145.410-
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 03:21:38 GMT
- From: lerc.nasa.gov!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!col.hp.com!srgenprp!alanb@purdue.edu
- Subject: How phasing SSB Exciters Work (Was: RF and AF speech processors)
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Tom Bruhns (tomb@lsid.hp.com) wrote:
-
- : But what if it was a design goal to come up with a quadrature phase
- : network with flat frequency response and linear phase? Would that be
- : possible? I think so, and I offer comments below in support of that
- : idea. If I don't get to it, maybe someone else can check out the
- : suggestion at the end to see if it really can work.
-
- : ...
-
- : 10. It _should_ be possible to find a pair of MFD filters with overlapped
- : passbands (either two bandpass filters or a lowpass and a bandpass)
- : which have equal d(phi)/df and a 90 (or 45--see paragraph 11) degree
- : phase difference between the channels in the shared passband.
- : Actually finding such a pair is the exercise remaining to be done!
- : Any volunteers?
-
- Tom: Your logic seems impeccable. The only possible fly in the ointment
- I can see is that it may not be possible to find the required band-pass
- filters such that the overlap region covers a 10:1 frequency range
- (300 Hz - 3 kHz). It may have to be done at an "IF" frequency so the
- band-pass filters cover a smaller percentage bandwidth.
-
- : As a simple feasibility check, I asked a curvefitter to fit to a couple
- : linear phase ramps with constant amplitude, offset by 90 degrees, in the
- : range from 300Hz to 3.5kHz, and it didn't have any trouble getting
- : within a tenth dB and under a degree, with about 14 poles and 14 zeros
- : for each. None of the poles was particularly high Q: max about 8.
-
- Did the curvefitter use an equation in the form of a ratio of
- polynomials? If so, then all that's required is to derive the poles
- and zeros and we're practically done!
-
- I seem to recall that a conventional phase-shift network can be implemented
- with around 4 all-pass filters (per output), each of which has a pole-zero
- pair on the real axis (Q of 1/2). Each filter can be built with a single
- op-amp, one capacitor and 3 resistors. Tom's idea is basically to use more
- all-pass filters and to allow them to have higher Q.
-
- As a further complication, one could intentionally design the phase-shift
- network to have slightly non-linear phase to compensate for the unflat
- group delay of the audio filter.
-
- Of course, all this assumes that achieving linear phase (as opposed
- to a small, smoothly-varying phase error) is worth the extra work.
- Sounds like making the phase response "perfect" would more than
- triple the network complexity. (10 to 14 high-Q poles versus 4
- low-Q poles.)
-
- AL N1AL
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 31 Mar 1994 15:49:59 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!sunic!EU.net!julienas!nenuphar.saclay.cea.fr!avocette!parnoul@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: passive satellites
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Hi there,
-
- A colleague just realized that the news posting outside the company is
- up again and running, we have been quiet for some reason for more than
- one year... Reading the news was fine though.
-
- Following is an idea I'd like to have some feedback from the EME'ers
- for instance.
- Do you think the big telecom satellites operating geosynchonously(sp?)
- above the equator could be used as passive satellites for ham contacts ?
-
- The reflecting surface should not be neglectable considering the huge
- solar panels, at least the satellite body should provide echos back
- to earth.
-
- I heard that the first ham "satellites" were aluminium covered ballons,
- reflecting some of the VHF power.
-
- The geosync. satellites are much further away, maybe the big guns in EME
- have a chance to hear something back ?
-
- The input stages of the mentionned satellites operating on whatever freq.
- might not appreciate the strong field shooting at them... Any regulations
- on that point ?
-
- What do you think ?
-
- 73 de f5hnk/Patrick
-
- RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY
-
- Patrick Arnoul F5HNK Email: parnoul@gaap.saclay.cea.fr
- French Atomic Commission (C.E.A)
- Centre d'Etudes de Saclay Phone: (33) 1 69 08 82 91
- DTA/LETI/DEIN Bat 528
- F-91191 GIF SUR YVETTE CEDEX Fax: (33) 1 69 08 83 95
-
- THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPED OVER THE LAZY DOG'S BACK THE QUICK BRWON FOX JUMPED O
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 1 Apr 1994 05:06:43 -0600
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!dog.ee.lbl.gov!agate!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!news.uh.edu!uuneo.neosoft.com!sugar.NeoSoft.COM!not-for-mail@network.ucsd.edu
- Subject: Repeater Voter Questions
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- In article <2nf4iu$dn6@news.udel.edu>,
- Dave Dabell <dave@diusys.cms.udel.edu> wrote:
- >
- > What voter should we use?
- > I've heard good things about Doug Hall products.
- > Are there others that should be considered?
-
- If you're going to buy one, the Hall voter is the best value. I've used it
- in a commercial application and it's a fine product. Works great and I'd
- highly recommend it. You can sometimes find surplus Motorola and GE voters
- on the used market. They're a bit tricky to use compared to the Hall, but
- all work basically the same.
-
- >
- > Anyone have suggestions on how to preserve audio
- > fidelity over the UHF link?
- > One thought I had was to route remote receiver
- > detector audio directly to the link xmit modulator.
- > This would bypass receiver de-emphasis and link xmit
- > pre-emphasis circuitry. Comments?
-
- You have the right idea. One other comment--make sure you feed the audio into
- the link transmitter past the audio limiter. This will make sure the audio
- doesn't get clipped by the link transmitter. Since you have control over the
- deviation of the links, you can get away with no limiter. The audio can be
- made flat from below 100 Hz to above 3 kHz with normal narrow-band FM
- equipment. I usually feed my audio into the PL input on the transmitter. This
- is usually after the limiter and pre-emphasis.
-
- >
- > What is the best way to match the remote receiver
- > audio to the main receiver?
- > I assume that audio level and frequency response
- > characteristics should be closely matched to make
- > the voting process transparent.
-
- This is the most important aspect of a voted system. If the receivers don't
- match, the voter will tend to favor one receiver over another. The Hall voter
- has adjustments which allow the user to "fool" it into thinking one receiver
- is noisier than another, but this won't make up for the audio being close to
- start with. I've never used equalization, but it's pretty easy to get it
- right by just taking discriminator (non de-emphasized) audio from the receiver
- and feeding the link transmitter past the audio processing.
-
- >
- >I'd also welcome any general advice or experiences folks
- >have had with remotes that might be of help to us.
-
- What you'll find most impressive is that a voted system will cover better
- than the sum of the receiver sites. Because you have diversity reception, much
- of the mobile flutter heard on single site receiver systems will disappear.
- I think you'll be pretty happy with it. The only down side is the additional
- maintenance of the link equipment and voter.
-
- Good luck.
-
- --
- Jim Reese, WD5IYT | "Reality is for those with no imagination."
- jreese@sugar.neosoft.com | --Jim McClellan
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 08:22:10 GMT
- From: lerc.nasa.gov!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!csn!col.hp.com!news.dtc.hp.com!hplextra!hplb!hpwin052!hpqmoea!dstock@purdue.edu
- Subject: RF and AF speech processors. Was: FT-990 vs TS-850
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Alan Bloom (alanb@sr.hp.com) wrote:
-
- : Crystal filters designed for receive filtering are not optimum
- : for a transmitter SSB generator.
-
- : AL N1AL
-
-
- Yippeee ! Thanks, Alan. That one little fact is always a shock
- to everyone I explain it to.
-
- Think of two expensive-grade Japanese rigs in QSO. The transmitting
- rig will have an SSB generator with crystal IF filter, an RF clipper (Tx
- IF would be a better adjective) and another SSB crystal filter. For
- economy, the radio will use SSB filters designed for Rx selectivity as
- the same filters are switched into the receive path. Serious Dxers will,
- of course, have changed them for especially narrow ones. At the
- receiving end, the posh radio on receive will have two SSB crystal
- filters in use, one in its 9-ish MHz IF, and one in its 455 kHz IF.
-
- The sound that reaches the listener's ears can have passed through
- FOUR receiving-spec crystal filters, some or all of which could be
- special extra-narrow ones.
-
- We are talking of up to 32 poles of crystal filtering, as four sets
- of 8-pole 2.4kHz wide sections. Just look in Zverev to see the group
- delay and ringing characteristics.
-
- Those filters are important in the receiver, but quite inappropriate
- in the transmitter, we could halve the damage done to the sound quality.
-
- My thoughts for a home-brew ultimate rig are running towards phasing
- SSB generation, IF speech processing and then a >3kHz wide crystal
- filter as a post-clipper clean-up. Carrier and opposite sideband
- suppression will be the sum of the performance of the phasing system and
- the crystal filter, so neither need produce spectacular performance.
-
- Experiments have shown a good, clean, controlled output spectrum,
- limited by power amp intermod products, and the audio quality was
- outstanding.
-
-
- Here in the 1990s I'm daydreaming about DSP'ing a similar scheme,
- Hilbert-transform based SSB generation, arithmetic clipping, and a
- digital SSB filter feeding a DAC producing a low IF to make a cheap and
- excellent SSB generator/speech processor.
-
- Multiband audio processing looks attractive, but it is the peak of
- the sum of all the bands that is what has to be controlled, so I think
- this may not be the best technique. There is, of course no technique
- that is RIGHT, but some are better than others....
-
- Amusingly, some of the fancy DSP based speech processor techniques
- turn out to be "RF processors" in digital form.
-
- Cheers,
- David
-
- (It's refreshing to have a decent technical debate going in place of
- the code wars and hand-held questions...)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 01 Apr 94 08:23:32 GMT
- From: netcomsv!netcomsv!skyld!jangus@decwrl.dec.com
- Subject: Time to lighten up.....
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- Time to interject some humor here. I spotted this in the Yucks digest and
- just knew it belonged here....
-
- I was toying with using search and replace to insert Jeff Herman's name in
- this, but figured that the rest of you would figure it out on your own.
-
- 73 es GE from Jeff
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Mar 1994 16:05:21 -0600
- From: skip@cy.cs.olemiss.edu (Skip Sauls) (by way of werner@cs.utexas.edu (Werne
- r Uhrig))
- Subject: [yucky stuff] Zsolt Szabo is DEAD!!!
- To: Gene Spafford <spaf>
-
- JOHNS HOPKINS (ANP) - Zsolt Szabo, the self-proclaimed genius who has
- gained notoriety for his absurd net postings, was found dead today
- at his terminal. Cause of death is unknown, but police detectives
- believe that he may have suffered from an overdose of EGO, a new
- and highly addictive narcotic. An autopsy has been ordered, but
- there is little chance of finding anything as the brain is usually
- consumed. Amazingly, the drug allows the person to continue to
- live, although admittedly in a severly reduced capacity, for up to
- 2 days after the last traces of the brain have degenerated.
- Police have been perusing the last few articles posted by the
- late Mr. Szabo on a computer bulletin board, referred to only as
- "that advocacy thing" by the detectives. A search of his apartment
- also turned up several photographs of a fashion model that he has
- apparently been stalking for the past few months. The only other
- evidence that the press was allowed access to was a series of words
- drawn in human feces on the wall of the deceased's apartment. Most
- of the words suggest an anal-fixation and are not printable here, but
- there were several that appear to be code words, including "730",
- "mbyte", and others. Police speculate that the former was the time
- that the deceased finally expired and that the latter was in reference
- to some sort of sado-masochistic sexual implement.
- Although very little information can be found about EGO, there is
- increasing speculation that it may have been around longer than some
- suspect. Each canister of EGO, which is a gas, has the letters "JY"
- engraved on it, along with the picture of what appears to be some
- sort of bird, perhaps a falcon. Unlike some narcotic gases, EGO is
- not an inhalant, at least in the traditional sense. The nozzle is
- acutally inserted into the anus and the gas is release into the
- intestines for absorption. This admitttedly bizzare method may be
- the cause of the intense anal-fixation exhibited by users in the
- final stages of the addiction.
-
-
-
- Amateur: WA6FWI@WA6FWI.#SOCA.CA.USA.NOAM | "You have a flair for adding
- Internet: jangus@skyld.grendel.com | a fanciful dimension to any
- US Mail: PO Box 4425 Carson, CA 90749 | story."
- Phone: 1 (310) 324-6080 | Peking Noodle Co.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 06:31:44 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!vixen.cso.uiuc.edu!news.uoregon.edu!engineer.mrg.uswest.com!cherokee!walter!thumper!cotton@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <slayCnEC6z.KDF@netcom.com>, <2nca7d$hf2@network.ucsd.edu>, <dsharpCnHu0x.IDp@netcom.com>cheroke
- Reply-To : cotton@thumper.bellcore.com (Chase Cotton)
- Subject : QRMers ... (was Re: Obscenity on ham bands)
-
- hey folks, just saw this on the net ... sounds neat!
- a cure for the garbage mouths too?
-
- Chase
-
- -----
- Chase Cotton cotton@thumper.bellcore.com
-
- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
-
- ============================================================
- ============================================================
- PRODUCT PRESS RELEASE NET POLICE INC.
- APRIL, 1994 DISTRIBUTE ALL FEEDS
-
-
- Are you like me? You sit down for a few hours to listen to
- a ham net and just relax. You tune up on 40 or 80 meters,
- everything is going great, not a thunderstorm in earshot,
- and then just as you begin writing down the phone number of
- the fellow selling the mint Collins tx/rx pair for $200, the
- numbers fade and are replaced by a 2000+ watt
- "belchhhhhhhhhhh", "burppppppp", or "yawnnnnnnnnn". The
- repeat is similarly stomped. You only get the area code.
- You curse under your breath. Hoping for a "recheck", you
- listen carefully only to be deafened by a 40 over 9 carrier
- and then you begin to moan and cry softly. Later you toss
- and turn all night dreaming about a QRM-seeking missile.
-
- Well, soon your prayers will be answered ...
-
- You've heard about "voice printing" and recently the FCC's
- use of "transmitter signatures", and now YOU will have some
- help fighting the most fearsome of all amateur radio
- monsters, the dreaded "QRMer" ...
-
- NET POLICE INC. is happy to announce the introduction of a
- new high-tech tool which will become the QRMer's worst
- nighmare ...
-
- THE BELCHprinter (tm)
- ---------------------
-
- The BELCHprinter (tm) is NET POLICE INC.'s triple threat
- answer to this age old problem. Using modern DSP and RISC
- microprocessor technology, the BELCHprinter unit is
- connected to the audio and IF feeds of your receiver. When
- the console unit's trigger is depressed, the BELCHprinter
- takes an IF and audio sample and extracts a unique numeric
- print of the QRMer and his transmitter (when using the
- optional high accuracy clock unit). The number is compared
- with other existing prints and duplicates are merged. Then
- a unique numeric ID is shown in the BELCHprinter's display.
- The unit stores 2048 prints in nonvolatile memory. With the
- optional RS-232 interface and software package, the unit can
- be combined with your PC to form a complete QRMer
- identification system with almost unlimited storage. To
- help further ID the QRMer, the BELCHprinter can be
- instructed to sample the signals of a known
- transmitter/operator and thus unknown QRMer prints can be
- identified. The built-in database in the BELCHprinter
- software can of course hold call and name information.
-
- A follow-on packet radio product is expected to be ready
- soon which will allow the exchange of QRMer print records
- between BELCHprinter owners so national and global databases
- can be constructed. NET POLICE INC. will also be serving as
- a repository for print records and will be distributing a CD
- version of the entire BELCHprinter Database (tm) as soon as
- sufficient prints have been collected.
-
- Hang in there. You'll get that Collins or Kenwood yet ...
-
- And coming soon ...
-
- BELCHsquelch (tm)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The first production BELCHprinter units are currently
- undergoing alpha tests around the country and orders will be
- accepted shortly. Prices have yet to be determined, but
- should be in line with other modern amateur radio
- accessories. You may contact NET POLICE INC. for further
- information on the product and associated accessories.
-
- Discounts are being considered for sales to recognized net
- control stations as a courtesy to the amateur radio
- community.
-
- model# description MSRP
- ------ ---------------------------------------------- ----
- BLCH1 BELCHprinter unit, manual, patch cords TBD
- BLCH1a RS-232 control, software for IBM compatible PC TBD
- BLCH1b high accuracy clock unit for BLCH1 TBD
- BLCHcd CDRom print database (requires BLCH1a) TBD
-
-
- Distributor inquiries are encouraged.
-
- NET POLICE INC. call 1-800-BAD-HAMS
- 2611 Indiana Ave., Suite 390A
- Chicago, IL 60019
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 31 Mar 1994 20:07:12 +0000
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!demon!llondel.demon.co.uk!dave@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <CnG3Jt.Htw@srgenprp.sr.hp.com>, <CnI0t1.DJ@seastar.org>, <1994Mar31.140529.6602@arrl.org>╝
- Subject : Re: How phasing SSB Exciters Work (Was: RF and AF speech pr
-
- Why not use a Weaver (Third Method) exciter? It is easy to generate a couple
- of 1800Hz carriers which are 90 degrees out of phase, and fairly easy to
- generate a couple of 10.7MHz carriers which are 90 degrees out of phase, and
- the rest is reasonably straightforward without any expensive bits. SBL1 mixers
- are cheap, so the fact that you need four shouldn't be prohibitive.
-
- Dave
- --
-
- *****************************************************************************
- * G4WRW @ GB7WRW.#41.GBR.EU AX25 * Start at the beginning. Go on *
- * dave@llondel.demon.co.uk Internet * until the end. Then stop. *
- * g4wrw@g4wrw.ampr.org Amprnet * (the king to the white rabbit) *
- *****************************************************************************
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 00:47:31 GMT
- From: ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!sgiblab!wetware!spunky.RedBrick.COM!psinntp!psinntp!arrl.org!zlau@network.ucsd.edu
- To: info-hams@ucsd.edu
-
- References <1994Mar23.162557.7558@arrl.org>, <2msav8$8f9@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>, <1994Mar25.135851.5580@arrl.org>
- Subject : Re: RF and AF speech processors. Was: FT-990 vs TS-850
-
- Zack Lau (KH6CP) (zlau@arrl.org) wrote:
- : Ignacy Misztal (ignacy@ux2.cso.uiuc.edu) wrote:
- : :
- : : Cheap AF processors use AF clippers. DSP-based processors are not only
- : : novelties now, but they are more xepnsive to built than RF processors.
- : : Why AF clippers are worse than RF (IF) clippers? Consider a 500Hz
- : : tone test. With AF processor you will get extra 1000,1500,2000,2500
- : : Hz tones. With RF (SSB and DSB) processor 500Hz will be the only
- : : output. Please note that some older rigs have "implicit" RF
- : : processors. For instance, SWAN 500 has 7360, a beam deflection tube,
- : : as a DSB modulator. By clipping peaks, it acts with the following XTAL
- : : filter as a DSP processor.
- : :
- : If you clip an ideal DSB waveform (1 kHz modulation), aren't there
-
- Oops, this should be 500 Hz modulation, not 1 KHz modulation in the
- parenthesis.
-
- : two tones spaced 1 kHz apart that could generate IMD products at
- : 1.5 kHz and 1.5 kHz (receiver output)? What if you had a significant
- : amount of carrier leakthrough that was cleaned up by the crystal
- : filter? Couldn't this give you extra tones at 1, 1.5, 2, and 2.5
- : kHz (at the receiver)?
-
- What this means is that having two crystal filters, one before and
- after the clipper, results in less distortion on your transmitted
- signal. The extra filter can also be useful on receive, since IF
- amplifiers typically reintroduce noise on the unwanted sideband
- detected by most product detectors. It isn't difficult to obtain
- matched sets of crystal filters, if you have enough $$$.
-
- --
- Zack Lau KH6CP/1 2 way QRP WAS
- 8 States on 10 GHz
- Internet: zlau@arrl.org 10 grids on 2304 MHz
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Hams Digest V94 #364
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