I am by no means an expert of JT65, but, as far as I know,
its coding
takes into account
the structure of the call signs of the
hams active in EME mode, using
them as an alphabet of
symbols to search
into. Probably the excellent ideas behind JT65 could
be used for a
new
program, but I doubt that JT65 can be used as it is.... but of course I
may be proved wrong,
as often happened...
Hello Alberto.
I'm no expert either and I quite agree standard JT65 is too wide and the
tone 'bursts' probably too fast for optimal use on LF.
However, I recall from the notes that come with the software that there is
a mode which does not anticipate the EME sequence. This was introduced after
several DX-Peditions found that odd prefixes and suffixes would not be accepted
in normal operation. I understand you still have to send a particular number of
characters, but it allows random message formats.
My thought was that if this mode was used and characters selected that
occurred close to the JT65 sync tone, then the overall transmission may be
narrow enough to try on LF.
Just to see if the idea of building up a message over several transmission
periods with TX and RX both time synchronised could allow an evaluation of
the technique.
Of course the current controversy on the EME reflector revolves around
the present version of JT65 using a table of callsigns of active EME
stations. Probably best to not add active LF stations to that database.
Regards
David