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Re: LF: "Gain" between qrss3 and qrss10?

To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: LF: "Gain" between qrss3 and qrss10?
From: "mal hamilton" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 11 Dec 2009 18:14:30 -0000
References: <38A51B74B884D74083D7950AD0DD85E828AC12@File-Server-HST.hst.e-technik.tu-darmstadt.de> <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Reply-to: [email protected]
Sender: [email protected]
This is what I have been saying all along and ofcourse there are Wireless
Operators who know their subject and Appliance Operators fumbling with data.
If you have enough bandwidth like microwave freqs then ARQ helps but on
LF/MF and even HF under poor propagation condx or QRM it goes on for ever
trying to get a correct response. to proceed with the traffic. I have used
and experienced these various systems performing commercially over the
years.
If you have lots of tfc to shift then one has to perservere otherwise use CW
and a professional operator.
Imagine trying to pass a position report on an aircraft on HF using ARQ in
poor or qrm condx, the aircraft could have landed by the time the msg was
received.
The fastest and most reliable modes on MF/HF for this type of operation was
CW or SSB and  is still used.
For efficiency and simplicity and cost 500 kcs is still a good bet for the
marine service and that is why  they are reluctant to let it go.
A professional CW operator will win out in the end, he only needs a few
basic components and a piece of wet string to transmit his message via
wirelss.
G3KEV


----- Original Message -----
From: "Andy Talbot" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, December 11, 2009 1:26 PM
Subject: Re: LF: "Gain" between qrss3 and qrss10?


On this matter...
For the recent talk I gave on weak signals at a Microwave Roundtable (
http://www.g4jnt.com/MartleSham.htm ) I made some simulated CW in
Noise using accurately calibrated S/N levels.

An interesting finding came to light, if you normalise the signal rate
to the S/N, so making bandwidth irrelevent, most of the 'fuzzy' modes
end up with a similar capability.   In other words, Aural CW, QRSS,
SMT Hell all need a similar S/N at their respective bandwidths to
work.    The actual normalised  S/N for readability is subject to the
operator's  experience togther with Temperature/Time of
day/mood/Age/Gender/Alcohol intake/Hunger/Weather  or any other
similar parameter, but there's no massive differences between any of
them.

So its all down to bandwidth.    Even machine modes without error
correction manage a not-too-dissimilar performance once their data
rates have been normalised.

However, if you spread the signal, intentionally, by adding FEC, the
improvements can be enormous.  As I think we all know only too well
when comparing QRSS etc with WSPR, Wolf and other modes with heavy
FEC.   At least on microwaves we have the luxury of virtually
unlimited bandwidth, so can operate in a true Shannon power limited
channel to make the most of band spreading.

Incidently, the usually quoted signal efficiency used on one axis of
the Shannon curve   "Bits/second/Hz"  sounds uninspiring.   But if,
instead of Hz, you use the old term 'cycles per second', it becomes
Bits/cycle.   Which puts a whole new meaning and explanation to the
axis on the Shannon curve, and elicited an "Oh Wow, yes, that IS an
interesting way of putting it" when told to an experienced comms
engineer.    The term was actually used in Shannon's original paper of
1948, but seems to have got lost

Andy
www.g4jnt.com

This email has been scanned for damaging side-effects by the health
and safety police



2009/12/11 Johan H. Bodin <[email protected]>:
> Hi Stefan,
>
>> Or isn't it possible to give such a relation?
>
> Yes, it is not only possible, it is in fact quite simple:
> When the speed is reduced by a factor K, the information bandwidth is
> also reduced by the same factor. This allows you to use a receiver
> bandwidth which is K times narrower without missing any information. The
> nice thing is that the noise power passing through this bandwidth is
> also K times smaller - The S/N ratio has improved K times (or 10*log(K)
> dB if you prefer). In other words, you can reduce the TX power by the
> same factor K and still enjoy the same SNR (if RX BW is is also made K
> timer narrower).
>
> In visually received QRSS, the receiver bandwidth is equal to the RBW,
> the "resolution bandwidth", which is approximately equal to the FFT bin
> width (one pixel on Argo).
>
> QRSS30 is 10dB more efficient than QRSS3, in theory at least.
>
> 73
> Johan SM6LKM
>
> ----
>
> Stefan Schäfer wrote:
>> Dear LF,
>> Does anybody know about the "gain" between QRSS3 and QRSS10 or QRSS30? I
mean, if the noise in both cases is equal, how much can I reduce my tx pwr
when switching from qrss3 to qrss10? Or isn't it possible to give such a
relation?
>> And: Was there ever a TA QSO in QRSS3?
>> I am new on the reflector, sri ;-)
>>
>> Stefan / DK7FC
>>
>>
>
>



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