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Re: LF: RE: [rsgb_lf_group] Re: LF: slow WSPR?

To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: LF: RE: [rsgb_lf_group] Re: LF: slow WSPR?
From: Sabine Cremer <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2012 15:35:43 +0200
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Thanks for the hints, Graham, I will try to keep all in my memory!

73
Sabine, DL1DBC


Am 12.09.2012 12:22, schrieb Graham:
SNR > reports 3 dB lower than actually present in the signal path.

Unfortunately   s/n   levels  are  not  that  simple  to  determine
or  set , the  original  ROS , later Opera  mode's   where  aligned
with  FLDIGI to  give the  same  results  .

After a  set of  test  run in the  US , using Path-sim , it was felt
, the levels obtained where more realistic , and to enable better
comparative  testing , the  s/n displayed  was  re-calibrated

The  Path-Sim    software  propagation simulator  , which  has a
different set of  parameters  and gives a  different  level  is  now
used as the reference.

Its  important  to  understand  that  the  two  modes . will  never ,
give the same readings as wspr indicates the PEAK level , where
Op indicates  the  AVERAGE   s/n , wspr  is  aligned  with FLDIGI and
over a real  path , the  Op system is able to make use of  deep
variations  in fading  and  is  immure  to  phase and Doppler
distortion.

But  , 'the  eating of the  pudding  is in the  proof  of the
making' ? Stefan  , last night  reaching  ua0aet over land , with  7
dB left in the system, taking some big bites out of the distance
records on 136

23:14    136 DK7FC de UA0AET Op32 5330 km -32 dB in Krasnoyarsk

73-G.





--------------------------------------------------
From: "Sabine Cremer" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2012 8:46 AM
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: LF: RE: [rsgb_lf_group] Re: LF: slow WSPR?

Hi Rik,

thank you very much for the link to the results of your study.

I was told often, that Opera is much more sensitive than WSPR. It was interesting to learn that this might be the result of Opera giving SNR reports 3 dB lower than actually present in the signal path.

I think, there are some myths surrounding some digital modes... ;-)

73
Sabine


Am 12.09.2012 08:55, schrieb Rik Strobbe:
Hi Marcus, Stefan, All,

Some kind of "WSPR8" (8 minutes wspr sequence) could indeed be tested
by generating the WSPR8 signal (what is easy as WSPR is fully
documented) and accelerate the recorded signal 4 times before feeding
it into the WSPR software. But this method requires to reduce the
WSPR8 bandwidth (frequency spacing between the tones) also by a factor
of 4, from 6Hz to 1.5Hz.

If you look at WSPR as an FM signal, the WSPR8 signal created that
way will have the same modulation index as the original WSPR(2)
signal, while a WSPR8 signal at the "old" 6Hz bandwidth would have a 4
times larger modulation index. And the modulation index affects the
SNR. Thus the suggested method might not fully exploit the
possibilities of WSPR8 (at unchanged bandwidth).

BTW: the results of the SNR performance test are still available at
http://on7yd.strobbe.eu [1]/QRSS/ [1].

73, Rik ON7YD

-------------------------

VAN: [email protected]
[[email protected]] namens Markus Vester
[[email protected]]
 VERZONDEN: dinsdag 11 september 2012 19:41
 TO: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]; [email protected]
 ONDERWERP: [rsgb_lf_group] Re: LF: slow WSPR?

Hi Stefan, LF,

if I remember correctly, Rik's careful evaluaton of SNR performance
in February resulted in a threshold for reliable decoding of -23 dB
for Opera-2, versus -29 dB for WSPR. This is carrier power versus
noise in 2.5 kHz, Opera "average power" reports are scaled 4 dB lower. Thus at same available ERP, WSPR would indeed have a 4x advantage in speed, and be equivalent to Opera-8. WSPR also transmits slightly more
information, ie. locator field and power.

Rik also looked at QRSS and DFCW, which at 100 % readability seemed
to provide same or slightly higher throughput than Opera (with some
depence on callsign length and viewing skills).

Technically it would be straightforward to generate a slow WSPR
transmission, and also certainly feasible to play back an accelerated recording. You'd have to get the timing right to fit to the 2-minute
slots, and the web reports would probably show wrong frequencies,
times and SNR. As Roger says, asking Joe Taylor for a modified version
would be a better permanent solution.

But whether slow or fast, it' still a digital mode, containing a
blackbox producing either valid output or nothing at all. If you are
after detection of the weakest possible signals, in my opinion the
visual modes or even a straight carrier transmission will be the only
way to see those "T" and "M" traces, along with the features of the
noise or QRM which we are trying to overcome.

Best 73,
Markus (DF6NM)

 -----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung-----
 Von: Stefan Schäfer <[email protected]>
 An: rsgb_lf_group <[email protected]>
 Cc: Edgar J Twining <[email protected]>
 Verschickt: Di, 11 Sept 2012 1:14 am
 Betreff: LF: slow WSPR?

It's a pity that there is no slow-WSPR, e.g. needing 32 minutes or so.

If WSPR (2 minutes FSK) is about as efficient as OP8 ( i heared so),

then it should be a real alternative to the slow DX modes on LF but not

on MF!

There is a software that plays recorded audio files in a faster mode, so

that QRSS becomes audible. VE2IQ has reported to me last year about it

but i don't remember the name.

Would it be possible to make our own slow WSPR by using that software

and playing a 32 minute manipulated WSPR at 16x speed, feeding it to the

normal WSPR rx software? The slower code could be generated outside the

program. Would that be a useful test or do i miss something?

73, Stefan/DK7FC

Am 10.09.2012 19:26, schrieb Graham:

May be Mal



But once again Jim has the answer to this problem ..if you can

find his articles after Google trashed the uk500khz news group ,



I think Jose R predicts a 6 dB gain by changing to PSK from

the Opera on/off keying but that would prevent most of the

LH/MF usage



G..



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