I would agree to the comment that you made regarding
"way it is now, but" yes it seems to change night to night-there always
seems to be junk on the whole hz freqs but between them seems clear so far for
our operations. I noticed even on Hartmut's captures last night 74.549 had
"artifacts" present-weak but present and never saw or noticed them before with
his directional RX ant. But .2 hz higher was absolutely "junk" free. Bob
From:
[email protected]To:
[email protected]Date: Tue, 1
Oct 2013 22:29:42 +0200
Subject: LF: Clear spots around 74.55 kHz
You can see some "sweet spots" around 74557, 74552 and 74540 Hz, wheras the vicinity of 74549 seems more affected.
Not sure how much this pattern might evolve over longer periods of time, with
changing BCD code bits for hour, day, month etc.
The strong line on 74540 is a locally generated
carrier to check frequency drift of my FiFi-SDR receiver.
Best 73,
Markus (DF6NM)
Sent: Tuesday, October 01, 2013 8:35 AM
Subject: Re: LF: 74.550kHz Sep 29/30
Here are clearer shots of the DCF77 sidebands from
the morning:
Notes:
- the RX antenna is resonant around 75 kHz, which
emphasizes the PRN sidebands below the DCF77 carrier. The fifth and sixth lobe
are still visible. In reality, the upper sidebands are slightly stronger. This
is probably due to an offset (or a 75 kHz notch) in the transmitter antenna
matching, which happens to help us now.
- the Swiss time signal HBG
on 75 kHz is no longer on air.
- there is an RTTY signal at 73.6 kHz which could
be CFH.
- the 1 Hz lines are
surrounded by a somewhat regular fine structure, consisting of 16.6 mHz spaced
sub-lines. This is probably due to parts of the BCD timecode and weather
information data which are repeating or similar in consecutive
minutes.
Best 73,
Markus (DF6NM)
Sent: Monday, September 30, 2013 11:26
PM
Subject: Re: LF: 74.550kHz Sep
29/30
Hi Bob, LF,
These are presumably artifacts from DCF77 which is
only about 160 km from here. In addition to the well known AM timecode, it also
carries pseudorandom phase modulation, which has been proposed in the
80ies to provide higher resolution timing (albeit orders of magnitude worse than
Loran or GPS). The resulting sidebands extend a couple of kHz on either side of
the carrier, with pronounced minima around multiples of the chip rate 77500/120
= 645.833 Hz, see
Attached is a spectrogram which was taken tonight
on the resonant antenna. Between statics, you can still see the fourth sideband
lobe which is centered near 74.6 kHz. The spectral gaps are on
74916.666 Hz,
74270.833 Hz,
73625.000 Hz,
with small and sharp central lines, presumably
caused by slight inbalances or nonlinearities in the transmitter.
By these criteria, if you have the choice I would
recommend to operate somewhere near these gaps, but not exactly in their middle,
and also preferably not exactly on integer Hz frequencies ;-)
Best 73,
Markus (DF6NM)
Sent: Monday, September 30, 2013 8:02
PM
Subject: RE: LF: 74.550kHz Sep
29/30
Hartmut;
You make it look easy!!!
That station on 74.548 is WG2XRS/5, Dex in South Carolina. I am sure
you will see him when condx favor his area.
Really great capture-this time I
have my transmitter running correctly. I thought I better drop down .1 hz
as I was seeing sigs on .550 and .549 on Vester's grabber but then remembered
you have directional ant and the sigs come from east of you and are not a
problem. I can go to 74.549 from now on.
Thanks for all your good work!
Bob WG2XRS/4 NY
> Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2013 17:33.:59
+0200
> From: [email protected]
> To:
[email protected]
> Subject: LF: 74.550kHz Sep 29/30
>
> Here are the captures taken last night:
>
>
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50178231/74550Hz-2013-09-30-QRSS60Screen.JPG
>
>
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/50178231/74550Hz-2013-09-30-QRSS120Screen.JPG
>
> XRS4 was just below 74.549 kHz and very faint traces of another station
> on 74.548. Only visible on the QRSS120Screen.
>
> --
> 73
> Hartmut
>
>