Hi Stefan
Thanks for the next set of instructions.
I will get that sorted at the weekend and try it out.
I know it might sound unusual but I'm looking forward to nasty
winter weather, that is the only way I can spend all my time playing
with radios. At the moment it is calm and dry, Mr Murphy is playing
games with me.
73, Tony
On 24/10/2016 14:54, DK7FC wrote:
Hi Tony,
OK so if your RX and PC time is stable, we can give it a try.
-You need a stereo input soundcard and feed the PPS signal to the
right
channel. Just run it at 48 kS/s. The PPS signal must be DC
decoupled
and the level must be limited to 80% of the ADC range, simply use
100nF
and a resistive divider. The values will depend on your GPS module
and
its output level.
-Download the latest version of SpecLab and install it to the
recommended folder.
-Turn the RX to 136.00000 kHz USB and use a 2.5 kHz wide SSB
filter.
Connect the RX to the left channel of the soundcard input.
-Download the usr file in this mail and open it into SpecLab (File
-> Load settings from...)
-Click on Components -> Show Components. A box opens. In the
top
left corner, click on "SR cal". Another box opens. The Status must
be
green, showing pps peaks OK. If the level is to high, click on
"scope"
and see the peak form. Then you need to adjust the divider of your
GPS
module to reduce or increase the PPS level. The box must be green
for
most of the time in the end. Click to scope again, there is a
pulse
counter PC and an error counter EC. The error should be lower than
2 %
or so, for example PC=1000 EC=16. Just let it run a few hours and
see
if the tracking is stable.
If you have problems in this step, tell us what the problem is.
-Wait a few hours and check if text files appear at
C:\Spectrum\data
After the first 40 minutes, a file should appear each 10 minutes.
-Ask someone to transmit a short EbNaut message at 1s symbols and
make
sure to record on this time.
So far. Then we can continue with part 3 :-)
73, Stefan
Am 23.10.2016 19:09, schrieb Tony Baldwin:
Hi Stefan
My receiver is an Elad FDM-DUO SDR with a 10 MHz GPS input.
Unfortunately SpecLab doesn't have that radio for an SDR input,
so I
have to use the sound input via USB.
I could send the 1 PPS to my computer via RS 232 as well if that
helps.
73, Tony, EI8JK.
On 23/10/2016 17:51, DK7FC wrote:
Hi all,
I started to write the second part of this tutorial but when
finished i
was not happy with the result.
The first thing one can say is that you will need a very
frequency
stable receiver. There is no chance without an external
reference
signal. For generating wav files using SpecLab you will also
have to
use a ref signal to compensate the drift of your soundcard.
Some people
have already prepared things in the past. You can use a 1 PPS
signal
for soundcard drift compensation or a down divided 10 MHz GPS
reference
or a stereo soundcard receiving VLF MSK signals on the other
channel to
compensate the drift.
Also the SpecLab configuration depends on your receiver type.
Now i could simply make some assumptions what your equipment
may be but
this may be not a good way.
So now i think it's better that we start with one example, one
(or
more) of the stations who are interested in EbNaut decodes on
LF should
describe the available system components. Then we can
work it out
what must be done.
We will need to have a stable RX frequency and a drift
compensated
soundcard frequency in the end.
So who of those who are interested wants to start?
73, Stefan
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