Hello Paul,
decoder.txt seems OK.
I am sorry if I gave the impression that I thought you were complaining.
Certainly not, all reports on crashes are abnormal behaviour are welcome.
But these rare crashes are very difficult to trance down.
As you stated, for now I will focus on testing and improving SlowJT9.
At a later stage I will try to intercept possible crashes.
Thanks for your help!
73, Rik ON7YD - OR7T
________________________________________
Van: [email protected] <[email protected]>
namens N1BUG <[email protected]>
Verzonden: maandag 12 november 2018 20:40
Aan: [email protected]; [email protected]
Onderwerp: Re: LF: Re: MF JT9-2 report
Hello Rik,
> A new version of SlowJT9, with correct reports and the cycle bug
> fixed, will be uploaded later today.
v0.9.02 installed and monitoring 630m JT9-2 here.
> Regarding the drift: keep in mind that in the JT9-2 -> JT9
> conversion process frequencies are doubled, so any drift also
> will inevitably be doubled in that process.
Yes of course. The drift I measured was the actual RF drift of the
signal, measured visually with a high resolution waterfall external
to SlowJT9. The actual drift passed to the decoder would be double
the amount I reported.
> About the crash: what was the content of the decoded.txt file?
> Maybe that will give me a clue what happened.
Contents of the file:
0359 18 -15 0.3 2188. 0 CQ WB4JWM EM83 JT9
> I have SlowJT9 (in
> JT9-2 mode) running since 9 Nov 20 UTC and it was still running
> this morning (12 Nov 6 UTC). It is running side by side with
> WSJT-X and Google Chrome, no other apps. I must admit that I
> haven't paid much attention to intercepting errors so far,
> another item to add to my to-do list.
I was not complaining! It ran all night the previous night on JT9-1
and for at least 8 hours last night on JT9-2 prior to the crash. I
don't think it is important to put too much work into tracking down
the reason for a few crashes right now. Better to continue testing
and see if it will be worth continuing the project.
Thank you again for your work! I look forward to more testing and I
hope SlowJT9 can help with trans-Atlantic QSOs on both 630m and
2200m. As I have said several times before, we are in need of some
help on 2200m. JT9-1 requires quite strong signals and there are few
or no alternatives aside from DFCW/QRSS.
73,
Paul N1BUG
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