[aprssig] Re: Single Board PC
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Thu Sep 8 14:27:20 EDT 2005
bruninga at usna.edu wrote:
>Can anyone point to a source of single-
>board PC's with 2 serial ports, and sound
>card that comes with WIndows. Something to
>put in a box and forgetabout. But
>can plug in a monitor and Keyboard to
>set up.
>
>It will run ALOGGER, and ECHOLINK, etc...
>for a stand-alone remote controlled satgate.
>
>Dont want hamfest specials, but something that
>is reproducible...
>
>Thanks
>Bob
>
>
>
It's not a complete boxed PC with OS installed, but the VIA Computer
micro-ITX "EPIA" series motherboards are perfect for this kind of
application. Several versions have dual serial ports and sound
built-into the motherboard. My combination APRS UI-Webserver--APRN
System--EchoLink "Ham Superserver" runs on the EPIA-TC board which has
the added twist of operating directly on a single +12 VDC supply at less
than 1.2A. It has DC-DC converters on-board that generate the other
voltages required including +5 and +12 for external devices like hard
disks and CD-ROM drives.
My version of the EPIA has TWO serial ports, 6 USB 2.0 ports, XGA video,
standard PS/2 mouse and kbd jacks, and one Ethernet port. The sound
system has both line and mic level inputs. (The LINE level input, which
an increasing number of laptops and motherboards omit, is vastly
preferrable to a MIC input for soundcard applications like Echolink or
PSK.)
Other versions of the EPIA board require a conventional ATX-type PC
power supply, but have FOUR serial ports and TWO Ethernet ports on
board. These boards are small (about 8" square) and can fit into
special small-footprint cases, but the tooling (mounting holes,
connector panels and backplane slot alignment) lets the board fit
standard ATX tower cases.
Full details on my installation, including links to the board
manufacturer's technical data and vendors are at:
http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/EPIAserver/index.htm
Important Warning: The on-board sound on many systems is a severely
cost-reduced "brain dead" approach to PC sound that does away with much
of the specialized hardware traditionally found on add-in sound cards.
Instead they use the host CPU, bus clocks and interrupt handlers to do
work formerly done by specialized sound chips and timing chains with
accurate dedicated oscillators. The exact timing and sample rate of
the sound system then varies depending on how many other programs and
processes are running on the CPU at the same time. This usually isn't
a problem for the normal voice and music applications of the sound
system, but can cause major calibration problems on PSK31 and SSTV.
Gradually accumulating timing errors (relative to the system at the
other end of a link) can cause periodic phase slips, hiccups and
stuttering audio on EchoLInk, slanted pictures on SSTV, and an
effect like a drifting analog VFO on PSK31.
Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
EchoLink Node: 14400 [Think bottom of the 2M band]
Home Page: http://wa8lmf.com
"APRS 101" Explanation of APRS Path Selection & Digipeating
http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/DigiPaths
Updated APRS Symbol Chart
http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/miscinfo/APRS_Symbol_Chart.pdf
New/Updated "Rev G" APRS http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/aprs
Symbols Set for UI-View,
UIpoint and APRSplus:
More information about the aprssig
mailing list