[aprssig] Re: *** TNC Test CD Update - Mirror Server Now Available ***
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Tue Oct 31 13:11:43 EST 2006
mwrobertson at comcast.net wrote:
> With the raw ISO images, most burners that I am familiar with, take
> right off and you're there. Our problem, (mine), is not RTFM and I
> apologize.. I had not see this method or heard of it, the dual CD I
> mean, so I learned something again yesterday! Thanks...
>
> Robbie
>
I would have FAR FAR preferred to use the .ISO format which is supported
by just about ALL CD recording applications, but unfortunately it won't
work with mixed-mode CDs.
As I explained on the web site (and in the readme file), I used CD audio
tracks rather than regular CD-ROM data .WAV audio tracks to avoid the
timing errors present in many motherboard-based sound systems on
low-cost PCs.
I first discovered this problem several years ago when I was trying to
make test recordings for SSTV slant correction. I found that many
low-cost sound systems integrated into PC motherboards have substituted
interrupt-driven software for the timing functions traditionally done by
dedicated crystal-controlled hardware in conventional sound cards. The
main clock osc of a PC motherboard (from which the interrupt timing is
derived) is normally controlled by a dirt-cheap crystal that is not very
accurately calibrated and not very temperature-stable. Further, the
rate actually varies depending on how many other software processes are
running (and competing for interrupt services) at the same time. Many
of these "brain-dead" no-hardware sound systems supposedly running at
the standard 11025 Hz sampling rate were actually off by 5-7% or more.
This problem is steadily getting worse as more and more traditionally
hardware-based functions are offloaded onto software models multitasking
on today's super-fast CPUs. Dirt-cheap color printers that use the
Windows GDI (graphics device interface) rather than dedicated processors
inside the printer, and nearly zero-parts-count 56K modems that are
basically just an audio transformer and interface are two of the biggest
offenders. The characteristic nature of these "brain dead" devices
is that they have HUGE (multi-megabyte) drivers loaded from CD -ROM
that then suck up massive amount of system resources and hard disk
space compared to their hardware-based predecessors.
With these cheap sound systems, it is virtually impossible to keep SSTV
programs like mmSSTV, MixW, ChromaPix, etc properly slant-corrected,
UNLESS you make a point of shutting down ALL other programs including
background utilities like virus scanners, firewalls, anti-spyware,
printer status monitors, etc.
Even inexpensive audio players (boomboxes, DiskMans, car stereos or even
the headphone output on a CD-ROM drive) etc) have dedicated
crystal-oscillator timing chains that are far more accurate AND STABLE
than most of todays cheap PC sound systems. Consequently, I opted to
make the test disk play CD audio rather than CD-ROM data.
--
Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
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