[aprssig] Deviation meters
Ray Wells
vk2tv at exemail.com.au
Thu Apr 5 03:16:28 EDT 2007
'Scott Miller' wrote:
>>Audio drive to the transmitter play an equally, and maybe more,
>>important role.
>>
>>
>
>And this is really what I'm hoping to come up with a tool to set - i.e., set
>your tracker/TNC to calibrate mode (alternating tones) and set the audio
>drive level to get appropriate deviation. Assuming the transmitter's not so
>out of whack that at 3.2 kHz deviation it's clipping the high tone already.
>
>
>
I wish you success. Such a tool will be greeted with much enthusiasm.
>>More important is having the transmitted amplitude of the two
>>tones in
>>
>>
>
>You're preaching to the choir. =]
>
But it's amazing how many are not in the choir!
> Of course, as long as we've got D700's
>and such out there, there's no getting around the fact that some stations
>will transmit with no pre-emphasis. I made a point of adding a pre-emphasis
>circuit to my T2-135 board, since the DR-135T doesn't provide pre-emphasis
>on the TNC input (not the one from the internal header, anyway). I may add
>a jumper on future versions to bypass it if needed, though.
>
>
>
It certainly complicates matters when mixed standards are employed on
the same network.
>>In the absense of a service monitor or oscilloscope, and if a simple,
>>peak reading device is used, adjust the audio drive until the desired
>>level is achieved, then back it off just a tad.
>>
>>
>
>This is what I've encouraged users to do. Still, it'd be nice to have a
>small board that'd give you at least a basic indication that you've got it
>set right, even if it wasn't very sensitive and required the radio to be
>tuned to a known frequency. I've got an Agilent service monitor, myself,
>and it's wonderful for checking my relative tone levels and deviation, but
>even used and several years old it was more than $3,000. I'd like to be
>able to point people to an affordable option that's somewhere between the
>extremes of 'service monitor' and 'set it by ear'.
>
>
>
Like yourself, I have a service monitor, a Motorola R2400, but we're
amongst a lucky minority.
I think that an oscilloscope is the most useful tool one can have for
making audio adjustments, and with software scopes available, such a
tool is within the reach of most. If one can monitor a "known"
transmitter (or transmitters), it's fairly elementary to adjust one's
own. Such a method does not return a precise deviation result but it's a
whole lot better than guesswork.
Ray vk2tv
>Scott
>N1VG
>
>
>
>
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