[aprssig] Displaying Operating Frequency
Robert Bruninga
bruninga at usna.edu
Wed Aug 1 12:30:55 EDT 2007
Stephen,
You nailed the concerns that were growing in my head as I wrote
that...
Yes, just like we are asking the Local Voice Repeater Initiative
to nail down the one-and-only "best" frequency in an area, I
guess, the FREQ idea is for contact purposes only, and so
listing the One VHF/UHF frequency that is being monitored in the
shack is the real objective. Thanks Bob, WB4APR
>
>
> This scheme assumes you are using one of the "DC-to-light"
> multimode rigs with CAT-enabled serial ports (i.e. FT-100,
> TS-2000, IC-706, etc), that are more likely to be on HF than
> VHF/UHF. I am far more likely to be monitoring/operating
> VHF/UHF bands with FM-only radios that don't have CAT ports.
>
> As a mobile, are you really interested in what HF frequency a
> fixed station is on? Wouldn't the current VHF or UHF
> frequency be of more interest since you are far more likely
> to have a VHF or UHF radio in the car than HF? Further, even
> if you have HF in the car, you are FAR more likely to be
> heard on VHF/UHF than on HF from the far side of town.
> (80M or 40M groundwave without the benefit of repeaters
> doesn't go very far....)
>
> If the fixed station is using a dual-band FM-only rig or
> several mono-band FM rigs on various bands (i.e. FT-1500s,
> TM-G707s, TM-742s, etc) to monitor VHF/UHF, this scheme won't
> work since most of these FM-only rigs are not CAT-capable.
>
> Further, is there going to be enough space in the comment
> field for all this stuff? [In my own scenario, I would
> have to somehow fit Echolink on 438.150MHz (Node 14400),
> voice on 146.52 and on 147.09, APRN on 146.700 and voice on
> 52.525 into the beacon.]
>
> I suppose one could have a processor-based gadget with a
> keypad and serial ports, that could interrogate some rigs via
> serial CAT, and provide keyboard data entry for other radios.
> It would then generate APRS packets to be beaconed by a
> dedicated radio on a rotating basis; i.e. comment field info
> about a different radio on each successive beacon. This
> gadget would probably also have to have some sort of serial
> port splitter/feedthrough functions since the CAT ports of
> radios so equipped are often already in use for automated
> logging, antenna selection/control, remote control, ALE or
> other functions.
>
> Just a thought: The Kenwoods would be simpler for this
> application since their CAT ports can be set to
> "auto-reporting". In this mode, they spit out frequency info
> periodically on their own with no command/response two-way
> interaction required. As a result, the APRS status-reporting
> box can just passively bridge any existing hookup on the CAT
> port, just listening and never talking. (This would be
> similar to the way one connects the input of a D700 GPS port,
> and a laptop serial port, in parallel across a GPS receiver.)
>
> Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Stephen H. Smith [mailto:wa8lmf2 at aol.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2007 12:15 PM
> To: bruninga at usna.edu; TAPR APRS Mailing List
> Cc: danny at messano.net
> Subject: Re: [aprssig] Displaying Operating Frequency
>
> Robert Bruninga wrote:
>
> You mentioned "EVERY ham would monitor APRS to
see
> what was going on locally, and EVERY ham's
station
> would beacon on the APRS channel a STATUS packet
> about what he was doing on any other frequency
or
> band or activity so everyone would know."
>
> The $6 word for that is "Presence", and it's a
shame
> we DON'T have something like that for hams now.
>
>
>
> Actually, after Katrina, the ARRL made it an initiative
to come
> up with a mechanism for determining and distributing the
> OPERATING frequency of all stations on the air, so that
they
> could easily be found when needed. It is called WOTA
for "Who
> is On the Air". Since we have always encouraged the
addition of
> Operating FREQUENCY as a standard field, we tried to
make APRS a
> big part of that initiative. But I got little support.
But we
> have now formalized a standard for including FREQUENCY
in APRS
> packets to improve this situation down the road...
>
> What I want to see are PIC processors connected up to
Home
> stations that will MONITOR the operating frequency of
the main
> RIG in the hamshack and automatically insert that
frequency in
> that station's APRS *local* beacon.
> I do not want to see these beacons all over the state,
but
> simply locally, so that if the need arises, that person
can be
> contacted.
>
> In fact, I think it would make a nice set of Add-on's to
many
> client software so that that software could monitor the
stations
> other radios and include their operating frequencies in
that
> stations beacon.
>
> IN fact, a TinyTracker or OT tracker or any PIC device
could be
> made for the major CAT interfaces for Kenwood, Icom and
Yeasu.
> Plug this device into the shack radios and plug it into
an
> unused HT on the APRS channel, and there you go...
>
> Bob, WB4APR
>
>
>
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