[aprssig] D-Star replacement for APRS: [Was: D710 GPS Port]
Gerry Creager
gerry.creager at tamu.edu
Tue Aug 14 14:45:02 EDT 2007
There's already a lot of work that's gone into using D-STAR with APRS.
Check out http://www.aprs-is.net/dstartnc2.htm
The initial work was done by AE5PL... the javAPRSsrvr mastermind.
gerry
Stephen H. Smith wrote:
> William McKeehan wrote:
>> Has anyone looked at D-Star as a potential replacement for APRS?
>>
>> It seems to have a lot of the basic functionality.
>>
> There are a LOT of technical, organizational and political obstacles to
> this ever happening.
>
> Partly as a result of the APRS founders shoe-horning and somewhat
> kludging APRS into the protocols, hardware and infrastructure of the
> preceding connected-packet era (do I dare use that over-used buzzword
> "leverage"?), APRS has succeeded because it has allowed us to do a lot
> of "neat stuff" with really cheap existing hardware. This will *NOT*
> be the case with D-Star. A migration to D-Star will be a wrenching
> total transition to *ALL NEW* base stations, mobiles, hand-helds and
> repeater infrastructure.
>
>
> D-Star is not a short-burst packetized transmission format. It's
> primarily a digitized voice format that can carry a limited amount of
> other data embedded in the main voice data stream. As a result, the
> simple single-frequency store-and-forward "digipeaters" we use on APRS
> won't work with it. You would be faced with coordinating a traditional
> full-blown two-frequency "repeater pair", along with using a separate
> receiver, transmitter and duplexer, just like present voice
> repeaters. Further , getting more than one repeater hop isn't a
> matter of the second repeater hearing the first one, and then
> retransmitting what it hears a moment later. It involves a complex
> land-mobile-style backbone of links on another band, usually 1200 MHz to
> connect repeaters together in real time.
>
> Further, no manufacturer seems to have adopted it, except Icom.
>
> While the only mfr to officially support APRS is Kenwood, at least you
> *CAN* add APRS hardware (TNCs, TinyTracks, Open Tracks, etc.) to other
> radios. This is not going to be the case with D-Star which is an
> entirely digital modulation technique totally different from the analog
> FM we use with APRS packet, that is built-into purpose-built radios. It
> is very unlikely you would be able to add D-Star to any existing radio,
> especially hand-helds.
>
> Achieving anything remotely like the coverage of the current
> analog-FM-packet-based APRS network (where just about any FM radio made
> in the last 30 years or so can be pressed into duty as a digipeater by
> adding a $50 TNC). Duplicating this coverage with D-Star would require
> literally tens of millions of dollars of brand-new infrastructure.
>
> Further, the present network reflects the sum total of a lot of small
> steps made independently by clubs and individuals. A nationwide D-Star
> "APRS- replacement" infrastructure would require a degree of
> coordination (and financial commitment) by clubs and individuals
> unprecedented in amateur radio.
>
> My guess is that we will get "islands" of D-Star activity in major
> metropolitan areas (where the population density of hams is great enough
> to support the major infrastructure investments required) , surrounded
> by hundreds (or thousands) of miles of non-coverage. I.E. the
> individual ham or small club in a small mid-western town or rural
> Kentucky that threw up an old hand-me-down 2-meter rig and a TNC to fill
> in the APRS network at almost no cost, is NOT going to lay out the
> several thousand dollars minimum to put up a D-Star repeater, let alone
> the backbone to link it to other D-Star systems.
>
> Before they make this major investment, users are far more likely to use
> Internet access from their cellphones to send/display GPS position
> reports and send/receive short text messages. (Envision an APRS-like
> application overlaid on Google Maps running on an iPhone-like device.]
>
>
> --
>
> Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
> EchoLink Node: 14400 [Think bottom of the 2M band]
> Home Page: http://wa8lmf.com --OR-- http://wa8lmf.net
>
> NEW! World Digipeater Map
> http://wa8lmf.net/APRSmaps
>
> JavAPRS Filter Port 14580 Guide
> http://wa8lmf.net/aprs/JAVaprsFilters.htm
>
> "APRS 101" Explanation of APRS Path Selection & Digipeating
> http://wa8lmf.net/DigiPaths
>
> Updated "Rev H" APRS http://wa8lmf.net/aprs
> Symbols Set for UI-View,
> UIpoint and APRSplus:
>
>
>
>
>
>
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