[aprssig] Looking for 9600 Baud equipment.
R.M. King
krm1012 at qwest.net
Sun Sep 28 19:05:14 EDT 2008
> 9600 bps G3RUH is not your choice for mobile APRS. It does not cope well
> with multipath phase rotation and flutter.
My experience with 440MHz 9600 Baud operations does not support the above
comment.
There are several people using 9600 Baud 440.875MHz APRS equipment in the
Puget Sound area of Washington State. Mobile operation using Kenwood
D700's, D710's, D7's and a variety of other equipment manufacturers for base
station operations has been outstandingly successful. Puget Sound is
surrounded by mountains. The Cascade range and the Olympic range are almost
always in site and there are many 200 ft. to 600 + ft hills in this area.
We have had no problems operating at 9600 Baud in this area. This has been
going on for over 4 years now.
As a matter of fact, many of us will tell you that they have BETTER success
using 9600 Baud than 1200 Baud.
You can check us out on find-u. Most of our digi's use an alias of Uxxxxx
. ie: UCAPK, UNCMNO, USAM, UQA and UVCMP etc.. There are a few using
normal convention such as K7OFT-10 and WSV.
With the TXD overhead, 9600 Baud packets are about 1/3 the length of 1200
Baud packets. This is a huge advantage. They are shorter and so there is
much less time for man-made and normal operational phenomenon to affect and
corrupt the packet. Throughput is higher and the BER is lower.
It is true that at 440MHz there is a 9.7Db propagation loss when compared to
144MHz. But the I.F. gain of modern transceivers and the higher antenna
gain of most 440 base station and mobile antennas helps to make up for this
loss. The net result is BETTER performance using 9600 Baud vs. 1200 Baud.
The one real caveat is one must use a good service monitor to set the
deviation at 9600 Baud. You can NOT guess by listening to the recovered
audio. It just doesn't work.
Our APRS 9k6 Baud APRS network is growing here in the Puget Sound area. I
would encourage anybody to try 9600 Baud APRS. On two meters (NOT
144.390MHZ) or on 440.875MHz.
Bob King K7OFT
krm1012 at qwest.net
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