[aprssig] setting up digipeaters & I-gates
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Fri Jul 23 15:46:53 EDT 2010
On 7/23/2010 10:58 AM, Jaye Inabnit ke6sls wrote:
>
> i Stephen:
>
> I'm not sure how you might have interpreted my questions regarding I-gates and
> Digipeaters as confusing the two--I have a good grasp of packet as I
> mentioned in my original post.
However, APRS differs from classical packet in three very major ways:
*ALL* APRS operations are done in UI-Frame unconnected mode -- you never
"connect" with another station. In classic packet, UI mode was used mainly
for beacons and the occasional "roundtable" net-type operation.
All APRS digipeaters use the same generic "callsigns"; i.e. WIDEn-N rather than
specific calls as classic packet did. As a result, the APRS digipeating
process "floods" out in every direction from the originating station in an
ever-widening circle, rather than following a linear path defined by specific
calls.
Classical packet never had the issue of RF<-->Internet connections.
> The link you included was very helpful. I just finished reading it and have
> as many questions as I did before reading--which in my case is a good
> thing :)
>
> Now that I'm back at my QTH, I want to start defining good hill top gear--KPC
> by Kantronics seems like a good choice but I'd certainly like to hear what
> other node operators are using on their hill tops.
In terms of simplicity, minimal space and minimal power consumption, it's hard
to beat a radio & KPC3+ as a stand-alone digipeater. Not having a PC on a
remote mountaintop is a real advantage, both in terms of power consumption,
space and potential software problems & lockups that require reboots.
The KPC+ draws less than 15mA at 12 VDC if you disable the panel leds. It
will work with virtually any VHF radio. KPC3 can output very high TX audio
levels ( greater than 1 volt) which is essential if you use old commercial LMR
radios like GE Mastr IIs or Motorola Micors which have very high mic-input
levels; i.e. telephone line-level equivalent.
(If your are going to be sharing mountain tops with public safety and
commercial land mobile users, it's almost essential to use commercial-class
radios. The receiver front-ends of most ham gear will be grossly desensitized,
blocked or intermodulated when exposed to the nearby RF onslaught on a crowded
mountaintop site. It's like a field-day multi-TX scenario only 50 times worse!)
If you pick them up second-hand, be sure you get KPC3+, not the earlier KPC3.
The older KPC3 uses an entirely different CPU; firmware updates are not
available for it. New KPC3+ units come with firmware compatible with the most
recent APRS standards, and older Plus units can be updated to current.
Or you might want to consider some of the newer-generation far less expensive
"mini-TNCs" such as the TNC-X with it's piggyback digipeater board
<http://TNC-x.com>
Or the Tracker 2 from Argent Data
<http://argentdata.com/products/tracker2.html>
Or the TinyTrack 4 from Byonics
<http://byonics.com/tinytrak4/>
All of these differ from "classic" TNCs by not having the traditional
command-line interface and interpreter intended for use with early
1980s-vintage dumb terminal devices. They present basically a KISS-type
interface to external computer programs.
> Here, I have access to
> some VERY good locations--locations that are very much needed since this is
> serious canyon country. We are a responsive ham group here on the coast, so
> I will certainly have plenty of good help too. Anyway, I'd like to use gear
> that is future compatible (non-locked in firmware etc) so updates to APRS
> routing can be facilitated without replacement of costly gear.
>
> I think I'll set up an Igate here at my QTH. I only use Linux so any Igate
> ops lurking, please feel free to post suggestions/help/tips via this list.
> Just a quick perview of Igate software available looks interesting, however,
> I will need to read much more about it since I don't want to listen to
> traffic as much as I wish to add "our" traffic to the APRS servers.
>
> I've been sending packets for over 12 hours and yet to have any heard by an
> Igate using 5 watts and a very high gain antenna.
Are your sending your packets to a destination beginning "APxxxx" ? Do you
have your coordinates in proper format as part of the transmission?
Except for a few special exceptions, such as the mic-E compressed format where
part of the location data is compressed into the destination field, igates
will ignore any packets not addressed to "AP-something". Further, nothing is
going to appear on a map unless you send your own lat/long (correctly) first.
Of course, the RF absorption losses of redwoods are considerable!
> It's very clear I need to
> get a hill top digipeater in place to cover the towns of
> Trinidad>Mckinleyville>Arcata>Eureka>Loleta>Fortuna>Rio Dell (These towns
> account for most activity and usually can't hear each other even though
> distance is relatively small). These towns are 0n HW101.
>
> Finally, are backbones used for APRS via local digipeaters?
In most places, NO. The vast majority of APRS activity is peer-to-peer
non-hierarchic 1200 baud operation using whatever other stations happen to be
within earshot.
In a few places, yes. The Pacific Northwest (Oregon, Washington, British
Columbia) have a quite sophisticated 9600 baud backbone for the 1200 baud
"users' system".
> I'd really like
> to see how other communities like ours are set up to handle the difficult
> terrain. Relieving packet dups/congestion at 1200 packet speed is obviously
> very important.
In an area of relatively low population density and high RF losses (forests and
not-terribly-high mountains), I doubt that congestion will be a major problem
for you.
[It's a far far bigger problem in the central valley along I-5 and CA-99
where digipeaters on very high peaks in the Coastal Ranges and the High Sierras
have minimum-loss line-of-sight paths of sometimes a hundreds miles or more to
major population centers like the Bay Area, Sacramento-Stockton,
Merced-Modesto, Bakersfield, and over the Tehachapis to the greater L.A. area. ]
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
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