I believe PACTORII did that. You connected at the slower speed and if the
through put was good it went to the higher speed. I also think that some guys
had this feature controlling the ALC of the rig too. The better copy, the
lower the output. when the copy started to get poor, the rig power went up.
Nothing new, just different mode.
One the 75 baud, about ever 5 to 10 years this comes up. Everyone always go's
back to 45 baud after playing.
Joe K0BX
on RTTY since 1974
Stop the insanity!
Please do not add me to any distribution lists (Joke, Stories or Junk) without
my permission.
--- On Thu, 6/17/10, Bill, W6WRT <dezrat1242@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Bill, W6WRT <dezrat1242@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [RTTY] 75 Baud
To: RTTY@contesting.com
Date: Thursday, June 17, 2010, 1:33 PM
ORIGINAL MESSAGE:
On Thu, 17 Jun 2010 11:04:38 -0500, "Robert Chudek - K0RC"
<k0rc@citlink.net> wrote:
>
>The early lesson from 75 Baud RTTY is when the bands deteriorate,
>slower is better. But when band conditions are great, higher
>speeds allows a lot more qso's per hour.
REPLY:
Perhaps we need software that automatically changes speeds with hand
conditions. A couple of scenarios come to mind:
1. You CQ at 75 baud. If the replying station is having trouble
decoding you, he answers at 45 baud, and your software changes to 45
baud for the rest of the QSO, then back to 75 baud when complete.
or
You CQ at 45 baud. If the replying station believes you will copy him
ok, he replies at 75 baud and if you copy ok, you change to 75 baud
and complete the QSO. The change would be semi-automatic, i.e. your
software would detect the 75 baud and ask if you want to change.
Might be a solution. What do you think?
73, Bill W6WRT
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