Thanks for the explanation David. The chirp I hear is probably
the ramp up on transmit, I'll look at it when I have more time.
73,
Ron
K0IDT
----- Original Message -----
From: "David G3YYD" <g3yyd@btinternet.com>
To: <rtty@contesting.com>
Sent: Monday, December 16, 2013 4:27 AM
Subject: [RTTY] 2Tone Chirp
As you can see I have joined this reflector.
The start up sequence of 2Tone is just as Chen, W7AY, describes. This is
intentional as I will explain.
When receiving using 2Tone in normal mode it asses the envelope value of
both the mark and space tones. It uses this along with its noise
assessment to generate a threshold value for each tone. These threshold
values are used as part of the way 2Tone works out whether mark or space
is being received at any instance in time.
At the moment a new transmission starts up 2Tone receive envelope and
noise values will be incorrect as they will either be a value of the
previous transmission or the value of the noise/QRM being received. In
order to optimise 2Tone decode there is a need to send a space tone and
a mark tone before characters are sent.
Being that mark tone is required to ensure the asynchronous decoder is
ready for the start bit of the first character then the logical sequence
is space tone for one character time; setting the space threshold value
and mark noise value. This is then followed by mark tone for one
character time setting the mark threshold value and space noise value
and resetting the asynchronous decoder to wait for first start bit (one
bit time of space tone).
Most (all?) other means of sending RTTY normally start with a long, in
many cases unnecessary long, mark tone and then sends the first
character. This means the space tone threshold will be in error. But
2Tone is a bit more sophisticated. It deliberately delays assessment by
one character time so it can also use information from the second sent
character to establish a space (and improved mark) threshold value for
the first character. So not all is lost but for best results the 2Tone
sequence is that fastest you can go and get the best decode accuracy.
As Chen says 2Tone transmission has a slow amplitude ramp up at the
start and ramp down at the end of transmission so there are no clicks to
cause QRM to other band users. Very few AFSK implementations do this
and no rig based FSK does it causing unnecessary QRM on adjacent channels.
73 David G3YYD
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