I am used to the problem that if there is too much load (i.e. too low of a resistance) on a TTL circuit that it simply loads it down and the signal levels decrease, eventually to the point where they
I tried to upgrade from 10.38D to 10.39C Upgrade and was told that Writelog was not installed, yet from what I can tell, 10.38D is installed and runs just fine. Looked in the archives and saw somethi
I used two Radio Shack audio isolation transformers in a small project box that I inserted in the middle of a standard stereo patch cable. Got rid of the hum that I saw on the RTTY screen. I had seen
It was a standard ground loop. This sort of problem can appear any time something is grounded in more than one place. The usual fix is to break the ground in one of them. 73 Stan, N3HS --Original Mes
I am using it on my new motherboard and all seems OK so far. 73 Stan, N3HS John, I for one have relegated the AC97 for use only as a music player. I have found several programs with which the AC97 do
I did the conversion and the only thing I found is that when the computer is turned off rather than Win XP shutting it down, it comes up faster and doesn't check the disk for errors before starting.
Let me add that you can buy a "bare bones" computer which means that the motherboard, floppy, memory, CR, etc are already installed. Just add hard disk (or move the one from the old computer which is
1) I just replaced my Motherboard and when I put my SIIG dual serial back in, it came out something like Com 8 & 9. The board was on Com 3 & 4 before the MB swap. Apparently the registry was holding
Yes, just the system control panel and select ports. Start -> Control Panel -> Performance and Maintenance > System -> Hardware -> Device Manager -> ports -> The device (in my caase the SIIG card) ->
Ow do I force Windows to use the sound card that I want it to? I have two cards in the computer and both work individually, however if I have both enabled, Windows (XP Pro) wants to use one of them a
I had reqad it before I did it and it is helpful on how to make things like MMTTY work, but I couldn't find any info on how to get windows to use the card I want it to. Thanks Stan, N3HS I don't know
I had reqad it before I did it and it is helpful on how to make things like MMTTY work, but I couldn't find any info on how to get windows to use the card I want it to. Thanks Stan, N3HS I don't know
I used an attenuator cable from Radio Shack. It is the one that I bought to record from the radio as the radio overdrove my casette recorder. It is a stock item on their shelves. 73 Stan, N3HS I seem
All of the discussion has been very helpful. I did find one curious thing that had thrown me a curve for a while. There are two Alt-K windows. One that comes up when I am using CD decode in writelog
I just tried it and had a different experience. Running XP Pro on Athlon 1500 512MB RAM. When I tried it with it's default port addresses, I was able to access all 3 LPT ports in the Writelog Ports S
I recently reinstalled XPpro to clean up my installation. I installed Writelog and it works OK. I also installed MMTTY with the same results. I then installed the MMTTY interface for Writelog. Howeve
Yes, twice. Did you reinstall the plugin that permits writelog and mmtty to work toghether? Try here: http://www.writelog.com/ThirdPartyDownloads.htm 73 I file
Thanks. Found what I needed. 73 Stan, n3hs Stan -- Try this http://www.aa5au.com/rtty.html Go down to the getting started section, and feast on the info there. 73, Jon K1US -- Original Message -- Fro
Can we give it a break? Interesting, other directors have said it was unanimous. I wonder who is right. Jim _______________________________________________ WriteLog mailing list WriteLog@contesting.c