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Re: [RTTY] fluttered signals

To: Jacques RAMBAUD <f6bki@wanadoo.fr>
Subject: Re: [RTTY] fluttered signals
From: Kok Chen <chen@mac.com>
Date: Sun, 18 Apr 2004 15:11:56 -0700
List-post: <mailto:rtty@contesting.com>

On Apr 18, 2004, at 1:34 PM, Jacques RAMBAUD wrote:
-what causes the signal to be so difficult to copy ? multipath ?....?
-Why is MMTTY unable to deal with such signal?
-Is there any other way , or RTTY decoder that are better in this respect , how old TU with discrete filters (88mh) works ?
-Are the KAM or PK232 better ?
any litterature on the subject?

If it sounds odd and fluttery and difficult to print even when the signal is loud, it is pretty likely to be multipath. It can happen not just from transpolar circuits but trans-equatorial as well. I get a lot of flutter across the pole from Europe, but I have also noted some pretty bad flutter from across the equator with loud S9 signals in Portland from FO5, for example. One time when JA1ELY was at PY0FF, his PSK31 signals were fluttered beyond copy (but his RTTY signal was still barely printable).


My opinion is that simple modems such as the KAM are not going to behave better than the software modem you used.

What makes it so hard to decode? The HAL ST-8000 Technical Manual says: "Multi-path propagation of an RTTY signal may cause differential fading or severe pulse distortion of the signal."

I think the "differential fading" is a specific instance of the selective fading that we all have learned to hate.

The "pulse distortion" is understandable from observing that any square pulse signal is made up of different Fourier components. If all components do not arrive at the same time instance, the result is no longer be square. When it is severe enough, this can cause the Mark detector output and the Space detector output to actually overlap (usually, when the Mark tank detects a signal, the Space tank circuit will not see anything since you do not transmit both Mark and Space tones simultaneously -- which you can in some other modes, but not in Binary FSK).

The ST-8000 has a very simple circuit (just a handful of gates) which takes the detected mark signal and the detected space signal and forms an output signal from the combination to estimate a signal whose mark and space do not overlap; pretty much an exclusive-OR type gate configuration. (The ST-8000 has detector settings for normal, mark only, space only, and multipath.)

RITTY has selectable matched filters that are designed for different propagation conditions, but I don't know any more than that since I don't run that software.

I have been planning for some time to investigate DSP counter-flutter implementations, but have never gotten around to it. I have even bought a used ST-8000 for the time I have more free time to investigate it and would need a reference modem to compare against. For now however, except for some recorded sound files, this is as much as I know.

73
Chen, W7AY


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