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Re: [RTTY] Some basic RTTY questions

To: Michael Rapp <mdrapp@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [RTTY] Some basic RTTY questions
From: Kok Chen <chen@mac.com>
Date: Thu, 29 May 2014 18:38:40 -0700
List-post: <rtty@contesting.com">mailto:rtty@contesting.com>
On May 29, 2014, at 5:54 PM, Michael Rapp wrote:

> But, I'm set up for FSK.  My software (MMTTY) doesn't decide what my
> transmitted tones are.  My radio does.  My Yaseu FT-950 allows me to pick
> 2125 or 1275 and that's it.  So it looks like I can't set my mark tone to a
> lower frequency even if I wanted to.
> 
> Moreover, changing the mark tone makes no sense on receive as one is
> receiving the tone frequency of the transmitting station.  Am I correct or
> am I missing something really basic here?

When you set your FT-950 up to transmit with "2125," what it does is to send 
the Mark carrier 2125 Hz lower than the receiver's SSB LO frequency.  It sends 
the Space carrier at 2295 Hz lower than the receiver's SSB LO frequency if the 
FT-950's shift is set to 170 Hz.

What this does is that when you change from transmit to receive, the another 
person's Mark carrier that is zero beat to your RTTY signal will be demodulated 
into a 2125 Hz tone at the receiver output, and with 170 Hz shift, the other 
person's Space carrier will be demodulated to a 2295 Hz tone.

When you change to "1275,"  your transmitter will transit the Mark carrier at a 
location that is 1275 Hz lower than the receiver's LO, etc.

As a result, your software modem must also know what Mark/Space tones you have 
selected on the rig.  The two must agree, otherwise the modem you won't decode 
anything.

I don't know about the FT-950, but on the Yaesu transceivers that preceded the 
FT950 (FT990, 1000D, 1000MP), you can also make the dial reading display the 
Mark carrier instead of the LO frequency.  If you have this option, please use 
it, since that is where others spot an RTTY signal,  and expect an RTTY signal 
to be spotted at.  Unlike SSB voice, the LO frequency is not longer at the dial 
frequency.

Some software modems can remodulate the audio tones from the receiver to any 
tone pair that you choose and output that the computer speakers.  I.e., it 
could be set to demodulate and decode 2125/2295 tone pair, but output 1000/1170 
audio tone pair to your ears.  If your favorite software modem does not allow 
that, just pester the developer to implement it.

> My second question is on optimizing my receive audio.  My radio PC is an
> old server and does not have a built-in sound card  I'm using a cheap
> little USB sound card that has a mic in not a line in.  I receive my RTTY
> audio by taking the REC OUT of my FT-950 into a mixer (for sideband work)
> and then the tape out of the mixer that goes into my USB sound card's mic
> jack.

My recommendation is to ignore that sound card.  You can buy usable USB sound 
cards with line level input for around $5 at Amazon. 

If you insist on saving the $5, you would need to build a 2-resistor voltage 
divider (or use a potentiometer) that brings the receiver output to within the 
dynamic range of the existing sound card.

73
Chen, W7AY

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