[CQ-Contest] Topband: Stew Perry : FO8RZ
Rick Lindquist, WW3DE
ww3de at comcast.net
Tue Dec 29 15:04:47 PST 2009
This is so totally cool, Victor. Thanks for sharing.
73, Rick, WW3DE
-----Original Message-----
From: cq-contest-bounces at contesting.com
[mailto:cq-contest-bounces at contesting.com] On Behalf Of Victor A. Kean, Jr.
Sent: Monday, December 28, 2009 11:09 PM
To: topband at contesting.com; cq-contest at contesting.com
Cc: f5phw at free.fr
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Topband: Stew Perry : FO8RZ
On Sunday 27 December 2009 10:25:54 pm f5phw at free.fr wrote:
> Very happy to be heard by K1LT in OH (559).
and from: [CQ-Contest] Using spectrum scopes in contests
> Anybody seriously making use of spectrum scopes in contests? If yes, how
do
> you use them?
I have to reply to these messages together, since they are related.
Many of you are bored by my numerous soapbox comments about my phased array
and
software defined radio "receiving system" (its an antenna *and* a radio at
the
same time). One of the benefits of this system is the constantly available
spectrum
display. I've hacked some software together so that I can use the SDR as
the
receiver and my IC765 as the transmitter with the transmitter tracking the
receiver.
(It hacking because the 765 is connected to a different computer and
nominally
being controlled by WriteLog.)
So, if I see an interesting signal on the SDR screen, a single mouse click
puts that
signal in the center of the receiver passband and also puts the transmitter
on the
same frequency.
On the spectrum display, weak signals are thin and dim, while strong signals
are
fat (usually quite fat from the key clicks) and bright. When its time to
S&P,
rather than crawl across the entire band verifying that each fat line is
someone
I've worked before, I just click on all the dim lines because they are
frequently
interesting. Furthermore, on 160 the interesting signals often congregate
in the
1830-1835 region.
So, while working my way up the band during an S&P session, I noticed an
interesting
signal off by itself around 1835. That turned out to be VE1ZZ working
ZL3IX. I had
the phased array pointed at 270 degrees for W6s and 7s, but I turned it to
240 to see
if I could hear ZL3IX. (Its that sharp.) I did and I worked him. When I
turned the
antenna, another even dimmer line appeared a couple of kHz lower. I clicked
on that
line and heard FO8RZ sign and then promptly fade into the noise. I couldn't
tell if
he was working the contest from just that one call.
Nevertheless, while chasing other dim lines around the screen, I kept an eye
on 1832
(actually, the whole "window"). A couple of times the faint line reappeared
and I
clicked to see what I could hear. The last time I did so, I heard FO8RZ CQ,
so I
called and completed a QSO. I never saw anyone else call him.
I wish I had recorded that QSO, because I could then play it back exactly as
I heard
it, since its digital, and the recording captures the spatial content which
means I
can steer the "antenna" (or am I steering the radio?) during the playback
and also
tweak the filters and go see who was causing the key clicks, etc. Note that
all I
had to do was click a single 200x200 pixel "button" to start a recording
that
pre-dates the click by 10 seconds (because the recording program is
constantly
buffering the data from the SDR hardware). But I didn't even think of it.
I
suppose I could record the entire contest, but at 3 megabytes a second, each
24 hour
recording would require 259 gigabytes. Maybe I'll go buy a terabyte hard
drive for
the CQ 160.
Anyway, I ramble.
Victor, K1LT
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