RTTY Contesting Technology Topics Ed Muns, W0YK

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Presentation transcript:

RTTY Contesting Technology Topics Ed Muns, W0YK CTU 2015 Presents RTTY Contesting Technology Topics Ed Muns, W0YK

RTTY Contesting Technology Topics Transmitting AFSK vs. FSK Which is “best”? Bandwidth FSK creation and inaccuracies Receiving Decoders IF bandwidth Multiple decoders Interfaces Homebrew Commercial 2/94

RTTY vs. CW/SSB Key Difference Signal encoding/decoding: By technology vs. By human brain Kinda’ like Assisted vs. Unassisted! (Accordingly, what does the “Assisted RTTY” operator really DO?!) 3/94

RTTY vs. CW/SSB Key Difference Technology exploitation replaces operating skill in encoding/decoding the RTTY signal. The 2 cornerstones of ham radio! RTTY technology is very important. 4/94

What is RTTY? compared to CW One RF carrier Local audio pitch On or off key up is data 0 key down is data 1 Morse code typically 25-40 wpm RTTY Two RF carriers 170 Hz apart (Space & Mark; Shift) Local audio tones One on and other off Space is data 0 Mark is data 1 Baudot code constant 60 wpm (or 45.45 Baud) Samual Morse (1791 – 1872), American co-inventor of Morse Code easily decoded by human ear Emile Baudot (1845 – 1903), French inventor of Baudot Code better suited to machine decoding 5/94

RTTY Transmission AFSK vs. FSK Two methods of transmission: AFSK (Audio Frequency Shift Keying) keyed audio tones into SSB transmitter via: Mic input, or Auxiliary audio input. e.g., Line In FSK (Frequency Shift Keying) keys the transmitter just like CW Note: Receiving is the same in either case. 6/94

AFSK vs. FSK 2010 survey AFSK has been overtaken by FSK since it first appeared in radios, circa 1990 7/94

AFSK vs. FSK comparison AFSK FSK Indirect (tones  Mic input) Any SSB radio (esp. legacy) SSB (wide) filtering Dial = sup. car. frequency VOX Audio cable (same as PSK31) Should use high tones NET (automatic TX tone control for S&P) Less bandwidth Easy set-up; better signal; NET FSK Direct (like CW keying) “Modern” radios RTTY (narrow) filtering Dial = Mark frequency PTT FSK keying hardware Can use low tones No audio level adjust No disabling speech proc. No erroneous sound keying Less pitfalls 8/94

AFSK vs. FSK dial frequency spots are often wrong! RTTY RF is independent of local audio tones and whether LSB or USB is used: The higher RF frequency is the Mark (14090.000 kHz) The lower RF frequency is the Space (14089.830 kHz) The difference between the two is the shift (170 Hz) FSK displays Mark (14090.000 kHz) AFSK displays suppressed carrier which varies with local audio tones and sideband used! For Mark tone of 2125 Hz (Space tone of 2295 Hz): LSB (14092.125 kHz) USB – Mark & Space tones reversed (14087.005 kHz) 9/94

AFSK vs. FSK which is “best” AFSK vs. FSK which is “best”? “Danger, Will Robinson, religious controversy ahead!” “AFSK often has poor signal quality, causing heavy QRM.” “FSK often has unnecessarily wide bandwidth, creating heavy QRM.” “AFSK is simpler.” “FSK is simpler.” 10/94

AFSK vs. FSK which is “best” AFSK vs. FSK which is “best”? Answer: The one that best enables your success! Two challenges: Transmission bandwidth, and Bit timing 11/94

RTTY Transmit Bandwidth AFSK Use radio FSK filter DSP TX filter (K3) Lobby other mfrs Use MODEM TX filter MMTTY 512-tap, not 48-tap default 2Tone default Properly adjust Level Compression disabled FSK Use radio FSK filter DSP TX filter (K3) Lobby other mfrs Otherwise, use AFSK 12/94

RTTY Radios AFSK bandwidth MMTTY - AFSK No TX filter K3 @ 1 mW Default 48-tap TX BPF Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) 13/94

RTTY Radios AFSK bandwidth MMTTY - AFSK Default 48-tap TX BPF K3 @ 1 mW 512-tap TX BPF Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) 14/94

RTTY Radios AFSK bandwidth MMTTY - AFSK 512-tap TX BPF K3 @ 1 mW 2Tone - AFSK Default “AM” setting Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) 15/94

RTTY Radios PA IMD impact on AFSK bandwidth MMTTY - AFSK 512-tap TX BPF K3 @ 1 mW K3 @ 100 watts Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) 16/94

RTTY Radios PA IMD impact on AFSK bandwidth MMTTY - AFSK No MMTTY filter No K3 AFSK filter K3 @ 100 watts K3 AFSK filter Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) 17/94

RTTY Radios PA IMD impact on AFSK bandwidth MMTTY - AFSK 512-tap TX BPF No K3 AFSK filter K3 @ 100 watts No MMTTY filter K3 AFSK filter Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) 18/94

RTTY Radios PA IMD impact on RTTY bandwidth FSK/MMTTY/2Tone FSK unfiltered MMTTY 512-tap BPF 2Tone “AM” setting K3 @ 1 mW Same encoders K3 @ 100 watts Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3rtty/k3rtty.html) Thanks W7AY for composite graphics 19/94

RTTY Radios FSK bandwidth Old K3 FSK bandwidth No waveshaping < DSP281 firmware Typical of all radios 50 watts New K3 FSK bandwidth Optimal DSP filter DSP281+ firmware Lobby other mfrs to add a FSK filter! Thanks K0SM (http://www.frontiernet.net/~aflowers/k3beta/) 20/94

AFSK Signal Quality Operator Skill & Attention Speech compressor disabled Audio drive level below clipping RF amplifier drive level below hard limiting Including change of operating frequency Elimination of ground loop hum Muting of Windows sounds 21/94

FSK Bit Timing PC vs. dedicated timing Stop Bit “jitter” Varying Stop Bit length Not nominal Stop Bit length Not 45 vs. 45.45 Baud PC CPU speed vs. application demand Quad-core, > 2 GHz USB loading Minimize other USB System clock inaccuracy Motherboard UART Dedicated Bit timing outside PC TinyFSK N1MM only rpiFSK N1MM, WriteLog, WinWarbler, others 22/94

RTTY Decoders typically bundled with an encoder MMTTY 2Tone Other software: MMVARI, Fldigi, MixW, etc. Hardware TNCs: Hal DXP38 Timewave PK-232 Kantronics KAM 23/94

RTTY Decoders 2Tone Outperforms MMTTY Uses less CPU cycles AFSK only Pseudo FSK Contest loggers: N1MM Logger WriteLog Introduced late 2012 David Wicks, G3YYD 24/94

Hardware TNCs or “Modem” 25/94

Logger Support WriteLog N1MM Logger Win-Test MMTTY, MMVARI, 2Tone PCI-3000/4000, DSP-4100/DXP-38, P-38, PK-232, KAM, STS, KT4FY MM, dumb terminal N1MM Logger MMTTY, MMVARI, 2Tone, Fldigi DXP38 Win-Test MMTTY 26/94

Logger support MMTTY & 2Tone Feature MMTTY 2Tone AFSK FSK WriteLog ☻  N1MM Logger Win-Test   NET on  not available 27/94

IF Bandwidth optimal decoding Narrow IF filters (Roofing & DSP) 400-500 Hz - normal 250 Hz – “may help” with strong QRM Tone filters – don’t use! Icom Twin Peak Filter K3 Dual-Tone Filter Audio filtering JPS NIR-10/12 Timewave DSP-599zx Modern DSP rigs 28/94

RTTY Decoders choice of Tones Less fatiguing Low/High tones can be mixed to put two audio streams in one ear: SO2R plus SO2V per radio SOnR 29/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders 2010 survey 20% use multiple decoders 30/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders Why? Diversity of decoding algorithms The more diversity, the closer to human brain Higher probability of clear print All decoders equal 95% of the time 1% of the time, only one will print clearly Each of the them is the “winner” at some time Less wasted time asking for repeats Zero cost 31/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders MMTTY & DXP38-WriteLog Parallel decoding Software, e.g., MMTTY Hardware, e.g., DXP38 Diverse conditions Flutter Multi-path QRM, QRN Weak signals Off-frequency stations 32/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders multiple MMTTY profile windows Parallel decoding same audio stream switching takes too long Multiple profile windows Standard Fluttered signals Fluttered signals (FIR) Multi-path hyper sensitive EU1SA AA6YQ-FIR-512 weak signals in QRN 33/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders two IF bandwidths Narrow IF filtering (main RX) Hardware modem, i.e. DXP38 MMTTY profiles Standard Fluttered signals Fluttered signals (FIR) Multi-path hyper sensitive EU1SA Wide IF filtering (sub RX) AA6YQ-FIR-512 Dual Peak Filter “Matched filter” 34/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders SO2V: 4 + 2 decoders RX/TX RX only Main-RX (2Tone Nor) Sub-RX (2Tone Nor) Main-RX (2Tone Flutter) Sub-RX (MMTTY Std ) Main-RX (MMTTY Std) Main-RX (DXP-38) 35/94

Multiple RTTY Decoders SO2R-SO2V: 2 x (4 + 2) decoders 36/94

Interfaces AFSK & FSK keying Standard audio cable 3.5mm (SC) to ?? (radio) Optionally Isolation transformer 40 dB pad, if Mic input Level control FSK FSK/PTT keying cable Homebrew Commercial Optionally USB-Serial adapter Edgeport/4 or /8 “some” consumer units 37/94

Homebrew FSK/PTT cable FSK: TXD (3) PTT: RTS (7) FSK input PTT input (DB9 pin #) Gnd (5) on radio 38/94

Homebrew FSK/PTT cable commercial W3YY board Opto-isolators 39/94

Commercial Interfaces USB: TX/RX, isolation, level ctrl RASCAL 40/94

Commercial Interfaces comparative choices See May-June 2012 NCJ, “RTTY Contesting” column 41/94

Commercial Interfaces RigExpert 42/94

Commercial Interfaces microHAM One Radio SO2R 43/94

Commercial Interfaces RigExpert & microHAM comparison See May-June 2012 NCJ, “RTTY Contesting” column 44/94

Resources NCJ RTTY Contesting columns Prior CTU RTTY presentations Decoding: Jul/Aug 2013 and Jan/Feb 2014 Commercial RTTY interfaces: May/Jun 2012 Prior CTU RTTY presentations 2014 CTU textbook from DXE ($19.95) AA5AU website: www.rttycontesting.com Tutorials and resources (beginner to expert) WriteLog/N1MM Logger and MMTTY/2Tone Email reflector: rtty@contesting.com RTTY contester networking Q&A 45/94