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WI8W   > RTTY     02.04.05 06:14l 372 Lines 18716 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: RTTY Gazette - April 2005
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To  : RTTY@WW


RTTY Gazette - April 2005

Greetings, everyone and welcome to this issue of the RTTY Gazette.   A few 
subscribers volunteered some interesting things for this issue.  This promises 
to be our largest issue yet, so let's get started.

I am writing this issue as the FT5XO DXpedition to Kerguelen Island is 
closing up shop after providing contacts to thousands of deserving amateurs.  
They were active on SSB, CW, and RTTY.  If you were one of the lucky ones 
to bag them on RTTY, I envy your accomplishment.  The propagation gods 
were not in our favor here in Michigan as I had only one brief 15 minute 
opening on 30 meters. I heard plenty of stations in the pileups but nary a 
whisper from FT5XO.  Nope, no RTTY contact for station WI8W.  The usual 
lids were apparent with many calling on their transmit frequency. Apparently 
they do not know the meaning of…UP UP.

All was not lost though as on Monday evening past I did manage to bag them 
using our most primitive digital mode…CW.  Well at least I will get a card 
and can say that I did get to work em!  I wonder if they are producing a 
video of the effort? 

How about you?  Got any stories to tell?  How did you bag em?

So now the sun has crossed the Equator on it's yearly travels into the 
Northern Hemisphere which will bring high static levels to the low bands and 
maybe some enhanced propagation to the high ones.  There are a few more 
great DXpeditions coming up that we can all chase down for that new one in 
the log.

It is also almost antenna season. I have some new things I want to put up and 
some things that need a bit of fixing. How about you?  What are you planning 
for the coming season?  

Beginning in this issue, and continuing in a few future issues, we will be 
presenting a overview of  linked digital modes written and provided by 
Jeremy N1ZZZ.  Here is the first part, reprinted with permission of Jeremy.

Ham Radio Linked Modes:
By Jeremy Allen N1ZZZ

This is the first of a series of articles that I hope will shed some light 
on the various linked modes used in radio today, especially in the HF 
bands.  Linked, or burst modes, is the family of protocols that link one or 
more stations for the purpose of transmitting error-free data, usually at 
moderate to fast rates.

Linked modes vary, however they have many common requirements.  In every 
linked mode, the T/R switching speed and timing are critical.  Most modern 
transceivers are quick enough to meet these requirements, but some old 
"boat anchors" are not the best choice for linked modes.  Also, most 
soundcard applications are not suitable for linked modes because of the 
timing delays that are inherent in many computer operating systems.  The 
exception to the timing rule is packet, which has a looser timing sequence. 
 Soundcard packet is the only viable linked mode currently available.  Also 
important is frequency stability.  This is very important for some of the 
fastest modes such as Clover and PacTor 2/3.  In any case, if the frequency 
of the signal drifts too much, then the link will be lost.

Linked modes are found as part of MCP's (multi-mode control processors).  
There are a wide variety of controllers on the new and used market.  
Various modes are available on the different models, however almost every 
MCP will have AMTOR, and PacTor linked mode, as well as older modes such 
as Baudot RTTY.  A number of manufacturers market MCP's with proprietary 
modes, so choosing a MCP is a combination of performance as well as desired 
features and modes. 
 
As a result of the surge in the use of the Soundcards, MCP's is a buyers 
market.  Good MCP's can be obtained for under $100 dollars now, so now 
many of these linked modes are available even to budget-conscious hams.

The major strength of all linked modes is error correction.  Although it 
might take awhile to pass the message, operators can be certain that 
whatever is on their screen was what the other station sent.  While modes 
like PSK31 and MFSK16 are very robust, and incorporate FEC, it is not 
uncommon at all to get junk characters on the screen.  This is not the case 
with the linked modes.  In addition, with the exception of AMTOR, linked 
modes can transmit binary files at fairly fast speeds, enabling users to 
transfer more than just text.  Graphics files and even short programs can 
easily be exchanged with little worry about corrupt or missing data.  So 
despite the increasing popularity of the soundcard modes among digital 
operators, the burst modes continue to hold a place in the ranks of amateur 
radio.


AMTOR: The First Amateur Linked Mode

	Before AMTOR hit the amateur airwaves around 1983, the only method 
	to move text over the amateur airwaves was RTTY.  The problem with 
	RTTY was that there was no error correction at all.  If any of the 
	bits were corrupted enroute, the text was not displayed correctly.  
	In order to introduce some error correction into digital 
	communications, a mode called SITOR was developed for commercial 
	use.  This mode was adapted for use in amateur radio by G3PLX, and 
	called AMTOR, which means Amateur Teleprinting Over Radio. Amtor 
	uses the 5-bit Baudot code, the same as RTTY, which allows for 
	operators to pass capital letters, number, and a limited number of 
	symbols.  Lower case letters cannot to be transmitted because there 
	are not enough bit combinations in the Baudot code to encode them.  
	This problem would have to wait for more advanced modes to be solved.
	AMTOR comes in two flavors, or Modes.  First is Mode-A, or ARQ 
	(automatic Repeat Request), which is when two stations are linked 
	and exchanging date.  Mode-B uses FEC (forward error correction) 
	which basically repeats every bit twice, with the hope that one of 
	the two will get through to the other station.  Mode-B is used for, 
	broadcasting, round table discussions, and calling CQ.  This signal 
	sounds somewhat like a standard RTTY signal.  The best place today 
	to listen for a Mode-B signal is to listen to the W1AW bulletin broadcast.
	Mode-A is the most well known AMTOR mode.  The signal sounds like 
	a series of chirps as the two stations exchange data.  The link is 
	established when one station uses a 4-letter SelCal code to call the 
	other station.  Selcals are most likely a contraction of the 
	station's call sign.  For example, my selcal is NZZZ, omitting the 
	1 of my call sign.  Usually the terminal software will automatically 
	transform the station's call sign into a selcal.  The software will 
	also display the set selcal when calling CQ in mode-B to eliminate 
	confusion, and allow the other station to initiate the link.
	When two stations are linked, the one sending data is called the 
	master, or ISS (Information sending station) station; whereas the 
	receiving station is the slave, or IRS (information receiving 
	station).  The ISS will send data in 3 character blocks.  If the 
	whole data block is received without error, the IRS will send an 
	ACK (acknowledge) signal, and the ISS will send the next block of 
	data.  If the data is corrupted en-route, the IRS will send a NAK 
	(not-acknowledge) code, and the ISS will resend the block until it 
	is received correctly.  The ISS will also resent the data if no 
	signal or a corrupted ACK/NAK signal is not received from IRS.  
	When the ISS is through sending data, the operator sends a specific 
	command and the ISS becomes the IRS while the IRS becomes ISS.  
	Under good conditions, an AMTOR link will pass data at about 100 
	baud.  This will exchange text as fast, or faster than most people 
	can type.  This mode, because of the Baudot code, cannot be used 
	to exchange data files however, but is good for keyboard QSO's.  If 
	the conditions are not very good, the throughput will be reduced 
	dramatically as the number of NAK signals increases.  If the 
	conditions really take a dive, the link will fail as the number of 
	repeats exceeds a preset number.  At this point MCP, will inform 
	the operator of the link failure and go back to a standby mode.
	So how do we get on AMTOR?  The best way to get on AMTOR is through 
	a Multimode Control Processor (MCP).  Most any MCP available today 
	will operate both Mode-A and B.  Soundcards, the new rage among 
	digital operators, can be used to work Mode-B but because of timing 
	issues on most operating systems, Mode-A is not feasible.  The real 
	issue with AMTOR is that there are better, more robust modes, such 
	as PacTor out there, so the use of AMTOR has reduced to a trickle.  
	There are some AMTOR signals out there, mostly around 14.080 LSB on 
	20 meters, but a sked would probably be the best way to get some 
	AMTOR QSO's in the log.
	In the next installment, we will look at the "improved" version of 
	AMTOR, PacTor.  


Thanks Jeremy…part 2 next month.

Next we have a short article from Jeff N3YEA.  Not necessarily about digital 
communications but it just might get you to thinking about how you got 
started in this wonderful hobby.  I know I am thinking about it right now.  
Here is Jeff's article.

I was always interested in radio , as a young child I would do odd jobs to 
get enough money to buy the small short-wave receiver kits. String a long 
wire across the backyard , which seemed high to me, but my Dad would 
always run into them when he was mowing the yard. 

I would tune around the SW bands for hours, listening to all the different 
languages, and those strange signals. Then someone gave me a Zenith 
Trans-Oceanic , which really opened my world up. I would log the different 
stations, and spend hours searching for new stations and those strange 
signals. I received an Amateur License Study Guide, but being 10 to 12 
years old - I understood very little in it, but I think I memorized most of 
it, just by reading it so often. I never could find a Elmer, back then you 
really didn't have an easy way of finding one, if you didn't know someone, 
or knew someone who knew someone. 

It was also when you had to travel to a major city to take the tests - which 
I never felt confident enough in my knowledge to ask my Dad to take a day 
off of work to drive a couple of hours to take the test. Heck - I didn't 
have any money for rigs anyhow. I remember dreaming over the newest 
Heathkit catalogs I would get. But then - I got into junior and senior high 
schools and discovered sports, girls and cars and the hobby was forgotten. 
Upon graduating from high school, I enlisted in the U.S. Army - where I 
wanted to be a truck driver, but their testing revealed that I had an 
aptitude for something else, in the "Army Security Agency" . But they 
couldn't tell me exactly what it was , because it was classified. 

So - off to Security Agency school I went - and lo and behold - the first 
part was learning CW , so for 3 months, 6 hours per day, I learned CW , 
and when you spend that much time learning it - you learn in very well. The 
next few months were spent learning how to receive ( intercept ) RTTY 
signals.  You can imagine my glee, getting my hands on all those "state of 
the art" R-390's , and the teletype machines, along with all the 
demodulators. And the antenna arrays !!! -- simply amazing to me..  many 
times, I would go in during my off hours, find an un-used R-390 and tune 
around , listening to even more stranger signals... 

When my service time came to an end, I got back into the mainstream of life, 
and radio bug again took a back seat, to getting married, buying the first 
house, raising a daughter and so on.. When my grandfather passed away, 
one of the things I was given, was a radio he had, that used to listen to 
the ballgames on. It also had a short-wave band on it, so there I was 
again, listening to the signals -- and this time - I could identify some of 
the them! Well, the bug was back , and I bought another up to date study 
guide. Now I had the internet to look up information - Wow - you could go 
somewhere local and take the test! so after a couple of months of studying, 
with my wife and daughter reading the practice questions to me at the 
dinner table, and getting back up to par at CW. I was surprised, that after 
nothing to do with CW for 21 years - it came back fairly easily. I contacted 
a local club and registered for their next test session. That October 
evening, I passed the 13 WPM code test, the Novice, Technician, and 
Technician plus exams. The first rig was a used Kenwood TS-520s and a 
Hustler 5 band vertical antenna and a straight key.. So many bands, so many 
people talking, so many on CW and there were those RTTY signals.   After 
listening for a couple of weeks waiting on my call to be assigned and to 
get the feel of how things worked - it was time. Armed with my new 
callsign, clammy palms, and shaking hands -- I tuned around the 80 meter 
CW band.. and there he was - KB9NUG , calling CQ ..   I tapped out my call 
sign twice .. and HE ANSWERED ME ! 

It's funny how you remember your first contact -- at least I do.. When I 
told him he was my very first contact, and that I was very nervous, he 
kept offering to QRS, and I kept telling him the speed was fine - no 
problem at all. It turned out he was visiting his father in Chicago, using 
his fathers rig. That is how they kept in touch, His call was WB9BXX, and 
when I got his qsl card - he had written on it, something that I think I'll 
always remember --  " Thanks for making me your first contact." 

But I couldn't stay away from the digital portions of the bands -- my first 
TNC was a MFJ-1278. Since then, I have learned so much, have met so many 
people, and have 
upgraded my equipment and license. I'm now running a Yaesu FT1000MP Mark V, 
and a Rigblaster and am just about exclusively digital. I still have that 
520 S and 1278 sitting on my desk, I should sell it - but there are so many 
memories attached to it - 
I hand out points in most every RTTY contest , and very rarely turn in a 
score sheet - I send in my logs for check logs. 

It's funny - during contests, at times, I'll listen to those RTTY tones, 
and I'll be taken back to my Army days, turning the big knob on the R-390, 
getting the "crossed banana's " just right, and hearing the teletype machine 
behind me, hammering out the letters and numbers. Then further back, to a 
little black plastic short-wave radio kit I built. 

73 , de 
Jeff - N3YEA

Thanks Jeff,  I may just put my story in here in a future issue.


Have you got a story to tell?  I am sure there are others who would like to 
read about it.


As you are probably aware this publication is distributed world wide not 
only through email but also on PACKET, AMTOR, PACTOR and other networks.  
If you are responsible for placing this publication on any outside networks 
please contact me.  I would like to try to get a feel for just how large an 
audience this publication reaches.  I also would like your input on the 
ability of those networks to handle graphic images and PDF files.  

I would also like input from you, the reader, on the subject of including 
images in the RTTY Gazette.  There is a lot we can do with this 
publication.  Let's explore the possibilities.

That about does it for the news and features…on to the Announcements.

***************************************************

ANNOUNCED DXPEDITIONS  -  APRIL 2005

Mar30 - Apr4	Cyprus		5B4
By LY1DF as 5B4/LY1DF; 80m + WARC; CW; QRV mainly afternoon hours

Apr1 - Apr9	Cayman Islands	ZF2UJK
By K4UJ fm Grand Cayman Is; 80 40 20 17 12 10m; CW SSB fm north side of 
island 

Apr1 - Apr15	Bolivia		CP6D
By DF9GR as CP6/DF9GR fm southern Bolivia; 80-10m; mainly CW RTTY PSK; 
QSL OK via DARC Buro 

Apr3 - May05	Dominican Republic		HI8IK
By IW2OAZ fm Sto Domingo and Bayahibe; QSL OK via Buro or direct 

Apr4 -  Apr12	South Cook Islands		ZK1APX
By AI5P; 40-10m; CW 

Apr6 - Apr20	Botswana	A25
By DL7CM DM2AYO as A25/homecall (perhaps A25CM); 160-6m; CW SSB RTTY PSK

Apr7 - Apr11	Macao		XX9
By JA0SC; 20 15 10m; SSTV RTTY

Apr15 - Apr29	  Bahamas	C6AWF
By G4WFQ fm Treasure Cay, Abaco Is (NA-080); 80-10m; CW, RTTY, some SSB; 
QSL via G3SWH or LotW 

Apr18 - Apr25	  Ghana	9G5
By DL7DF; 160-10m; CW, some SSTV; yagi + dipole; 700w 

Apr19 - Apr29	  Kyrghyzstan	EX
By ES1FB as EX/ES1FB; holiday style operation; 
QSL: Jaak Meier, Box 2907, 13102, Tallinn, Estonia 

Apr19 -  May17  Kyrghyzstan  EX
By ES1RA as EX/ES1RA; holiday style operation; 
QSL: Oleg Mir, Box 806, 11702, Tallinn, Estonia 

Apr20 - May8	  Mongolia	JT1Y
By I0SNY; Apr 25-26 as JT2Y from Choybalsan, Khosbayar; 
QSL OK via Buro or direct Apr22 - Apr25	  Liechtenstein    HB0
By IZ1DSH IK1WEG IZ1GDB as HB0/homecall; 80-10m; CW SSB; 
QSL OK via ARI Buro or direct 

Apr22 - Apr25	  Luxembourg	  LX
By ON4BAG ON4LO ON6QX ON6UM as LX/homecall; 160-10m; SSB CW Digital; 
QSL OK via Buro or direct 

Apr22 - Apr26	  Liechtenstein   HB0
By IZ1DSH IZ1GDB as HB0/homecall fm Gaflei Malbun; 80 40 20 30m; CW SSB; 
QSL OK via Buro or direct 

Apr23 - May1	  Egypt	   SU8IOTA
By SU1HM SU1SK SU2TA SU1SA fm Disuqi Is (AF-NEW) in the Nile Delta and 
Sinai Region Group: 
QSL: Said Kamel, PO Box 190, New Ramsis Center, Cairo 11794, Egypt

******************************************************

UPCOMING CONTESTS - APRIL 2005


EA RTTY Contest				1600Z, Apr 2 to 1600Z, Apr 3 
RSGB 80m Club Championship, CW		2000Z-2130Z, Apr 4 
ARS Spartan Sprint		        0200Z-0400Z, Apr 5 
YLRL DX-YL to NA-YL Contest, CW		1400Z, Apr 6 to 0200Z, Apr 8 
JIDX CW Contest				0700Z, Apr 9 to 1300Z, Apr 10 
ARCI Spring QSO Party			1200Z, Apr 9 to 2400Z, Apr 10 
TARA Skirmish Digital Prefix Contest	0000Z-2400Z, Apr 16 
EU Spring Sprint, CW		        1500Z-1859Z, Apr 16 
NAQCC Weeknight 40/80-Meter Sprint	0030Z-0430Z, Apr 20 
RSGB 80m Club Championship, Data	2000Z-2130Z, Apr 21 
SP DX RTTY Contest		        1200Z, Apr 23 to 1200Z, Apr 24 
EUCW/FISTS QRS Party			0001Z, Apr 24 to 2359Z, Apr 30 


That about does it for this issue.  Have fun and Good DX

73

Thom WI8W



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