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			122 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			122 lines
		
	
	
		
			5.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| // Status=review
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| .Main Window:
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| - Select *JT9+JT65* on the *Mode* menu.
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| - Toggle the *Tx mode* button to read *Tx JT65 #*, and set the Tx and Rx
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| frequencies to 1718 Hz.
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| - Double-click on *Erase* to clear both text windows.
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| 
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| .Wide Graph Settings:
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| 
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| - *Bins/Pixel* = 7
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| - *JT65 .... JT9* = 2500
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| - Adjust the width of the Wide Graph window so that the upper
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| frequency limit is approximately 4000 Hz.
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| 
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| .Open a Wave File:
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| 
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| - Select *File | Open* and navigate to +...\save\samples\JT9+JT65\130610_2343.wav+.  
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| The waterfall should look something like this:
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| 
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| //.130610_2343.wav Decode
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| [[X14]]
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| image::130610_2343-wav-80.png[align="left",alt="Wide Graph Decode 130610_2343"]
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| 
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| The position of the blue marker on the waterfall scale is
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| set by the spinner control *JT65 nnnn JT9*, where nnnn is an audio
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| frequency in Hz. In *JT9+JT65* mode the program will automatically
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| decode JT9 signals only above this frequency. JT65 signals will be
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| decoded over the full displayed frequency range.
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| 
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| JT9 signals appear in the *Cumulative* spectrum as nearly rectangular
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| shapes about 16 Hz wide.  They have no clearly visible sync tone like
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| the one at the low-frequency edge of all JT65 signals.  By convention
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| the nominal frequency of both JT9 and JT65 signals is taken to be that
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| of the lowest tone, at the left edge of its spectrum.
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| 
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| This sample file contains 17 decodable signals — nine in JT65 mode
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| (flagged with the character # in the decoded text windows), and eight
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| in JT9 mode (flagged with @).  On multi-core computers the decoders
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| for JT9 and JT65 modes run simultaneously, so their results will be
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| interspersed.  The *Band Activity* window contains all decodes (you
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| might need to scroll back in the window to see some of them).  A
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| signal at the frequency specified by the green marker is given
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| decoding priority, and its message is displayed also in the *Rx
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| Frequency* window.
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| 
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| [[FigDecodes]]
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| image::decodes.png[align="center"]
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| 
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| - Confirm that mouse-click behavior is similar to that described
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| earlier, in <<TUT_EX1,Example 1>>.  _WSJT-X_ automatically determines
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| the mode of each JT9 or JT65 message.
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| 
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| +
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| 
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| TIP: When you double-click on a signal in the waterfall it will be
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| properly decoded even if on the "`wrong`" side of the *JT65 nnnn JT9*
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| marker.  The Tx mode automatically switches to that of the decoded
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| signal and the Rx and Tx frequency markers on the waterfall scale
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| resize themselves accordingly. When selecting a JT65 signal, click on
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| the sync tone at its left edge.
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| 
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| - Double-click on the waterfall near 815 Hz: a JT65 message
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| originating from W7VP will be decoded and appear in the *Rx Frequency*
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| window.  Between the *UTC* and *Freq* columns on the decoded text line
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| you will find *dB*, the measured signal-to-noise ratio, and *DT*, the
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| signal's time offset in seconds relative to your computer clock.
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| 
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| [width="80%",align="center",cols="^10,2*^8,2*^10,54",options="header"]
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| |===
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| |UTC|dB|DT|Freq|Mode|Message
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| |+2343+|+-7+|+0.3+|+815+|+#+|+KK4DSD W7VP -16+
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| |===
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| 
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| - Double-click on the waterfall at 3196 Hz.  The program will decode a
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| JT9 message from IZ0MIT:
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| 
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| [width="80%",align="center",cols="^10,2*^8,2*^10,54",options="header"]
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| |===
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| |UTC|dB|DT|Freq|Mode|Message
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| |+2343+|+-8+|+0.3+|+3196+|+@+|+WB8QPG IZ0MIT -11+
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| |===
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| 
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| - Scroll back in the *Band Activity* window and double-click on the
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| message `CQ DL7ACA JO40`. The program will set *Tx mode* to JT65 and
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| the Rx frequency to that of DL7ACA, 975 Hz.  If you hold down the
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| *Ctrl* key, both Rx and Tx frequencies will be moved.  If you had
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| checked *Double-click on call sets Tx Enable* on the *Setup* menu, the
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| program would configure itself to begin a transmission and start a QSO
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| with DL7ACA.
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| 
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| - Hold *Ctrl* down and double-click on the decoded JT65 message `CQ
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| TA4A KM37`.  The program will set Tx mode to JT9 and the Rx and Tx
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| frequencies to 3567 Hz.  The program is now configured properly for a
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| JT9 QSO with TA4A.
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| 
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| .Reopen the First Sample File:
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| - Select *File | Open* and navigate to `...\save\samples\130418_1742.wav`.
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| 
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| Taking full advantage of the wide-band, dual-mode capability of
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| _WSJT-X_ requires a receiver bandwidth of at least 4 kHz.  These
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| data were recorded with a much narrower Rx bandwidth, roughly 200 to
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| 2400 Hz. If you have no Rx filter wider than about 2.7 kHz, you will
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| be using data like this. For best viewing, adjust *Bins/Pixel* and the
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| width of the Wide Graph so that only the active part of the spectrum
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| shows, say 200 to 2400 Hz.  Re-open the example file after any change of
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| *Bins/Pixel* or Wide Graph width, to refresh the waterfall.
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| 
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| The signals in this file are all JT9 signals.  To decode them
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| automatically in *JT9+JT65* mode you’ll need to move the *JT65 nnnn JT9*
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| delimiter down to 1000 Hz or less.
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| 
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| .Waterfall Controls
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| 
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| Now is a good time to experiment with the *Start* control and the
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| sliders controlling gain and zero-point of the waterfall and spectrum
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| plots.  *Start* determines the frequency displayed at the left side of
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| the waterfall scale.  Sliders set the baseline level and gain for the
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| waterfall and the several types of spectra.  Good starting values
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| should be close to mid-scale.  You might want to uncheck *Flatten*
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| when adjusting the sliders.  Re-open the wave file after each change,
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| to see the new results.
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