[GreenKeys] Re: M20-RO
Sheldon Daitch
[email protected]
Wed, 05 Feb 2003 14:20:33 +0200
David,
Thanks for the listing.
These do match my chart for the 16 channel tone pack
that was used with the Tele-Signal manufactured
FCC-19 and FCC 25 systems, which, per my spec information,
was rated up to 100 wpm.
In the thinking out loud department, I wonder if anyone
can confirm that the Lenkurt 25A system also used
the same channel pairs, per David's chart below.
I was looking at another piece of equipment, the
tone keyer and demodulation equipment marketed with
the RCA SSB-R3 ISB systems, and this line of tone
equipment would put 19 TTY signals on a VF grade circuit,
42 Hz shift, channels on 170 Hz spacing, with the
channel center frequencies as:
255 425 595 765 935 1105 1275
1445 1615 1785 1955 2125 2295
2465 2635 2805 2975 3145 3315
I never saw this equipment, only info from the
RCA receiver manual. As with a lot of RCA's
equipment, it was relabeled gear from another
manufacturer. I can't determine yet, who made
this VFTG equipment, Allied Signal has latched
in my mind, but I can't confirm it.
(Singer/Tele-Signal made the FCC-19s that I
saw.)
Sheldon
David Ross wrote:
>
> RTTY folks -
>
> There is precious little teletype MUX stuff on HF lately, most all
> data traffic has migrated up to satellites. Lately is it just a fast
> bitstream sent via satellite, no need for audio tones at all...
>
> A common teletype MUX format in the 1960s & 1970s had 16 tone pairs in
> a 3 KC audio passband. The scheme was intended to accommodate 16
> simultaneous 75 baud bitstreams. Each tone pair used 85 CPS shift,
> center freqs were 170 CPS apart and started at 425 CPS - tones are like
> this:
>
> 382.5 & 467.5
> 552.5 & 637.5
> 772.5 & 807.5
> 892.5 & 977.5
> 1062.5 & 1147.5
> 1232.5 & 1317.5
> 1402.5 & 1487.5
> 1572.5 & 1657.5
> 1742.5 & 1827.5
> 1912.5 & 1997.5
> 2082.5 & 2167.5
> 2252.5 & 2337.5
> 2422.5 & 2507.5
> 2592.5 & 2677.5
> 2762.5 & 2847.5
> 2932.5 & 3017.5
>
> In the '60s, both Collins & TMC built HF radios with filters
> compatible with this format - the radios used special IF filters with
> well-defined widths & passband flatness & group delay.
> Varying delays across the filter's passband were critical, since one
> optional MUX configuration had the 16 separate channels set up as 8
> dual-diversity channels. Between two diversity channels analog voting
> was used, and the scheme worked best if the incoming sigs were exactly
> in sync.
>
> The CCITT spec that defines this old-timey MUX format also specifies
> four sidebands called A2, A1, B1, & B2 - if you see a radio with
> sidebands named like this then it probably uses these fancy superflat
> filters...
>
> - A2 is the LSB of a suppressed carrier 6.29 KCs
> above the dial freq.
> - A1 is plainjane USB
> - B1 is plainjane LSB
> - B2 is the USB of a suppressed carrier 6.29 KCs
> below the dial freq
>
> Dave Ross N7EPI [email protected]
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