[NLRS] WSPR on Tuesday
Chris Elmquist
chrise at pobox.com
Tue Jun 10 15:34:02 EDT 2025
There is an old discussion of "drift" on the WSJT mailing list here,
https://wsjtx.groups.io/g/main/topic/how_does_wsjt_x_calculate/78207034
When WSPR was a new thing, a very long time ago, I played on HF quite
a bit with it and my IC-746PRO which I had at the time.
What I discovered was that whenever the rig went into transmit, there
would be subtle but noticable heating of the entire radio, even at
low power levels like 1, 5 or 10W. This heating drove the reference
oscillator off frequency a little which manifested as a "slant" in my
TX frequency. After it unkeyed, you could then see it slew back to the
correct receive frequency as the radio cooled back down, with another
slant in the received signals.
This drove me to build a PLL to lock the 32 MHz reference oscillator in
that radio to 10 MHz GPSDO which eliminated all of this drifting.
I did the same with this FT-736 for VHF+ use.
My IC-7610 for HF accepts 10 MHz external reference out of the box,
so I definitely use that.
Chris NØJCF
On Tuesday (06/10/2025 at 02:07PM -0500), Chris Elmquist wrote:
> On Tuesday (06/10/2025 at 01:53PM -0500), Dave Fugleberg wrote:
> > for those of you with an IC-9700...how stable to you find it to be? I'm
> > seeing a lot of traces in the waterfall with significant drift (like 30-50
> > Hz) over the course of the 2 minute WSPR window on 70cm. Not nearly as
> > pronounced on 2m. I have yet to copy anyone on 70cm - maybe that's why.
> > Has anyone added that ref lock board from Leo Bodnar to their 9700?
>
> I'll let Jon respond on his own situation but I think his -9700 is
> externally referenced-- as is my FT-736. And between Jon and I, we
> are always exactly on the same frequency.
>
> I am transmitting with offset 1480 Hz (per the WSJT setting) and Jon
> reports all of my spots on 144.49080 +/- 1 Hz and 432.301480 +/- 1 Hz.
>
> Similarly, I spot him at 144.490500 +/- 2 Hz. I have not seen Jon on
> 432 yet today but I conclude his TX offset is 1500 Hz, the default.
>
> Yesterday when we were playing on 1296, we were both on 1296.501500
> exactly for each of us, on each spot-- no drift.
>
> You can look in the WSPRNet database here,
>
> https://www.wsprnet.org/drupal/wsprnet/spots
>
> and set up the query to show what others are seeing from you and vise-versa
> as a good way to check this sort of thing. This of course assumes those
> spotting are uploading their spots.
>
> Chris NØJCF
>
> --
> Chris Elmquist
>
--
Chris Elmquist
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