Audio Receivers - posssss/portapack-mayhem GitHub Wiki
The Audio App is the main way that signals can be heard and seen in detail. Three types of decoders are provided for audio modulated signals and a spectrum view of the signals. The user interface has the ability to view and change:
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SPEC: Display a Spectrum of the received signal and allow viewing of 10MHz of RF Spectrum, centered on a configurable frequency, with 5MHz above the frequency and 5MHz below.
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AM: Demodulate and Record RF Signals modulated using the Amplitude Modulation scheme. It can demodulate Double-Sideband AM (ITU Designation: A3E) and both Lower-Sideband and Upper-Sideband Single-Sideband AM (ITU Classification: R2E, H3E, J3E) signals.
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NFM: The Narrow Band Frequency Modulation decoding ITU Classification: FM3
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WFM: The Wide FM Receiver is a Sub-Application of the Audio Receiver Application. Its purpose is to Demodulate and Record RF Signals modulated using the Frequency Modulation scheme. It can demodulate mono and stereo Wide FM signals of 200KHz bandwidth. Such signals are commonly used for VHF FM Broadcast services.
The Key Items on the App that can be seen or selected with the cursor and changed with the encoder knob are:
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Title bar: The usual Items may be changed and displayed.
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Mode: On the line below title bar is the demodulation mode AM, NFM, WFM, SPEC. When either of these are selected it will bring up a secondary set of relevant items on the line below. These are discussed in secondary items below.
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Frequency: The Centre frequency of the demodulation band.
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Gain: Settings are shown in order of LNA(IF) (0-40) and VGA (Baseband Gain) (0-62). When either of these are selected in the secondary line the AMP setting is shown and can be as either set to 0=0db or 1=14dB.
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Signal Display: The three coloured displays are top to bottom RSSI(Red/Blue) with an average marker in the line. Next is the Baseband signal and last the Audio level.
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Volume: The Last item on this line is the audio volume control (O-99) that is used with either headphone or speaker if fitted.
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Secondary Information: This line provides associated information for the following items these are:
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AM: Bandwidth settings of DSB 9k, DSB 6k, USB+3k, LSB-3k, CW. The Spectrum view is +/-20k.
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NFM: Bandwidth Settings of 16k,11k,8k5. Note there is no setting for the more common 6k5 used in European Spectrum plans. Next item is SQ: which is shown in the format of 40/99 allow the noise squelch point to be set Between 0-99. Typically, around 40-50 is a good threshold.
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Gain: The RF Amp settings. The Spectrum view is +/-20k.
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WFM: There are three option filters in that Secondary settings :
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(1) 200k ,the original filter for commercial FM stations with soft transition,
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(2) 180k with sharp transition, for also commercial FM broadcast station, specially useful to improve demodulated S/N in around 6 to 8 dB‘s in weak signals .
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(3) 40k with also sharp transition, for supporting NOAA APT weather satellite reception in 137 MHz . (that filter is too narrow for WFM with 75khz delta deviation and can produce audio distortion in the demodulated sound). The Spectrum view is +/-100k with a marker That may be changed (though seem the incorrect value).
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SPEC. The spectrum Secondary Items allows the view of the RF spectrum with different setting for maximum bandwidth shown:
20M with markers at +/- 5M 10M with markers at +/- 3M 5M with markers at +/- 2M 2M with markers at +/- 500k 1M with markers at +/- 300k 500k with markers at +/-200k
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The next item is the setting of the bin sizes used for the waterfall (0-63) with “0” being the minimum information being the fastest display and “63” the maximum information collected the slowest display. Adjust to give a balance of speed and information seen.
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CTCSS: This Continuous Tone Coded Squelch System is a display at the end of the secondary information line. It is used by many systems and standardised by EIA/TIA, with a description here. In the NFM mode in Audio app, the tone field is increased from 11 to 14 characters. Now , the CTCSS tone frequency and CTCSS code numbers are displayed at once (if a matching freq was found in the tone_key table). See the Annex to this document below. It should be noted that most of the time the display is jumping around and only clearly displays the received tone when there is a gap in the voice and the Signal is of good quality.
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Record: The record button if selected will show the record file name, % of the SD Card used, and at the end of the line is the total recording time available left on the SD card and this decrements when recording.
CTCSS Tone List
None 0.0
0 XZ 67.000
1 WZ 69.400
2 XA 71.900
3 WA 74.400
4 XB 77.000
5 WB 79.700
6 YZ 82.500
7 YA 85.400
8 YB 88.500
9 ZZ 91.500
10 ZA 94.800
11 1ZB 97.400
12 21Z 100.000
13 1A 103.500
14 1B 107.200
15 2Z 110.900
16 2Z 114.800
17 2B 118.800
18 3Z 123.000
19 3A 127.300
20 3B 131.800
21 4Z 136.500
22 4A 141.300
23 4B 146.200
24 5Z 151.400
25 5A 156.700
40 -- 159.800
26 5B 162.200
41 -- 165.500
27 6Z 167.900
42 -- 171.300
28 6A 173.800
43 -- 177.300
29 6B 179.900
44 -- 183.500
30 7Z 186.200
45 -- 189.900
31 7A 192.800
46 -- 196.600
47 -- 199.500
32 M1 203.500
48 8Z 206.500
33 M2 210.700
34 M3 218.100
35 M4 225.700
49 9Z 229.100
36 -- 233.600
37 -- 241.800
38 -- 250.300
50 0Z 254.100
Axient 28kHz 28000.0
Senn. 32.768k 32768.0
Senn. 32.000k 32000.0
Sony 32.382k 32382.0
Shure 19kHz 19000.0