Thanks Dave, Although I use Winwarbler and Spot Collector a lot, I have never 
really tried clicking on PSK31 spots . I will have to give that a try.  Very 
useful.  I wonder if this is the only application that does work well with 
PSK31 spots?

Andy K3UK

--- In digitalradio@yahoogroups.com, "Dave AA6YQ" <aa...@...> wrote:
>
> >>>AA6YQ comments below
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com [mailto:digitalra...@yahoogroups.com]on
> Behalf Of Andy obrien
> Sent: Monday, February 22, 2010 9:56 PM
> To: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [digitalradio] PSK SPOTS
> 
> 
> 
>
> 
> >>>In WinWarbler, one click in the waterfall selects a PSK signal, and one
> click of the Spot button generates an outgoing spot (via SpotCollector).
> 
> >>>Double-clicking a PSK Spot Database Entry in SpotCollector directs
> WinWarbler or MultiPSK to immediately begin decoding the spotted station,
> QSYing the transceiver as required to achieve the specified optimal offset.
> Alternatively, one can click a plotted DX spot on DXView's World Map or
> click a DX spot on Commander's bandspread to accomplish the same result.
> 
> >>>WinWarbler's broadband decoder continuously identifies active PSK QSOs
> within the receiver bandpass, listing the decoded callsigns in its "Stations
> Heard" window. Optionally, these callsigns can be inserted into
> SpotCollector's Spot Database, where they are color coded for "need" with
> respect to the user's award objectives and award progress, dynamically
> obtained from DXKeeper. Thus its straightforward to identify needed PSK DX.
> 
> >>>These capabilities have been in broad use by DXLab users for many years.
> 
>     73,
> 
>        Dave, AA6YQ
>


Reply via email to