As i know it is about 2.5khz wide . so a "normal" ssb filter would work .
but do not use a "narrow" ssb filter

Dg9bfc

Sigi

 

 

  _____  

Von: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com [mailto:digitalra...@yahoogroups.com] Im
Auftrag von jose alberto nieto ros
Gesendet: Dienstag, 23. Februar 2010 10:21
An: digitalradio@yahoogroups.com
Betreff: Re: [digitalradio] ROS Advantage?

 

  

You must configure your receiver without any king filter. ROS filter the
signal better than the transceiver.

 

Please: DONT APPLY FILTERS TO YOUR TRANSCEIVERS.

 


 

 

  _____  

De: Ugo <ugo.dep...@me.com>
Para: "digitalradio@yahoogroups.com" <digitalradio@yahoogroups.com>
CC: "digitalradio@yahoogroups.com" <digitalradio@yahoogroups.com>
Enviado: mar,23 febrero, 2010 07:40
Asunto: Re: [digitalradio] ROS Advantage?

  

Hi All. 

Just a question, and please, be patient if I'm asking this...

I'm a SWL and I decoded ros in last days, but HOW MUCH is large its
bandwidth ?

In other words, which is the minimun value of bandwidth enough to
receive/decode ros ? 

Best regards and thanks in advance for any reply. 

73 de Ugo - SWL 1281/VE

 

(sent with iPhone)


Il giorno 22/feb/2010, alle ore 22.33, KH6TY <kh...@comcast. net
<mailto:kh...@comcast.net> > ha scritto:

  

Hi Jose,

Of course we start that way (using a SSB filter), but then a Pactor station
will come on, cover the upper fourth of the ROS signal, and decoding becomes
garbage until it leaves. With a more narrow mode, the Pactor station can
just be filtered out at IF frequencies and not affect either the AGC or the
decoding of something like MFSK16 or Olivia 16-500, as long as those signals
are sufficiently away from the Pactor signal (even if they are still within
the bandwidth of a ROS signal).

In the case of CW stations, during the contest, they just appeared in the
SSB filter bandwidth, and therefore among the ROS tones, and some of those
also stopped decoding until they left.

Let's say a MT63-500 signal appears at 2000 Hz tone frequency (i.e. covering
from 2000 to 2500 Hz) at the same signal strength as the ROS signal. Will
ROS stop decoding? If a MT-63-1000 signal appears at 1500 Hz tone frequency,
will ROS stop decoding? If this happens and there is a more narrowband
signal like MFSK16, for instance, covering from 500 Hz to 1000 Hz, the
MFSK16 signal can coexist with the MT63 signal unless the MT63 signal has
captured the AGC and cutting the gain. If it has, then passband tuning can
cut out the MT63 signal, leaving only the MFSK16 signal undisturbed and
decoding. In other words, there is less chance for an interfering signal to
partially or completely cover a more narrow signal that there is a much
wider one, unless the wider one can still decode with half or 25% of its
tones covered up. The question posed is how well ROS can handle QRM, and
that is what I tried to see.

If ROS can withstand half of its bandwidth covered with an interfering
signal and still decode properly then I cannot explain what I saw, but
decoding definitely stopped or changed to garbage when the Pactor signal
came on.

73 - Skip KH6TY
 



jose alberto nieto ros wrote: 

  

Hi,

 

You must not filter anything in the transceiver. You must pass all bandwith
in your receiver because filter are doing by the PC better than you
transceiver.

 


 

 


  _____  


De: KH6TY <kh...@comcast. net>
Para: digitalradio@ yahoogroups. com
Enviado: lun,22 febrero, 2010 18:31
Asunto: Re: [digitalradio] ROS Advantage?

  

Howard,

After monitoring 14.101 continuously for two days, I find the following:

1. CW signals (of narrow width, of course) during this past weekend contest
often disrupted decoding, and it looks like it was not desensitization due
to AGC capture, as the  ROS signals on the waterfall did not appear any
weaker.

2. Pactor signals of 500 Hz width, outside the ROS signal, that capture the
AGC, do desensitize the receiver and cause loss of decoding, as expected.
Passband tuning takes care of that problem however.

3. Pactor signals which have the same degree of darkness as the ROS
carriers, and occur within the upper third of the ROS signal, cause loss of
decoding, and it is not possible to fix the problem with passband tuning, as
trying to do that appears to take away enough of the ROS signal that the
degree of frequency hopping used is insufficient to overcome. Receiver is
the IC-746Pro.

4. If more than one ROS signal is present on the frequency, ROS will decode
one of them - apparently the strongest one - and the weaker one is blanked
out until the stronger one goes away and the the weaker one is decoded.

5. Compared to Olivia 16-500, for example, the width of the ROS signal seems
to be a disadvantage as far as handling QRM is concerned. Five Olivia 16-500
signals will fit in the same space as one ROS signal needs, so QRM, covering
the top 40% of the ROS signal, for example, would probably not disrupt any
of three Olivia signals in the bottom 60% of the ROS signal bandwidth.

In other words, the wide bandwidth required for ROS to work is a
disadvantage because IF filtering cannot remove narrower band QRM signals
that fall within the area of the ROS signal, but IF filtering can remove the
same QRM from the passband that has been narrowed to accept only an Olivia
signal. A much wider expansion or spectrum spread might reduce the
probability of decoding disruption, but that also makes the signal wider
still and more susceptible to additional QRM. The advantage of FHSS appears
to be more in favor of making it hard to copy a traditional SS signal unless
the code is available, than QRM survival, but on crowded ham bands, it looks
like a sensitive mode like Olivia or MFSK16, because it is more narrow, and
filters can be tighter, stands a better chance of surviving QRM than the ROS
signal which is exposed to more possibilities of QRM due to its
comparatively greater width.

The mode sure is fun to use and it is too bad it does not appear to be as
QRM resistant as hoped, at least according to my observations.

Another problem is finding a frequency space wide enough to accommodate
several ROS signals at once so there is no cross-interference. It is much
easier to find space for five Olivia or MFSK16 signals than for even two ROS
signals.

These are only my personal observations and opinions. Others may find
differently.

I still plan to find out if ROS can withstand the extreme Doppler shift and
flutter on UHF which just tears up even moderately strong SSB phone signals.
Olivia appears to be the best alternative mode to SSB phone we have found so
far and sometimes provides slightly better copy than SSB phone, but for very
weak signals, CW still works the best. Even though the note is very rough
sounding, as in Aurora communications, CW can still be copied by ear as it
modulates the background noise.

73 - Skip KH6TY
 
  



Howard Brown wrote: 

  

Aside from the legal aspect, does anyone have an opinion as to whether the
limited hopping (within the 3khz that it hops) helps the robustness of the
waveform?  If it makes a tremendous difference, maybe we should all work to
get it accepted. 

Howard K5HB

 


  _____  


From: J. Moen  <mailto:j...@jwmoen.com> <j...@jwmoen.com>
To: digitalradio@ yahoogroups. com
Sent: Sun, February 21, 2010 9:13:50 PM
Subject: Re: [digitalradio] FCC Technology Jail: ROS Dead on HF for USA Hams

  

Bonnie's note describes the US/FCC regulations issues regarding ROS and SS
really well.  It's the best description of the US problem I've seen on this
reflector.

 

After reading what seems like hundreds of notes, I now agree that if ROS
uses FHSS techniques, as its author says it does (and none of us has seen
the code),  then even though it 1) uses less 3 kHz bandwidth,  2) does not
appear to do any more harm than a SSB signal and 3) is similar to other FSK
modes, it is not legal in FCC jurisdictions.

 

As Bonnie points out, ROS "doesn't hop the VFO frequency," but within the
2.5 bandwidth, it technically is SS.  This would be true if ROS used 300 Hz
bandwidth instead of 2.5 kHz, but hopped about using FHSS within the 300 Hz
bandwidth.  So I have to agree the FCC regs are not well written in this
case.

 

Regarding the corollary issue of US/FCC regulations focused on content
instead of bandwidth, I'm not competent to comment.  

 

   Jim - K6JM

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: expeditionradio <mailto:expeditionra...@yahoo.com>  

To: digitalradio@ yahoogroups. com <mailto:digitalradio@yahoogroups.com>  

Sent: Sunday, February 21, 2010 5:09 PM

Subject: [digitalradio] FCC Technology Jail: ROS Dead on HF for USA Hams

 

  

Given the fact that ROS Modem has been advertised as Frequency Hopping
Spread Spectrum (FHSS), it may be quite difficult for USA amateur radio
operators to obtain a positive interpretation of rules by FCC to allow use
of ROS on HF without some type of experimental license or waiver. Otherwise,
hams will need an amendment of FCC rules to use it in USA. 

Sadly, this may lead to the early death of ROS among USA hams.

If ROS Modem had simply provided the technical specifications of the
emission, and not called it "Spread Spectrum", there would have been a
chance for it to be easily adopted by Ham Radio operators in USA. 

But, the ROS modem designer is rightfully proud of the design, and he lives
in a country that is not bound by FCC rules, and probably had little or no
knowledge of how his advertising might prevent thousands of hams from using
it in USA. 

But, as they say, "You cannot un-ring a bell, once it has been rung".

ROS signal can be viewed as a type of FSK, similar to various other types of
n-ary-FSK presently in widespread use by USA hams. The specific algorithms
for signal process and format could simply have been documented without
calling it Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum (FHSS). Since it is a
narrowband signal (using the FCC and ITU definitions of narrowband emission
= less than 3kHz) within the width of an SSB passband, it does not fit the
traditional FHSS description as a conventional wideband technique. 

It probably would not have been viewed as FHSS under the spirit and
intention of the FCC rules. It doesn't hop the VFO frequency. It simply FSKs
according to a programmable algorithm, and it meets the infamous 1kHz shift
300 baud rule. 
 <http://www.arrl.org/FandES/field/regulations/news/part97/d-305.html#307f3>
http://www.arrl <http://www.arrl/> . org/FandES/ field/regulation
s/news/part97/ d-305.html# 307f3 

This is a typical example of how outdated the present FCC rules are, keeping
USA hams in "TECHNOLOGY JAIL" while the rest of the world's hams move
forward with digital technology. It should come as no surprise that most of
the new ham radio digital modes are not being developed in USA!

But, for a moment, let's put aside the issue of current FCC "prohibition"
against Spread Spectrum and/or Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum, and how it
relates to ROS mode. Let's look at "bandwidth".

There is the other issue of "bandwidth" that some misguided USA hams have
brought up here and in other forums related to ROS. Some superstitious hams
seem to erroneously think that there is an over-reaching "bandwidth limit"
in the FCC rules for data/text modes on HF that might indicate what part of
the ham band to operate it or not operate it. 

FACT:
"There is currently no finite bandwidth limit on HF data/text emission in
USA ham bands, except for the sub-band and band edges."

FACT:
"FCC data/text HF rules are still mainly based on "content" of the emission,
not bandwidth."

New SDR radios have the potential to transmit and receive wider bandwidths
than the traditional 3kHz SSB passband. We will see a lot more development
in this area of technology in the future, and a lot more gray areas of 20th
century FCC rules that inhibit innovation and progress for ham radio HF
digital technology in the 21st century. 

Several years ago, there was a proposal to FCC to provide regulation by
bandwidth rather than content. However, it failed to be adopted, and ARRL's
petition to limit bandwidth was withdrawn
 <http://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2007/04/27/101/?nc=1> http://www.arrl
<http://www.arrl/> . org/news/ stories/2007/ 04/27/101/ ?nc=1

Thus, USA hams will continue to be in Technology Jail without access to many
new modes in the foreseeable future :(

Best Wishes,
Bonnie Crystal KQ6XA

 

 



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