Good stuff Don. Thanks. Yea, the 9999.99, I was not worried about at all. It is the 1300 Hz I have to wander over to, to get the CW signal that is bothering me. I am experiencing the same thing with local signals, I have generated from other radios. I will check out WWV during the quiet time and see what I find.

As far as "Just adjust the CW BFOs so the passband is centered...", what are you telling me to do here? I have run through c22 adjustment (started out at 10000.09 for WWV, and got to 9999.99 using the "Wayne" method), CAL PLL and CAL FIL (with Spectrogram) at least 3 times. Should I go back and do the BFO test?

Admittedly, it is possible, even likely, that I am making the same mistake each time I have run them. I have seen the U and L frequency readout get better, but not the CW. Additionally, it transmits on the correct frequency.

David Wilburn
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
K4DGW
K2 #5982


Don Wilhelm wrote:
Dave,

If you have WWV properly tuned at 9999.99 (when in SSB mode), that is only 10 Hz off frequency, and is well within the range of error to be expected with the K2. The digital quantizing error is about 20 Hz.

The K2 always displays the frequency of the carrier - so when tuned properly to WWV, you will hear (or see on Spectrogram) the tones demodulated (as you have done), but when switching to CW, you should hear the carrier at the pitch you have set for the sidetone.

When listening to WWV in CW mode it is easy to mistake one of the tones they transmit for the carrier. At the times they transmit a 600 Hz tone, you will be able to hear discrete signals at 9999.40, 10,000.00 and 10,000.60 since it is an AM signal transmitting a 600 Hz tone. (You can hear one signal at the carrier minus the transmitted tone pitch, the carrier itself, and another signal at the carrier plus the tone pitch.) If the CW filter is narrow enough, you will hear each of these signals as separate signals in the receiver - you must be careful to identify the actual carrier. Using the wrong one will create a large apparent error in your dial readout. It is best to tune WWV during the minutes they do not transmit a tone - tune the carrier to your sidetone pitch and the dial should read correctly.

Just adjust the CW BFOs so the passband is centered at your chosen sidetone pitch (using a noise input, NOT a single signal) - and set the dial calibration in LSB or USB, then believe that the K2 will take care of the offset for you. On CW, the dial readout will be the carrier frequency of the station you are listening to and will also be the frequency you will transmit on.

73,
Don W3FPR

David Wilburn wrote:
I have setup Spectogram, and have 500 & 600 Hz markers setup. I then set the K2 to 10000.00, in U mode, and adjust the frequency until I have either 500 or 600 Hz depending on which minute it is (odd minutes being a 600 Hz tone and even being a 500 Hz tone, even though this seems backwards of how it should be).

I then used this zero beat reference, and the procedure on page 101 of the K2 manual so that I have it down to U or L mode is zero beat at 9999.99.

I notice the calibration on page 101 of the K2 manual says to use U or L mode. My question, is how much should the offset be when I go to CW mode? I am trying to track down why my CW RX frequency is so far from my USB frequency (was 1500 Hz off at one point). I have it better, but I am sure the issue is with how I did the alignments.

_______________________________________________
Elecraft mailing list
Post to: [email protected]
You must be a subscriber to post to the list.
Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.):
http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft
Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm
Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com

Reply via email to