[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the satellites.

2011-06-09 Thread aa2tx
Hi Doug, 


Here is the best article on the subject with an explanation 
of why and what to do: 


http://www.amsat.org/amsat/features/one_true_rule.html 


Welcome to satellites! 


73, 
Tony AA2TX 
AMSAT, VP Engineering 


--- 
- Original Message - 
From: Douglas Phelps dphel...@ameritech.net 
To: amsat-bb@amsat.org 
Sent: Wednesday, June 8, 2011 8:59:51 PM 
Subject: [amsat-bb] SSB Operation on the satellites. 

I am new to the satellites. Got to where I can hear my downlink if the bird is 
higher than 15 degrees. My question is about handling the doppler shift. 

If you do not have a sat program automatically correcting you rig frequency, 
what is the most common or preffered technique? 1 - Hold the TX steady and adj 
the RX for doppler or 2- Hold the RX steady and adjust the TX for doppler? I 
know this must be a basic question but I am learning. Thanks, 

Doug 
K9DLP 
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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Tom Schaefer, NY4I
A rookie observation….

That article was written in 1994—well prior to the state of the art in full 
doppler correction. I use MacDoppler for adjusting the VFOs and it happily 
adjusts both of them. The ONLY time I run into a problem where the received 
station is moving is when it is clear someone is NOT using full doppler 
correction.

I would humbly submit that this being 2011 and both SatPC32 and MacDoppler 
handle full doppler correction, the exception should be the One Tune Rule and 
the norm should be full doppler correction. I know that when I work someone 
that is also using full doppler correction, it is a joy as the radio just 
happily stays tuned and we move during the whole pass. 

Is the state of the art still such that we are all using radios that do not 
support full doppler correction?

I will put my flame suit on now…

73,

Tom


Tom Schaefer, NY4I
n...@arrl.net
EL88pb 
Monitoring EchoLink node KJ4FEC-L 489389
DSTAR Capable  APRS: NY4I-15



On Jun 9, 2011, at 6:23 AM, John Heath wrote:

 Hi Satelliters,
  
 Might cause some flames with this  but here goes:
  
 With a good few years of operating on the SSB sats, AO's-10,13,40, RS10, 
 FO-20,FO-29 and 98 countries confirmed I can agree totally with the one true 
 rule in theory. When stations at each end of the QSO use the method it works 
 flawlessly, I have done it with QSO partners using Fod track and with 
 Instantrak 
 computer Doppler correction, but there is the problem.
  
 Many of the stations that you want to work will be using manual tuning 
 methods, 
 so as you maintain your frequencies at the satellite, according to the rule, 
 your QSO partner will have to search for you. Then when its your turn to 
 transmit he will have to search for you. 
 
  
 The practical solution that I and I believe most of the ops. I have worked 
 seem 
 to use is to have short overs and to adjust frequencies the TX to try and 
 keep 
 the QSO in a fixed spot on the receiver.
  
 Following the other often recommended method of adjusting the higher 
 frequency 
 irrespective of its function, up link or down link, cause QSO's to drift 
 across 
 the pass band causing problems for other users.
  
 The other point worth making for newcomers to the SSB birds is to start on 
 the 
 easy passes/satellites first to get the knack of manual tuning. For example, 
 try 
 VO-52 with its 2m downlink, and to pick low elevation passes where the rate 
 of 
 change of frequency due to Doppler shift is less. Don't expect to get it 
 right 
 with near overhead passes of FO-29 until you have delevop  your skills.
  
 We were all beginners once so don't be afraid to have a  go and make a few 
 mistakes.
 I am pleased to say that in my experience the SSB satellites have a great 
 user 
 community who maintain high operating standard and welcome new ops.
  
 Have fun on the birds
  
 73 John G7HIA
  
 Lamenting the loss of our lovely HEO birds, Happy Days !!
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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF
It's certainly the case that many people operate out in the field and do not 
have a computer available.
My radios are not computer controlled, even in the shack.

On 09-Jun-11 11:08, Tom Schaefer, NY4I wrote:

 Is the state of the art still such that we are all using radios that do not 
 support full doppler correction?

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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread n0jy
Certainly desirable Tom, but I've been in Amsat and on the birds since the
'70s and it wasn't until the last couple of years that I got my PC hooked
to my FT-736R!  And then just this year to get it hooked to my FT-817 (IF)
radio.

I will say that there's nothing better than PC doppler and rotator
control, having used 3 hands many times in the past.  I would be a
terrible drummer!  But for all fairness, there are a number of reasons
that one may not have PC aided doppler correction so the one true rule
still holds good.

Not a flame, just another opinion.  I'm sure this thread will get some
mileage!

73,
Jerry
NØJY

 A rookie observation….

 That article was written in 1994—well prior to the state of the art in
full doppler correction. I use MacDoppler for adjusting the VFOs and it
happily adjusts both of them. The ONLY time I run into a problem where the
 received station is moving is when it is clear someone is NOT using full
doppler correction.

 I would humbly submit that this being 2011 and both SatPC32 and
MacDoppler
 handle full doppler correction, the exception should be the One Tune
Rule
 and the norm should be full doppler correction. I know that when I work
someone that is also using full doppler correction, it is a joy as the
radio just happily stays tuned and we move during the whole pass.

 Is the state of the art still such that we are all using radios that do
not support full doppler correction?

 I will put my flame suit on now…

 73,

 Tom






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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Joe
I always varied the transmit.

This way the person I'm talking to as well as any other listeners are 
all on the same freq listening.

Growing up on the birds when you had to twist the BIG knob to keep 
everyone on freq is not not a big deal. And to this day i still don't 
know why it seems to be a problem now days.

It all just takes practice.  just like in field day coming up  our club 
tries to get the non HF users to come out and try it. and at times it's 
incredibly painful to watch the guy that operates Channelized radios.

IE: 2 meter FM

How it will take them minutes to finally be within 500Hz of being on 
freq of a ssb signal. And even then most of the time they will be 
calling someone when it's obvious they are no where near on freq.  then 
it's twiddling the big knob again  going right past on freq spot and 
again try again off freq.  Where a seasoned operator will tune them in 
in 1/2 a sec coming in from one side and stop dead on freq.

it all just takes time on the air.

simple.

Joe WB9SBD

The Original Rolling Ball Clock
Idle Tyme
Idle-Tyme.com
http://www.idle-tyme.com

On 6/9/2011 7:18 AM, Nigel Gunn G8IFF/W8IFF wrote:
 It's certainly the case that many people operate out in the field and do 
 not have a computer available.
 My radios are not computer controlled, even in the shack.

 On 09-Jun-11 11:08, Tom Schaefer, NY4I wrote:

 Is the state of the art still such that we are all using radios that do not 
 support full doppler correction?

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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread n0jy
OK my brain may be playing tricks, but if you vary only your transmit
frequency such that you always hear yourself on the same downlink
frequency, isn't it true that the other station may not necessarily be
hearing you on the same downlink frequency and is chasing you anyway? 
Your doppler is +5kHz (for example) on the receive, the bird is just about
to pass overhead of me though so my receive ferquency goes rapidly from
+2kHz to -5kHz, your transmit tuning has no relation at all to what
frequency I am listening on.  Then the bird goes past you and you suddenly
switch down 5kHz, so I have to follow you on my receive.

Or am I nuts?  (Quite possible, come see where I work and you will
understand!)

Jerry
NØJY

 I always varied the transmit.

 This way the person I'm talking to as well as any other listeners are
 all on the same freq listening.




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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Joe
doppler effects both paths, up and down.

so at least if everyone is listening to a 100Hz freq tone at 100 Hz, we 
are all on the same freq.

Joe WB9SBD

The Original Rolling Ball Clock
Idle Tyme
Idle-Tyme.com
http://www.idle-tyme.com

On 6/9/2011 9:35 AM, n...@lavabit.com wrote:
 OK my brain may be playing tricks, but if you vary only your transmit
 frequency such that you always hear yourself on the same downlink
 frequency, isn't it true that the other station may not necessarily be
 hearing you on the same downlink frequency and is chasing you anyway?
 Your doppler is +5kHz (for example) on the receive, the bird is just about
 to pass overhead of me though so my receive ferquency goes rapidly from
 +2kHz to -5kHz, your transmit tuning has no relation at all to what
 frequency I am listening on.  Then the bird goes past you and you suddenly
 switch down 5kHz, so I have to follow you on my receive.

 Or am I nuts?  (Quite possible, come see where I work and you will
 understand!)

 Jerry
 NØJY

 I always varied the transmit.

 This way the person I'm talking to as well as any other listeners are
 all on the same freq listening.



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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread David Palmer KB5WIA
Jerry's correct.  If you only adjust your transmit frequency, such
that your receive frequency appears to stay the same -- then you're
automatically correcting for your own downlink doppler, but not for
anyone elses.  Other hams in the footprint will still have to chase
you.  The only way to stick with the one true rule is to adjust
*both* uplink and downlink during the pass.

That being said, adjusting the higher (UHF) transmit frequency on
VO-52 and AO-07 only (ie. manual control) will get you pretty close,
and you won't drift a whole lot.  I hear plenty of hams doing this, as
long as there are just one or a two QSO's going on, they don't drift
into each other very often.

73 de Dave KB5WIA / CM88
SatPC32 with 2xFT817ND

On Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 7:35 AM,  n...@lavabit.com wrote:
 OK my brain may be playing tricks, but if you vary only your transmit
 frequency such that you always hear yourself on the same downlink
 frequency, isn't it true that the other station may not necessarily be
 hearing you on the same downlink frequency and is chasing you anyway?
 Your doppler is +5kHz (for example) on the receive, the bird is just about
 to pass overhead of me though so my receive ferquency goes rapidly from
 +2kHz to -5kHz, your transmit tuning has no relation at all to what
 frequency I am listening on.  Then the bird goes past you and you suddenly
 switch down 5kHz, so I have to follow you on my receive.

 Or am I nuts?  (Quite possible, come see where I work and you will
 understand!)

 Jerry
 NØJY

 I always varied the transmit.

 This way the person I'm talking to as well as any other listeners are
 all on the same freq listening.


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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Patrick STODDARD (WD9EWK/VA7EWK)
Hi!

 That being said, adjusting the higher (UHF) transmit frequency on
 VO-52 and AO-07 only (ie. manual control) will get you pretty close,
 and you won't drift a whole lot.  I hear plenty of hams doing this, as
 long as there are just one or a two QSO's going on, they don't drift
 into each other very often.

Actually, if stations would spread out a bit more on the transponders,
this would be even less of an issue.  There is so much space that goes
to waste on these transponders, when everyone seems to never go
more than a few kHz up or down from the center.  Sometimes, everyone
appears to be jammed up around the center separated by 1 or 1.5 kHz
between signals.  When we have transponders with 50 to 100 kHz to
play with depending on the satellite, that seems crazy.  At least there's
room where someone can go far away from the center to do testing
and not bother those around the center.

I'm one of those who does not use computer control, operating portable
stations in the field.  I try to follow the portion of the One True Rule about
making adjustments on the higher of the two frequencies when not using
full computer control.  Sometimes I have to make adjustments on both
frequencies to keep up with those who are fully computer controlled.  I
use an FT-817ND as my transmitter, and either a second FT-817ND or
a Kenwood TH-F6A HT for my receiver (that HT has an all-mode wide-
band receiver in it).  Whenever I get a home station again, or find a
laptop/netbook with an LCD panel that I can see well in the field, I will
take another look at putting my 817s under the control of SatPC32.

73!





Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
http://www.wd9ewk.net/

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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Tom Schaefer, NY4I
This is a great thread.

Well, I am going to continue with full doppler and just resolve myself to 
tuning in some people that are not quite there yet. As a lot, I would think 
adding computer control to handle full doppler would not be that big a deal 
nowadays as most of the programs support it. I am not telling you how to spend 
your money though. The big test will be at Field Day when I am using full 
doppler and listening to everyone do the doppler-shuffle. :)

See you on the air as W4TA from Field Day but NEVER on an FM bird. 

73,


Tom Schaefer, NY4I
n...@arrl.net
EL88pb 
Monitoring EchoLink node KJ4FEC-L 489389
DSTAR Capable  APRS: NY4I-15



On Jun 9, 2011, at 1:19 PM, David Palmer KB5WIA wrote:

 Jerry's correct.  If you only adjust your transmit frequency, such
 that your receive frequency appears to stay the same -- then you're
 automatically correcting for your own downlink doppler, but not for
 anyone elses.  Other hams in the footprint will still have to chase
 you.  The only way to stick with the one true rule is to adjust
 *both* uplink and downlink during the pass.
 
 That being said, adjusting the higher (UHF) transmit frequency on
 VO-52 and AO-07 only (ie. manual control) will get you pretty close,
 and you won't drift a whole lot.  I hear plenty of hams doing this, as
 long as there are just one or a two QSO's going on, they don't drift
 into each other very often.
 
 73 de Dave KB5WIA / CM88
 SatPC32 with 2xFT817ND
 
 On Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 7:35 AM,  n...@lavabit.com wrote:
 OK my brain may be playing tricks, but if you vary only your transmit
 frequency such that you always hear yourself on the same downlink
 frequency, isn't it true that the other station may not necessarily be
 hearing you on the same downlink frequency and is chasing you anyway?
 Your doppler is +5kHz (for example) on the receive, the bird is just about
 to pass overhead of me though so my receive ferquency goes rapidly from
 +2kHz to -5kHz, your transmit tuning has no relation at all to what
 frequency I am listening on.  Then the bird goes past you and you suddenly
 switch down 5kHz, so I have to follow you on my receive.
 
 Or am I nuts?  (Quite possible, come see where I work and you will
 understand!)
 
 Jerry
 NØJY
 
 I always varied the transmit.
 
 This way the person I'm talking to as well as any other listeners are
 all on the same freq listening.
 
 
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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread John Becker
At 01:01 PM 6/9/2011, you wrote:

Actually, if stations would spread out a bit more on the transponders,
this would be even less of an issue.  
There is so much space that goes
to waste on these transponders, when everyone seems to never go
more than a few kHz up or down from the center.  


True. 

I'm a very big on computer control.
It seems that once you find a free spot it's yours.
That is till someone chasing someone else crosses
your QSO.

I really fail to see how someone with a pair of H/T's 
tuning and tuning and tuning can call that fun.

I'll stick with my FT847 and computer control.

John, W0JAB




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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Tony Langdon
At 04:06 AM 6/10/2011, Tom Schaefer, NY4I wrote:
This is a great thread.

Well, I am going to continue with full doppler and just resolve 
myself to tuning in some people that are not quite there yet. As a 
lot, I would think adding computer control to handle full doppler 
would not be that big a deal nowadays as most of the programs 
support it. I am not telling you how to spend your money though. The 
big test will be at Field Day when I am using full doppler and 
listening to everyone do the doppler-shuffle. :)

When I get my antennas sorted, I'm in the computer controlled camp 
(which was helpful for testing).  I may be able to solve a few issues 
by taking the Macbook into the field and using it to provide Doppler 
correction for a mobile/portable station.  Computer control will save 
me a couple of arms adjusting VFOs, so I'll be free to point the 
antenna at the right patch of sky. :)

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread Joe Krepps
So for the operator with a single FT-817ND - understanding there will be a  
learning curve in regards to doppler, doing the Arrow wave entertaining  
and/or frightening the neighbors, is AO-7 do-able or just not a really  
good idea?

Won't be ticked off if the answer is probably best not to try. Honest!  
:) I'm guessing it'll take a lot of programming memory channels to stay on  
track?

73!
Joe -already has MacDoppler Lite and a couple sat. iPhone apps.
WB3CFN
FM19
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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the Satellites

2011-06-09 Thread B J
snip

 So for the operator with a single
 FT-817ND - understanding there will be a  
 learning curve in regards to doppler, doing the Arrow
 wave entertaining  
 and/or frightening the neighbors, is AO-7 do-able or just
 not a really  
 good idea?
 
 Won't be ticked off if the answer is probably best not to
 try. Honest!  
 :) I'm guessing it'll take a lot of programming memory
 channels to stay on  
 track?

snip

Last year, I tried using HO-68 on SSB with my FT-817ND and had mixed results.  
Most of the time, other stations heard my signal but couldn't contact me 
because my downlink settings were too far off frequency.

A few months ago, I bought a second-hand '847 and I've been practicing on VO-52 
and AO-7 during passes which are fairly quiet and I'm less likely to interfere 
with other stations.

73s

Bernhard VA6BMJ @ DO33FL




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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the satellites.

2011-06-08 Thread Tony Langdon
At 10:59 AM 6/9/2011, Douglas Phelps wrote:

If you do not have a sat program automatically correcting you rig frequency,
what is the most common or preffered technique?  1 - Hold the TX 
steady and adj
the RX for doppler or 2- Hold the RX steady and adjust the TX for doppler?  I
know this must be a basic question but I am learning.  Thanks,

Adjust the higher frequency of the two you're using.

73 de VK3JED / VK3IRL
http://vkradio.com

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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the satellites.

2011-06-08 Thread Jari Koivurinne
 I am new to the satellites.  Got to where I can hear my downlink if the
 bird is
 higher than 15 degrees.  My question is about handling the doppler shift.

 If you do not have a sat program automatically correcting you rig
 frequency,
 what is the most common or preffered technique?  1 - Hold the TX steady
 and adj
 the RX for doppler or 2- Hold the RX steady and adjust the TX for
 doppler?  I
 know this must be a basic question but I am learning.  Thanks,

 Doug
 K9DLP

Hi!

Good question.

Hold the TX steady and adjust the RX. If You adjust TX, the other guy have
to adjust also his RX and then his TX... a mess.
It is much easier if everybody adjust only his own RX and keeps TX steady.

73
Jari OH3UW


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[amsat-bb] Re: SSB Operation on the satellites.

2011-06-08 Thread i8cvs
Hi Doug, KA9DLP

Hold the RX steady and adjust the TX for doppler.This is what I did
manually from OSCAR-6 and I do actually on VO-52, FO-29 and
OSCAR-7

73 de

i8CVS Domenico

- Original Message -
From: Douglas Phelps dphel...@ameritech.net
To: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Sent: Thursday, June 09, 2011 2:59 AM
Subject: [amsat-bb] SSB Operation on the satellites.


I am new to the satellites. Got to where I can hear my downlink if the bird
is
higher than 15 degrees. My question is about handling the doppler shift.

If you do not have a sat program automatically correcting you rig frequency,
what is the most common or preffered technique? 1 - Hold the TX steady and
adj
the RX for doppler or 2- Hold the RX steady and adjust the TX for doppler? I
know this must be a basic question but I am learning. Thanks,

Doug
K9DLP
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