d part gets everyone at least receiving and decoding FT8, and
>> hopefully most of them transmitting too, making QSOs within the room.
>>
>> The third part moves into fox-n-hounds, contesting and whatever, for
>> those who have the stamina and interest!
>>
>> 73 GL
>
efully most of them transmitting too, making QSOs within the room.
>
> The third part moves into fox-n-hounds, contesting and whatever, for those
> who have the stamina and interest!
>
> 73 GL
> Gary ZL2iFB
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* WB5JJJ
> *Sent:* 03 January 201
e third part moves into fox-n-hounds, contesting and whatever, for those
> who have the stamina and interest!
> 73 GL
> Gary ZL2iFB
>
>
> From: WB5JJJ
> Sent: 03 January 2019 12:10
> To: WSJT software development
> Subject: [wsjt-devel] F/H demo at local hamfest
them transmitting too, making QSOs within the room.
The third part moves into fox-n-hounds, contesting and whatever, for those who
have the stamina and interest!
73 GL
Gary ZL2iFB
From: WB5JJJ
Sent: 03 January 2019 12:10
To: WSJT software development
Subject: [wsjt-devel] F/H
Couple of ideas
#1 You can actually use speaker/mic to do it so no RF is involved at all.
#2 You can run one computer with two big monitors and run 4 or 5 copies of
WSJT-X all on virtual audio cables.
You can do your own test that way to learn the Fox side a bit better.
de Mike W9MDB
I have been asked to set up a F/H demo for our hamfest in March. I'm
thinking run the power all the way down on some rigs set up around the room
and transmitting into dummy loads on a very discrete frequency so as to not
get people too excited elsewhere. This way the local hams could actually