ARLA/CLUSTER: Radioamadores britânicos usam o modo PSK31 em transponder nos satélites
João Costa > CT1FBF
ct1fbf gmail.com
Quarta-Feira, 27 de Maio de 2015 - 13:22:32 WEST
UK radio amateurs use PSK31 satellite transponder
After building a 28 MHz 1/4 Wave Ground Plane antenna to replace his
dipole Peter Goodhall 2E0SQL was able to receive his 10 watt signal
through the PSAT PSK31 transponder for the first time on Tuesday, May
26
Peter Martinez G3PLX posted a report to the RSGB Tech Yahoo Group
reproduced here with permission:
Finally got my own signal back via PSAT just now and proved that the
uplink frequency control works. The PSAT uplink receiver is about 300
Hz low of 28120 kHz which means that when the satellite is heading
straight towards me at +600 Hz Doppler, my transmitter needs to be 900
Hz low.
If I chose to place my own signal on a downlink frequency of 1000 Hz,
the transmit audio tone would have to be down at 100 Hz which is too
low for my SSB transmitter. So I have chosen 1500 Hz in the downlink.
I will try again on the next few passes. I am just sending “Test de
G3PLX via PSAT” continuously at the moment and not listening for
replies. Still not getting a strong downlink SNR so the power control
loop isn’t kicking in.
Bob Bruninga WB4APR has made a request to developers of PSK31 software
to open their PSK31 frequency tracking to accommodate more than 1 Hz
per second Doppler shift. Current implementations can do 1 Hz/s but
completely fail at 3 Hz/s.
PSK31 Transponder Frequencies:
PSAT: 145.825 MHz FM 1200 baud AX.25 telemetry – digipeater currently off
PSAT PSK31: 435.350 MHz FM downlink, 28.120 MHz SSB PK31 uplink.
W3ADO-5 PSK TLM beacon on 315 Hz
BRICsat: 437.975 MHz 9600 baud telemetry every 20s
BRICsat PSK31 435.350 MHz FM downlink, 28.120 MHz SSB PK31 uplink.
W3ADO-6 PSK TLM beacon on 375 Hz
Guide to using the PSK31 transponder
http://amsat-uk.org/beginners/how-to-work-psk31-satellites/
ParkinsonSAT (PSAT)
http://www.aprs.org/psat.html
Fldigi PSK31 software
http://www.w1hkj.com/Fldigi.html
Listen to satellite signals in the 145 and 435-438 MHz bands from
anywhere in the world using the online SUWS WebSDR located near
London. Further details at
http://amsat-uk.org/2014/08/15/suws-websdr-moves-to-new-site/
AMSAT-UK
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