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Old January 6th 04, 03:50 AM
Mike Coslo
 
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N2EY wrote:
In article , Mike Coslo writes:


That wasn't a good signal W1AW was putting
out, and it was making a mess out of the local neighborhood.



Are you sure the W1AW signal was dirty? An overloaded receiver or soundcard
will do exaclty what you describe.


I'll never say never, but I don't think it was too likely. I tried a
number of things with the RTTY party last weekend, and even though there
were lots of strong, wide signals, the few psk signals on at the same
time were no problem to copy. And the other people on the air had to be
suffering the same malfunction I might have been.



That doesn't mean it's impossible that W1AW had a problem, just that all things
need to be checked out. Have you listened to W1AW since then?


Usually PSK and OOK Morse get along just fine.



Depends on who's doing what. 3579 used to be a popular "glowbug" frequency for
Morse folks using simple rigs and a colorburst crystal. Then the freq was taken
over by PSK-31 due to the popularity of the "Warbler".

My point is that by coming out with a ratty signal, W1AW was doing
what so many hams were complaining about K1MAN does. Fire it up, and too bad
for the rest of you.



W1AW transmits bulletins and code practice on a published schedule, and is on
every HF amateur band simultaneously. Been doing that for almost 70 years now.
However, the signal should be clean.

Didja email them? Even that "professional" Harris stuff can go wacko.


Well, I thought about it, but after the reaction of a number of people
here that I think know more about the suject than I do, I would imagine
they would write it off to pilot error.

- Mike KB3EIA -