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On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 12:33:44 GMT, Bob Miller
wrote: On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 02:11:44 -0400, Buck wrote: Each radio has it's own finger-print that the FCC can read. Many times, they can tell the make and model by the signature before ever seeing the rig. I would think that the most popular HF mobile rig ever is recognized by the FCC. Rig fingerprint? How does that work? bob k5qwg I don't know, the FCC mentions them in letters to the owners of the rigs they are requiring inspection on. -- 73 for now Buck N4PGW |
#2
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On Fri, 03 Jun 2005 10:01:39 -0400, Buck wrote:
On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 12:33:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 02:11:44 -0400, Buck wrote: Each radio has it's own finger-print that the FCC can read. Many times, they can tell the make and model by the signature before ever seeing the rig. I would think that the most popular HF mobile rig ever is recognized by the FCC. Rig fingerprint? How does that work? bob k5qwg I don't know, the FCC mentions them in letters to the owners of the rigs they are requiring inspection on. It's called "signature analysis". Every emitter, whether the human voice, a transmiiter or a piece of vibrating machinery puts out its vibrations in a unique pattern that can be determined by careful analysis of the signal. There are mathmatical analysis tools that can break down the patterns into frequency bands and time signatures that all together, show that your Icom IC-706 MarkIIG is uniquely different from my friend's. The math isn't particularly difficult, there are specialty chip sets that will do it. The trick is doing it fast and accurately enough. The "waterfall" display in WINPSK is doing the math, but only enough to show the signals and decode the PSK protocol. If it were accurate enough it would show the differences between all the transmitters. Russ - kf4wxd |
#3
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On Fri, 03 Jun 2005 10:01:39 -0400, Buck wrote:
On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 12:33:44 GMT, Bob Miller wrote: On Thu, 02 Jun 2005 02:11:44 -0400, Buck wrote: Each radio has it's own finger-print that the FCC can read. Many times, they can tell the make and model by the signature before ever seeing the rig. I would think that the most popular HF mobile rig ever is recognized by the FCC. Rig fingerprint? How does that work? bob k5qwg I don't know, the FCC mentions them in letters to the owners of the rigs they are requiring inspection on. It's called "signature analysis". Every emitter, whether the human voice, a transmiiter or a piece of vibrating machinery puts out its vibrations in a unique pattern that can be determined by careful analysis of the signal. There are mathmatical analysis tools that can break down the patterns into frequency bands and time signatures that all together, show that your Icom IC-706 MarkIIG is uniquely different from my friend's. The math isn't particularly difficult, there are specialty chip sets that will do it. The trick is doing it fast and accurately enough. The "waterfall" display in WINPSK is doing the math, but only enough to show the signals and decode the PSK protocol. If it were accurate enough it would show the differences between all the transmitters. Russ - kf4wxd |
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