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"Keyboard In The Noise" wrote in message
news:n%2yc.34114$tI2.12543@fed1read07... Can any one point me to a good expalnation of why PSK31 should be operated at low power ??? PSK-31, more so than most modes, requires that amateurs respect each other's need to communicate. It is a very narrow band mode, and requires astonishingly low power to be effective. PSK is even more narrow banded than CW. The narrower the bandwidth, the less power you need to make it above the noise. Furthermore, on PSK, the DSP algorithms are good enough that you only need to be barely above the noise for 100% copy. Once you have achieved 100% copy there is nothing to gain by having a stronger signal. Most amateurs use SSB rigs on PSK. Unlike CW, where a sharp filter can keep a strong station out of the passband (and out of the AGC), on PSK the entire PSK band is one SSB signal wide. If there is one strong station, that station is going to prevent everyone else on the band from hearing their own QSOs. Running 100 watts on PSK is the very definition of a LID. Have heard for a 100 Watt rig keep it throttled back to 35 Watts also heard 50 Watts. 35 watts is probably tops for most conditions. A good operator will keep his power well below that, and only crank it up to 35 or so when conditions are truly horrid. I think it has to do distortion if higher power is used Most SSB rigs can't deliver full power continuously. They are rated for peak power at a very low duty cycle. Many will toast their finals at 100 watts continuous. Depending on the rig and how you make the measurements, many cannot make more than half power without distortion, and distortion on PSK is a very bad thing. But this should be a moot point anyway. Most of the time you should be able to make the contact at a watt or so. Sometimes you may need to crank it up to 5 or 10, but if you need a lot more than that, something is very wrong. Most likely, some other LID on the band is running 100 watts. Sadly, PSK seems to be experiencing the sort of power warfare that makes 20 phone such an awful place. A few years ago, it was rare to hear a station running more than 2 or 3 watts. Now it seems like 20 is a lot more common. Unfortunately, a lot of 20 watt stations means that other stations need to run higher power, too. I am speaking here of 14 MHz and up. On the lower frequencies, especially 3.5 MHz, there is a need for a little more power. But at 14 MHz and up, the only reason to need more than about a watt is because QRM from stations running too much power are interfering with the receiving station. ... |
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