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----- Original Message -----
From: "David Harper" Subject: FSK technical question For a communications protocol such as RTTY, I know the mark and space frequencies indicate 0 and 1 values of a (usually) 5-bit character. But how does the receiving side synchronize with the transmitting side? How does the receiver continue to properly allocate the OK, remember the whole start and stop bit thing? The line sits at mark when idle. When a character comes, the line drops to space for one bit time. This is the start bit. Then the 5 or 8 bits are transmitted, then one, 1.5 or two stop bits, which are really nothing more than the minimum time between characters. So the receiver is guaranteed *at least* one bit time of mark followed by exactly one bit time of space between characters. The receiving side does need to be reasonably accurate, but only accurate enough to not garble a character. It never has to keep in sync for more than 10 bits worth (8 data bits plus a start and stop bit). If the protocol specifies more than one stop bit, from the receiver's perspective that is nothing more than additional time the transmitter has allotted to do end of character processing. On your earlier question about receiving FSK, the various posters answered what you would do if you wanted to use an SSB or AM rig, or an audio FM rig to receive FSK. However, a purpose-built FSK receiver would probably use an FM discriminator, and simply recover data, rather than audio, from the discriminator. Remember that an FM discriminator has an output that is related to the frequency. If you fed the discriminator two frequencies, the output would be two voltages. ... |
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