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I believe he meant AFSK (audio frequency shift keying) vs FSK
(frequency shift keying). yes, that is what i meant. i didn't even know amplitude shift keying existed. am i correct about afsk being audio tones transmitted over FM, while fsk is just alternating between two non-modulating frequencies? jason You are partly correct. If audio tones are fed into the microphone input (audio stages) of an AM or FM transmitter you are generating AFSK. If an audio tone is fed into a SSB transmitter it will generate a single output frequency. If the tone is switched off and on , it will be received as a CW transmitter being keyed off and on. Some newer transceivers generate CW this way. If the tone is shifted in frequency , the output will be a carrier shifted the same ammount. This is received the same as a FSK transmitter. You can get the same effect if you have a crystal controled transmiter and switch a capacitor across the crystal to change the frequency. There is almost no way to tell the differance between the two. If 100% pure tones are used and everything else it 100% correct then there is no differance in the transmitted signals. As always nothing is 100% and you can tell the differance with very close and strong signals. This is still close enough it does not matter. |
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