![]() |
Digital broadcaster on 76 m ?
Every evening on 3865 here in the northeast US there is what I believe to be
a digital broadcaster. The "noise" is a rasping sound, and it goes on all evening long, steady. Quite strong. I know nothing about digital reception. Is there a way to decode this signal, by using my PC sound card and some software? Rick K2XT |
Digital broadcaster on 76 m ?
In article ,
Rick wrote: Every evening on 3865 here in the northeast US there is what I believe to be a digital broadcaster. The "noise" is a rasping sound, and it goes on all evening long, steady. Quite strong. I know nothing about digital reception. Is there a way to decode this signal, by using my PC sound card and some software? Try: http://n1su.com/windrm/ (ham-oriented) http://drm.sourceforge.net/ (broadcast-oriented) The wide-bandwidth (broadcast-oriented) DRM systems may require that you have access to a low-frequency-IF version of the signal, or tap out a 455 kHz IF and mix it down to around 10-15 kHz. I believe that the narrow-bandwidth (ham-oriented) versions could use the audio output from a SSB receiver. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
Digital broadcaster on 76 m ?
On May 30, 7:24 pm, (Dave Platt) wrote:
In article , Rick wrote: Every evening on 3865 here in the northeast US there is what I believe to be a digital broadcaster. The "noise" is a rasping sound, and it goes on all evening long, steady. Quite strong. I know nothing about digital reception. Is there a way to decode this signal, by using my PC sound card and some software? Try: http://n1su.com/windrm/ (ham-oriented ) http://drm.sourceforge.net/ (broadcast-orient ed) The wide-bandwidth (broadcast-oriented) DRM systems may require that you have access to a low-frequency-IF version of the signal, or tap out a 455 kHz IF and mix it down to around 10-15 kHz. Did you mean 3965kHz? There is no scheduled DRM transmission on 3865kHz. On 3965, Radio France has a 1kW DRM transmission from Issoudun targetting France on all day except 1800-1900 and 2000-2200 UTC. I'm amazed that you find it so strong across the Atlantic. Tom |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:07 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com