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N2EY:
First, you can run duplex, simply use two modems and a separate transmitter and receiver. The second modem can be a USR internal if you don't have two serial ports for externals. To run duplex with one modem, there is some kind of patch device they used to keep the receiver output from getting on the mic input of the transmitter (but the modem had simultaneous access to both)--and for the life of me, I can't remember what it was called, first time I had ever seen one. When I get a chance, I will ask about it. You might know what it is/was? Second, it works, build one--or--draw it on paper and decide it does not work. I am on to other things, I got tired of webcams years ago. Don't even video chat on irc, MSN Messenger, ICQ messenger or yahoo messenger much anymore. And that is much easier than "Mac Amateur IM." I can tell, this argument will shortly switch to rules and regulations, it always does, and I have no interest in having such recited to me. Expect only my bad nature in return. I didn't do the hardware or even know the "true nature" of the signal which comes out of that modem and hits the phone line or a mike in. I just toyed with the software and watched it work--it "lived" in my garage for a year or so. I am into my "universal translator" these days and trying to set up to chat fluently with the russians... I think the russian girls are kind of cute... grin John wrote in message oups.com... John Smith wrote: Dee: Will you agree that a 56K phone modem, does indeed, transmit this data rate with an audio bandwidth of ~300Hz to ~5000K, and if you do so agree, how can you argue this cannot fit in a HF AM RF signal which only goes 2.5K each side of center frequency?????????? Of course it can. The question is whether the RF path will have characteristics comparable to those of the telephone line. Are you NOT imposing an audio frequency of AT LEAST a 5K bandwidth on the rf carrier with normal speech? No. Typical ham transceivers only need about 2.5 kHz of audio bandwidth. (actually, most quality transceivers have a wider audio bandwidth than this which can be set +/-) and if you agree you are indeed, how can you argue that 5K bandwidth can carry a 56K data rate over a phone line--and NOT a hf rf signal???? That looks insane to me? It's a question of the characteristics of the RF path. Certainly there are some paths that will support the amplitude- and phase- stable requirements of the 56K modem - and some paths that won't. On top of that is the fact that most RF paths aren't full duplex. How fast is the 56K modem in half-duplex with transmit-receive switching? The modem is NOT using the whole 5K bandwidth--necessarily, there is compression into a narrower bandwidth which can and is generally software controlled--if necessary (the modems software is a LOT smarter than most give it credit for, especially in the case of the old "onboard processor" and "hardware logic" USRobotics external modems. You need to explain to me why it even begins to look difficult to you for me to be able to understand what you are asking? As, I have to be missing something here... You are. Do you think HF offers the same transmission characteristics as a telephone line? You know, I have not even looked to see on the web, but aren't tons of people doing this right now as we newsgroup? On telephone wires or HF radio? I suppose you could actually use the rf signal as data carrier itself and modulate it directly through on/off switching, as opposed to modulating the rf carrier with the audio data carrier... but that would take some heavy duty equip mods/revamps, if it didn't wipe out the neighbors cable tv! grin Think about this: at 100 mhz if you can precisely control the EXACT amplitude of each and every cycle of rf out the back end of the xmitter, you have a virtual 100mbs data carrier... most are working here... 450 MHz? 1Ghz? 12Ghz? Think about the stability of the RF path at HF. ... and of course, the receiver has to be able to decipher the amplitudes of each cycle back to a data stream for the video card... ... this is the land where dreamers are... John "Dee Flint" wrote in message ... "John Smith" wrote in message ... Mike: 300 baud is ridiculous, in Dee's first post mentioning 300 baud I tossed it out the window--that was fine up to about 1985, then only the mentally challenged continued to run 300 baud modems! Please show me and everyone else how we can run more than 300 baud on HF without exceeding reasonable band widths. There are a whole lot of things, not just video, that would be nice to do. How can we do it? Bandwidth is directly related to baud rate. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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