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#1
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Hello,
I am looking to decode an SSB signals coming out of my SW radio fed to my PC soundcard .. There are many software available on the net but havent been able to find on like this (BOF or some sideband filter...) I have seen stuff like DSPfilter and MIXsomething but doesnt seem to do the trick. I someone could help please. Thanks yan |
#2
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Yan,
If you're trying to decode things like Slow-Scan TV, etc. then a great program to use is SkySweeper. You can get a free demo he http://www.skysweep.com and also see information about what each version can do. -- Stinger "Yan" wrote in message om... Hello, I am looking to decode an SSB signals coming out of my SW radio fed to my PC soundcard . There are many software available on the net but havent been able to find on like this (BOF or some sideband filter...) I have seen stuff like DSPfilter and MIXsomething but doesnt seem to do the trick. I someone could help please. Thanks yan |
#3
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Yan wrote:
Hello, I am looking to decode an SSB signals coming out of my SW radio fed to my PC soundcard . There are many software available on the net but havent been able to find on like this (BOF or some sideband filter...) I have seen stuff like DSPfilter and MIXsomething but doesnt seem to do the trick. I someone could help please. Thanks yan I don't think you can take the audio output from an envelope detector of a SSB suppressed carrier signal and convert it to the audio that you would have got were the carrier not suppressed. The envelope detector generates the difference frequencies between the predominant energy in the IF spectrum and the weaker. When carrier is present, that would be the differences between the carrier and the sideband energy, i.e., the desired modulation. In the absence of carrier, it is a mish-mash between the strongest speech spectrum and the weaker and no subsequent processing is liable to be very capable of untangling it. That's why a BFO to provide a replacement carrier and a product detector are used for SSB demodualtion. What can be done is to downconvert the IF signal to another IF in the passband of the sound card and the DSP processing could multiply the input spectrum against a frequency, say 15 kHz, and low pass filter the output to extract the modulation. Such a technique is described and Windows software can be downloaded at http://www.detomasi.it/en/project.html. Here's a link to an article about a DSP AM/FM/SSB demodulator based on the Motorola 56002: http://thierry.leconte.chez.tiscali.fr/demod.html . If you make this IF converter, you will also be able to experiment with DRM reception using the DReaM software. Tom |
#4
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Yan wrote:
Hello, I am looking to decode an SSB signals coming out of my SW radio fed to my PC soundcard . There are many software available on the net but havent been able to find on like this (BOF or some sideband filter...) I have seen stuff like DSPfilter and MIXsomething but doesnt seem to do the trick. I someone could help please. Thanks yan What radio do you have? -- Brian Denley http://home.comcast.net/~b.denley/index.html |
#5
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![]() What radio do you have? I have a Grundig S350. I am starting to think that what I am asing is a little too much. I had a YB400PE and it had a SSB switch and all it did was apply some function on on my AM signal. I have many audio applications but I am looking for a means of filtering the band and applying the missing carrier (or whatever other sgnal manipulation.) Basically, I want the warble on any given station to be cleared up. Thanks ;-) |
#6
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Short answer ... it can't be done.
You'll need a receiver built to receive SSB. jw K9RZZ |
#8
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(Yan) wrote in message . com...
What radio do you have? I have a Grundig S350. I am starting to think that what I am asing is a little too much. I had a YB400PE and it had a SSB switch and all it did was apply some function on on my AM signal. I have many audio applications but I am looking for a means of filtering the band and applying the missing carrier (or whatever other sgnal manipulation.) Basically, I want the warble on any given station to be cleared up. Thanks ;-) It's really easiest to just get another SSB radio. But you could build a BFO circuit I suppose. Back when I first started out, I used to use old clock radios as tunable BFO's. You just stuck the old BC radio right next to the SW portable, and tune it "the BC radio" until you hear a "swish" sound in the SW radio. Tune the BC radio until that BFO signal is sitting on your SW freq. If you are careful in tuning with both radios, it's a workable setup. But if either radio drifts, you need to touch up the tuning a good bit. The "SSB" switch on the 400PE was a built in BFO circuit. MK PS..http://web.wt.net/~nm5k/r6.jpg This is a pix of my first SWL setup when I was in 8th grade. Note the philco portable with the AM clock radio directly behind it. That was my "BFO". The one to the left, would work also, but I used it as my actual clock, and for AM-BC. The contraption in the center view is my first 40m "7 mhz" transmitter I built using a 6V6. It actually worked! No smoke was ever let out of that unit...That pic was taken in 1971. Hard to believe that was 33 years ago...Proof of impending old fartism... ![]() then.... ![]() school the next year or so...I bought it new at a firestone tire store of all places. They sold philco TV's , radios' , etc back in those days..MK |
#9
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Yan wrote:
What radio do you have? I have a Grundig S350. I am starting to think that what I am asing is a little too much. I had a YB400PE and it had a SSB switch and all it did was apply some function on on my AM signal. I have many audio applications but I am looking for a means of filtering the band and applying the missing carrier (or whatever other sgnal manipulation.) Basically, I want the warble on any given station to be cleared up. Thanks ;-) Yan: Bad radio choice if your interested in SSB. Can you take it back and get a radio with SSB? A Sony SW7600 would have been a better choice for about $140. -- Brian Denley http://home.comcast.net/~b.denley/index.html |
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