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![]() Roy Haines with Dewey Foley wrote: "John S." wrote in message oups.com... Take a look at the www.scancat.com site for a lot of information on Hoka decoders. I found this copy of an MT review on the same site: http://www.scancat.com/rvw-c3.html I don't know the age of the review, however I think it may not be recent because the AEA-PK232MBX is mentioned in a brief comparison to what seems to be a very pricey Hoka decoder. There are several other models at greater and lesser prices with extensive reviews. The site also shows a link to a yahoo discussion group which might be the place to ask about users of Hoka products. At one time I was really into decoding digital signals, but dropped out because the stuff I could decode on a PK232MBX and Kenwood R-5000 setup had pretty much disappeared. What has been your experience with the digital services on HF - is there much left that can be translated into readable english? Thanks for the replies!! Sure, good to talk with another digital ute enthusiast!! Well, first off... the original Hoka units were basically a donglized serial device (modulating audio into digital on/off signals) which fed some fairly cool but primitive software. Nowadays I think everything is through the soundcard. The old Hoka still works for me, but I am interested in stuff that is more modern, and thus the need for an upgrade. Is there much out there that can be converted to readable english with an advanced decoder? My dated experience with the PK232MBX was that there wasn't much beyond weather stuff and that was disappearing. I've heard that most of the digital stuff is encrypted and unreadable. Secondly, I havent even looked at HF digital signals in probably 5 years. Staying in UHF/VHF, 900 Mhz mainly (use your imagination for that, involving taps for discriminator output). Since the paradigm shifted from a particular mode of communication to another, the Hoka is obsolete for me for that one particular idiosyncracy. So tell me about what you are hearing (or reading) in the VHF/UHF range. Anything that can be translated to readable english? One day it was all interceptable. The next day it all changed. The transmission methodology mutated, much to my surprise. Not being handy with an iron, and having some disposable income, I would venture some cash for something that could demodulate these signals. But I see that the new Hoka stuff for the sound card will do the trick. Its like $4,000 for the CD, though, and my income isnt THAT disposable! Yeah, the good old days of decoding news, diplomatic stuff, russians, ship-to-shore traffic, etc., in TDM, FDM (yes!) TOR and all the other interesting modes are pretty much gone. I reckon that if I did get back into the swing of digital HF though, I would tune and tune and tune some more til I found something neat, foregoing the typical schedules of weather faxes for a while at least. I have some time off this week, so perhaps I will check the propagation charts and dial away to see what pops up. Long ago for a time, I would monitor Argentinian news faxes on my old Universal Decoder with that old 8 inch Apple screen, but thats old school I guess by now! Yeah, I had a 64K ram Radio Shack CoCo with a homebrew RF modulator to drive a 40 character monitor fed by a Kenwood R-5000 and AEA PK232MBX. And it worked! Successive IBM PC's were never quite as much of a challenge, but much easier to read. Later, I read Cuban Embassy Diplomatic traffic, discussing blacklisting code named members from meetings and such. In the clear!! Monitoring the open (more or less) maritime traffic would be pretty darned rad if some sh*t hit the fan on the high seas... imagine a lone RTO in the shack sending out a distress message that leads to an international news item. The possibility is fairly high for something like that, and that prospect is fairly exciting, to me at least. Checking out the WUN newsletter tells me that its still posible to pick up interesting things now and again. In the urbanized areas of the U.S. though, QRM is so freaking prominent I would imagine its as frustrating to us as it is to an astronomer in Las Vegas trying to examine a distant planet through the ambient light of a billion light bulbs, and the drunken tobacco laden exhaustbreath of a billion visitors a day (you get the picture!). Damn, its gets harder and harder for us, dont it?! Checking out the specs on the new Hoka stuff just gets me all giddy again... too bad its JUST out of reach of this enthusiast. I should call Jim down at ScanCat to get his take on it. We go back probably 10-12 years. Thanks again for your replies. |
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