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Author Topic: Coconut Shortwave and others, SSTV 6925 U  (Read 1710 times)

Offline textim

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Coconut Shortwave and others, SSTV 6925 U
« on: December 16, 2009, 0519 UTC »
I received this series of images from Coconut and another op beginning at 0345z.  There was a third station as well, but not enough signal to decode here.













Both stations sent at the same time for this one.




« Last Edit: December 16, 2009, 1125 UTC by textim »
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Offline DOCTOR

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Re: Coconut Shortwave and others, SSTV 6925 U
« Reply #1 on: December 16, 2009, 1404 UTC »
I heard the sstv stations for close to an hour 0315 to 0410, unable to copy..my computer interferes with the receiver so dont bother, but all ranged from s-2 to s7 for the time period.

DOCTOR/WA7026SWL/INDIANA
DOCTOR/WA7026SWL

INDIANA
RCVR...EATON S350DL, TESCUN PL600
ANTENNA...GRUNDIG INDOOR LOOP MW
WHIP, LONGWIRE...
ALINCO DX 70T/END FED WIRE

***PLEASE QSL***

Offline Kyle Broflovski

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Re: Coconut Shortwave and others, SSTV 6925 U
« Reply #2 on: December 16, 2009, 1941 UTC »
What SSTV modes are most commonly used on these frequencies?  I'm just starting out in digital modes and it is really confusing with a dozen different modes just in SSTV.
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Offline Seamus

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Re: Coconut Shortwave and others, SSTV 6925 U
« Reply #3 on: December 16, 2009, 2034 UTC »
Most of the SSTV programs I have worked with will auto-select the correct mode upon reception.

Scottie 1 and Scottie 2 are probably the most common formats out there, with the Martin and Robot formats making up probably 95% of the remainder.  I have heard some quick squirts of the 8- and 12-second B/W modes, and a handful of Scottie DX transmissions, but Scottie 1 & 2 are probably your best bet for receiving. 

In your software, load up a few sample images and "send" them without anything hooked up to the sound card but your speakers.  This will give you a feel for the timing and cadence of the formats, and after some practice, you can sort of judge between them by ear. 

If you're using MMSSTV, set it for auto-start, and make sure that the "auto" button is selected in the format list.  With any signal strong enough to have a definite sync pulse, it should be able to auto-detect and receive it on its own, without having to worry about manual mode selection.

 

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