New release (4.15) of MULTIPSK

Pour les francophones: la version française de ce message se trouve sur mon 
site (http://f6cte.free.fr). Il suffit de cliquer sur le lien "Principales 
modifications (courriel avertissant de la sortie de la nouvelle version)".


Hello to all Ham and SWL,




The new release of MultiPSK (4.15) is on my Web site (http://f6cte.free.fr). 
The main mirror site is Earl's, N8KBR: http://www.eqth.info/multipsk/index.html 
(click on "United States Download Site").
Another mirror site isTerry's: http://g90swl.co.uk/multipsk/

Multispk associated to Clock are freeware programs but with functions submitted 
to a licence (by user key).




The main modifications of MULTIPSK 4.15 are the following:




1) Decoding of the MIL-STD-188-110A ("110A") + 110A beacon

This mode (MIL-STD-188-110A/B) is named also FED-STD-1052 or STANAG 4539. It is 
used mainly by professionals (the text being mostly encrypted) but also, 
rarely, by Hams. 

The 75 bps sub-mode in TX (beacon) is proposed by Multipsk.


Several sub modes (75 to 4800 bps) and two different interleaving (short and 
long) are proposed. All modes are fixed frequency, except a 75 bps (bits per 
second) sub-mode which is transmitted in "frequency hopping". It is not decoded 
in this soft.

The receiver should be in USB mode. The bandwidth must extend from 300 to 3300 
Hz (at -30 dB) with a relatively flat frequency response between 600 and 3000 
Hz. The central frequency is, in this case, equal to 1800Hz. It can be selected 
a 1500 Hz central frequency for Ham receivers.

The soft automatically decodes the speed (75, 150, 600, 1200, 2400 or 4800 bps) 
and the interleaver (short or long), in different character formats.

The radio-amateur frequency proposed for this mode is 14104 KHz (adjusted on 
the transceiver). 

Important: in USA, 110A text transmission is forbidden. PSE, check if it is 
allowed in your country.




This mode is available for licencied copies, only (otherwise, the decoding is 
stopped after 5 minutes). However the 75 bps sub-mode in format 8N1 (RX/TX) is 
free.

See specifications further on.




2) RS ID, Call ID (Prop ID)



These identifiers are now permanently monitored in background, by default (the 
CPU load being weak). The management of these identifiers has been improved. 



For Call ID and "Prop ID" ("Propagation ID"), it is proposed four frequencies 
bandwiths for transmission and monitoring. 
3590, 7040, 10148, 14075 KHz (to adjust on the transceiver).
All the minimum AF band, i.e. from 200 Hz to 2500 Hz can be used. These 
frequencies can be favourably scaned ("Transceiver" button).

http://f6cte.free.fr/The_RS_ID_easy_with_Multipsk.doc

http://f6cte.free.fr/The_Call_ID_and_Prop_ID_easy_with_Multipsk.doc




3) Improvements of

- the SdR mode and frequency management,

- the ARQ FAE mode (in ALE or ALE400),

- the JT65, GMDSS and SELCAL modes.




110A specifications:




Baud rate: 2400.




Modulation: 8PSK (not differential, the exact phase being determined through 
known data) with a central frequency of 1800 Hz




Reception mode: USB

Character set: different synchronous or asynchronous formats are proposed (5 
ITA2, 7 bits ASCII or 8 bits (ASCII+ANSI)) 

Shape of pulse: raised cosine

Bandwidth: about 3 KHz (300 to 3300 Hz)

Demodulation: coherent

Synchronization: automatic using the known data

Convolution code: except in 4800 bps, yes. The constraint lenght is equal to 7 
bits, 

Interleaving: except in 4800 bps, yes. Two interleavings are proposed: short or 
long. However, it is expected the possibility not to use interleaving.

Pmean/Ppeak: about 0.76 (specific to Multipsk in TX)

Lowest S/N (on Multipsk): + 4 dB in 75 bps mode (first decodings at +1.5 dB) 
and + 10 dB in 2400 bps (the signal to noise ratio must be, in general, very 
good, to be able to decode this mode, i.e "excellent" at 2400 bps and "good" at 
75 bps). 

Each frame contains a synchronization preamble phase where the sub-mode is 
defined, a data phase where the unknown data is transmitted (mixed with known 
data to follow the transmission characteristics) , an "End of Message" ("EOM") 
phase and a final flushing phase (to finish de-interleaving and de-convolution 
operations).

An adaptative equalization is required at this speed (2400 bauds).

73

Patrick

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