all you need is a flex 5000 at each end of the wire

----- Original Message ----
From: Tim Ellison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Lee A Crocker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Flexradio <FlexRadio@flex-radio.biz>
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 12:15:58 PM
Subject: RE: [Flexradio] Does the Flex-5000 have "SO2R in a box" capability?

Lee wrote:

"Given the switching times you could transmit alternate words on
alternate bands at 
1500W all the time while listening to both bands."

While carrying on a lucid and intelligible conversation?  This I want to
see and hear!  It would make one hell of a parlor trick :-)

-Tim, W4TME

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lee A Crocker
Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2007 10:11 AM
To: Flexradio
Subject: Re: [Flexradio] Does the Flex-5000 have "SO2R in a box"
capability?

your problem is you are lost in the land of half duplex transceivers.
The flex radio is a full duplex radio.  With the added receiver you have
three independent processes going on all the time.  In fact with the
extra receiver you could receive on 20, receive on 15 and transmit on 40
simultaneously.  No switching.  On 20 you could transmit and receive
simultaneously or on 15 you could receive and transmit simultaneously.  

First in my experience there is no need for bandpass filters.  I use my
2 SDR-1000's at 1500W on 2 bands every day  The antenna are 100ft or
less apart and I have no desense on the non transmitting band.  Using a
DSP based radio, as long as the AD/DA channel doesn't overload the
filters are 100% effective.  Second you need 2 complete signal paths
from antenna through amp to the radio.  If you want a 20 and 15 setup
from the back of the radio you need a 20M amp connected to ant 1 and a
15M amp connected to ant 2  and the amps connected to their respective
antenna and key lines.  Then it is merely a matter of listening on 2
bands and aiming your transmitter to what ever band you want to transmit
on, just the same as any SO2R.   The audio duties can be handled in
software with as many  right ear, left ear, both ear, side tone,
combinations as you want.  Side tone is just another digital process to
be route. PowerSDR already has the algorithm for panning 2 receive
channels
 across the stereo spectrum.  Given the switching times you could
transmit alternate words on alternate bands at 1500W all the time while
listening to both bands.  If you need to use the same antenna for
transmit and receive a PIN switch will solve that.   I use PIN switches
at 1500W all the time.   

Full duplex with three running processes and software control of routing
the audio as a digital entity, and control signals generated in software
is the key and it is why the flex is such an innovation.  

73  W9OY
 


__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 

_______________________________________________
FlexRadio mailing list
FlexRadio@flex-radio.biz
http://mail.flex-radio.biz/mailman/listinfo/flexradio_flex-radio.biz
Archive Link: http://www.mail-archive.com/flexradio%40flex-radio.biz/
FlexRadio Knowledge Base: http://kb.flex-radio.com/
FlexRadio Homepage: http://www.flex-radio.com/





__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 

_______________________________________________
FlexRadio mailing list
FlexRadio@flex-radio.biz
http://mail.flex-radio.biz/mailman/listinfo/flexradio_flex-radio.biz
Archive Link: http://www.mail-archive.com/flexradio%40flex-radio.biz/
FlexRadio Knowledge Base: http://kb.flex-radio.com/
FlexRadio Homepage: http://www.flex-radio.com/

Reply via email to