Hello Guy and Nick (I don't have the e-mail address of Don and John ready) Found this on HCDX :
------------ You should note that neither Total Recorder nor any of the other virtual recorders about which we know does continuous time-stamping like several of the MD recorders do. There are running indications (in minutes and seconds) of how far you are into the recording, as well as its total play-back length. If you allow Total Recorder to save the recording automatically, the default title is the time and date of the end of the recording. The lack of absolute date-stamping does not seem to be much of a problem in practice. ------------ RecAll-PRO is doing that for you. It's a tiny little recorder that continuously time and date stamps recordings. You can download it at http://www.sagebrush.com Furthermore it has a Vox (voice-activation). That means that you don't have to strangle with setting the times of the receiver and once again that of the recorder. No RecAll records only when there is audio available at the line-in and stops when there is no audio. You can activate settings to start a new file every time when there is audio available again and file names can have a date prefix if you want. There's also the non-pro version but I recommend the pro. Both can be tested during 15 real use days (not calendar days). DX-radar looks like a very interesting tool, but it is a pity that it isn't compatible with my AOR AR7030. Ergo is also a real nice program but I advise you also to take a look at RxWings at http://home.wxs.nl/~jarkest/home.html It's Freeware and works with the AR7030 from AOR, the NRD-535(D) from JRC and the RX320 from Ten Tec! Ergo looks nicer but this program doesn't need correct frequency tuning for displaying. What's also nice is that you can tune the receiver while the PC tracks what station you are tuned to (The 'snapping' range can be modified). And let's hope that there will be a new MW-ILG in the near future as mentioned on Bernd Friedewalds's site. There is also a possibility to do a spectrum scan. This is probably worthless compared to the DX-Radar but the nice thing about RxWings is that the source code is open. So if you have programming skills it might be possible to 'convert' the spectrum scanner into a DX-Radar. For the rest, I thank you very much for this very interesting article on HCDX. Although I am using a laptop too next to my AOR, I have learned a lot about it. Next month I will be for the first time on a real DX-pedition in Fjerristlev (Denmark). I hope that conditions will rise and that I will be able to make a lot of good catches. 73, ---------------- Guido Schotmans - Antwerp, BELGIUM ------------------- RX: AOR AR 7030 - ANT: Wellbrook ALA 1530 outdoor active broadband loop Narrow FM Homepage http://go.to/narrowfm or http://dxing.hypermart.net ----------------------------------------------------------------------- ---[Start Commercial]--------------------- World Radio TV Handbook 2003 will be out soon. Order it now! http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/095358643X/hardcoredxcom ---[End Commercial]----------------------- ________________________________________ Hard-Core-DX mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www2.hard-core-dx.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx http://www.hard-core-dx.com/ _______________________________________________ THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License published by Michael Stutz at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt