, February 28, 2006 8:47 PM
To: FlexRadio@flex-radio.biz
Subject: [Flexradio] Question About VOX and Other Stuff
Hi Eric,
The AOR ARD-9000 digital voice box includes a built-in voice memory to
allow a person
to start talking without missing the first syllable after the Sync
tone
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jim Lux
Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2006 10:46 PM
To: Bob McGwier N4HY; Mark Ericksen
Cc: FlexRadio@flex-radio.biz
Subject: Re: [Flexradio] Question About VOX and Other Stuff
At 10:14 AM 2/28/2006, Bob McGwier
Hello everyone, I am a soon to be SDR-1000 user (it's on order). I have been
following the threads on this forum with great interest and have even been
reading a C# book when time permits (and I'm going to need a lot of time).
There has been some discussion lately about latency when using VOX.
It can be implemented in hardware and it should be along with the proper
keyer and sidetone where they both belong. We should be taking the CW
sidetone and doing demod/remod.
Thank you for being gentle with out ineptitude.
Bob
N4HY
Mark Ericksen wrote:
Hello everyone, I am a soon to
, February 28, 2006 10:58 AM
To: FlexRadio@flex-radio.biz
Subject: [Flexradio] Question About VOX and Other Stuff
Hello everyone, I am a soon to be SDR-1000 user (it's on order). I
have
been following the threads on this forum with great interest and have
even
been reading a C# book when time
Just to throw in another incompatible opinion, I'm not sure there *is*
such a thing as proper VOX. I couldn't get it to work right on my rig in
1966 and I can't get it to work right on any rig today. By that standard
the current SDR1K VOX is doing fine ;-)
73
Frank
AB2KT
Bob McGwier N4HY
Hi Eric,
The AOR ARD-9000 digital voice box includes a built-in voice memory to allow a
person
to start talking without missing the first syllable after the Sync tone is
delivered.
In the ARD-9800 base station model, you had to key up and wait for the sync
tone to stop
before you could
At 10:14 AM 2/28/2006, Bob McGwier N4HY wrote:
It can be implemented in hardware and it should be along with the proper
keyer and sidetone where they both belong.
I respectfully disagree. Isn't the whole point of a software radio with a
minimalist hardware to do as much as possible in
Going back to my 8080 machine code day's and older PC understandings.
Hardware IRQ's Priority is still for the Clock/Timer first, the Keyboard
and others are down the line. There are ways to prioritize a Serial port
higher. Maybe this can be used to input faster a key line. However the
Jim Lux wrote:
At 10:14 AM 2/28/2006, Bob McGwier N4HY wrote:
It can be implemented in hardware and it should be along with the proper
keyer and sidetone where they both belong.
I respectfully disagree. Isn't the whole point of a software radio with a
minimalist hardware to do as
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