Recently I have been using my K3 and MixW. During TX I notice that my TX freq will jump up (my guess) abt 10hz. the receiving station then TXes at that new Freq when I go to RX. I miss part re-adjusting to the new freq.
I have the TX locked on MixW and the sampleing rate is 12000 on the audio. I am using the navigator interface and have had no problems until now and Firmware upgrades to latest beta. I have not re-installed an earlier firmward version. I the TX shifts up the 10hz+- at infrequent times and when I go back to TX it goes to the original TX freq. At some point on most TX's it will go up again and return again... Any suggestions??? Craig WØLV |
W?LV wrote:
> Recently I have been using my K3 and MixW. During TX I notice that my TX > freq will jump up (my guess) abt 10hz. the receiving station then TXes at > that new Freq when I go to RX. I miss part re-adjusting to the new freq. > > I have the TX locked on MixW and the sampleing rate is 12000 on the audio. > I am using the navigator interface and have had no problems until now and > Firmware upgrades to latest beta. I have not re-installed an earlier > firmward version. > > I the TX shifts up the 10hz+- at infrequent times and when I go back to TX > it goes to the original TX freq. At some point on most TX's it will go up > again and return again... > > Any suggestions??? Most likely your sound card's record and playback time bases are not quite equal - this appears to be a common problem with sound card device drivers. MixW, like most sound card digital mode software, has a configuration option that lets you correct for this difference. It's called the "Clock adjustment" in the Sound device settings dialog. There are two separate clock adjustments, for TX and RX, and by adjusting them separately you can bring the two clocks into sync with each other to remove the TX/RX offset. When you installed MixW, it should also have installed a "Sound card sample rate checker" program (CheckSR.exe) in your MixW program folder. If you start this program up and let it run for long enough to let the readings settle down (maybe an hour or so?), it will tell you what the two Clock adjustment parameters should be for the chosen sound card and sample rate. My guess is that they will turn out to be slightly different, and that this difference in clock rates has caused your transmit and receive audio frequencies to be slightly different, which is why you observe a shift between RX and TX. CheckSR tells you what adjustment figures (in ppm) to enter into both the TX and RX boxes, and with a bit of luck after you do this you won't see the frequency shift any more. For non-MixW users, try using Google to find CheckSR.exe. 73, Rich VE3KI ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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