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Re: Softrock RX Ensemble II - RF gain
Is there a way to attenuate incoming signal or have some kind of RF gainEduardo, You should not need one. The lower bands on an Ensemble should already have attenuation. A Softrock normally handles strong signals well. If you have a strong local station then maybe a filter? Of course an external switched attenuator could be tried. 73 Alan G4ZFQ |
Re: Built RX Handy SDR receiver
Hi Guy,
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Built RX Handy receiver boards for the 80m/40m band group, (4MHz-8MHz), are available on the Fivedash.com website. Multiple receiver boards are in stock for next business day mailing. If you are wanting a less expensive copy, one built on a reclaimed receiver board, I will look into my past projects box to see if I can find another receiver board to reclaim. Regards, Tony, kb9yig On Feb 16, 2022, at 10:01 AM, Guy Mengel N1GMM <guy@...> wrote: |
Re: Softrock RX Ensemble II case / casing / enclosure
Is this plastic? I prefer a metal box, for several reasons.
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73, Zack W9SZ On Wed, Feb 16, 2022 at 12:16 PM N0FZ <n0fz@...> wrote:
There is a 3D printed design at: |
Re: Softrock RX Ensemble II case / casing / enclosure
On Wed, Feb 16, 2022, 9:09 AM Zack Widup <w9sz.zack@...> wrote:
KM5H used to supply a case for the Ensemble II. However, it appears hisSearch for the website on archive.org. There's a good chance you'll at least see photos of it. Mike W0BTU |
Re: Softrock RX Ensemble II case / casing / enclosure
KM5H used to supply a case for the Ensemble II. However, it appears his
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website is gone. I don't know if anyone has a few saved up somewhere or not. I made my own using an aluminum box. I forget the supplier or the part number of the box, but the Ensemble II fit it perfectly. It just involves some work drilling and cutting the holes to allow access for the various ports. I used a nibbling tool to cut the rectangular holes. 73. Zack W9SZ On Wed, Feb 16, 2022 at 8:24 AM Eduardo A de Carvalho <eadc@...> wrote:
New to the group, greetings to all. |
Re: Built RX Handy SDR receiver
I am still actively playing with an designing things with the soft rocks. I would be interested in obtaining one of your new handy receivers Tony!
Guy -- guy (at) eastroad (dot) org -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.. . \|%|/// | ~ ~ | ^( @ @ )^ ---------o000o--_/-o000o--------- N1GMM Have a good day! |
Softrock RX Ensemble II case / casing / enclosure
New to the group, greetings to all.
I now own a softrock rx ensemble 2 and would like to know if anyone here could point me to where to buy casing for the receiver. I would like to keep it inside a proper case. Any suggestions or leads? Thank you in advance. |
Built RX Handy SDR receiver
Good Morning All,
Fivedash has a built SDR receiver offered for sale that is based on the HF RX II receiver. This built receiver board, called the RX Handy, covers a single range such as 4 MHz to 8 MHz for 80m and 40m band coverage. (Other ranges are possible, even 630m.) The RX Handy receiver is a simplified HF RX II receiver circuit design and doesn't require a 12 VDC power supply for operation since all circuits on the RX Handy are powered by the 5 VDC provided in the USB cable plugged into the board. Cables plugged into the RX Handy receiver for normal operation are just the USB plug, the stereo audio output plug and the BNC antenna. The down side of powering the RX Handy from the USB 5 VDC is more center frequency noise, about 3 kHz on each side of the center frequency. The built RX Handy receiver board is a useful HF receiver for casual operation, I typically have on playing every morning as I work on various projects. The various 40m SSB nets make for easy and often interesting listening as I work prior to breakfast. Several who have tried the RX Handy receiver have spoken well of it. This week's project was to take a several year old partially built 6m/2m receiver prototype board, strip off the unused components and build an RD Handy receiver on the board. The old receiver board is the same size as the RX II board and is now playing nicely on 40m. If anyone would be interested in trying an RX Handy receiver, this salvaged receiver is available for $20 post paid to a US customer. Just contact me directly by e-mail. Best regards to all, Tony, kb9yig |
FS: 7th order broadcast bandstop filter
I'm parting with the broadcast band stop filter I made last year.? Photos:
I used this with the Softrock successfully to cut out interference on both LF and HF.? BNC connectors.? Approx 500- 1700 Khz (+/-10%). $60 shipped, PP ok. Thanks.? Please contact off list. |
Re: FS: Ensemble RXII LF
best offer
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On 2/6/22 23:10, JonI via groups.io wrote:
Hi, I have the LF version of the Ensemble RXII for sale for $60 shipped insured CONUS, Paypal ok. Tony built. I have hardly used it. Please contact offlist. Photos: |
ability to "tweak" I & Q signals on various SDR software
A number of SDR softwares that run my Ensemble like Winrad , HDSDR and Rocky you can reverse I & Q signals, etc. But you can't do it on Flex PowerSDR software which also runs my Ensemble.
Am I missing how to alter the I & Q signals with the PowerSDR software? I checked all settings, don't see it. Al |
Re: I & Q signals and SDR software (getting usable sound out of an SDR RX from your PC)
So you have the I & Q signals that are at audio frequencies (about what frequencies are they) . . . going into your PC soundcards.That is for Softrocks, "audio" frequencies up to +/-96KHz depending on the soundcard used as an ADC. But more modern SDRs send data streams maybe representing a spectrum of 30MHz or more. I guess that the SDR software uses programming language to do this,The choice is the writer's. There is no dedicated language. Best of luck:-) I've never got past just a basic outline of what is involved. 73 Alan G4ZFQ |
I & Q signals and SDR software (getting usable sound out of an SDR RX from your PC)
Let's see if I got this correct . . .
So you have the I & Q signals that are at audio frequencies (about what frequencies are they) . . . going into your PC soundcards. Once this gets into your PC via the soundcards . . . it gets changed ( detected ) into "usable" content via the SDR software. I guess that the SDR software uses programming language to do this, does anybody know what programming language? I know alittle about Python, is it a common language or something new & special for this function, acting as a detector? If it is new language, what is it called? Does anybody know of a website that explains this all . . . in depth. Thanks |
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