poltergeisty said:And is c4fm a stair stepped waveform?
rfmobile said:poltergeisty said:And is c4fm a stair stepped waveform?
No ... C4FM is not the same as 4 level FSK. Both C4FM and CQPSK are shaped by a raised cosine filter - the difference being that the CQPSK signal is being shaped in both [carrier] phase and amplitude to further limit bandwidth needed while the C4FM signal is shaped only in phase.
If you look at both signals coming from a narrow FM discriminator, they look almost the same - the peaks on the C4FM signal will be taller than the CQPSK signal
-rick
poltergeisty said:Do you think becuse of the complexities used for cqpsk that signal integrity would be harder to come by compared to c4fm? I would think that this would be an issuse in areas where you would only get 1 bar of signal for example and decoding is not 100 percent where is a c4fm signal at 1 bar dose come in.
This makes sense. Thanks. I kinda of thought that would be the case. This must be why some times a qpsk signal is harder to hear with a scanner. They did not design the scanner right.rfmobile said:poltergeisty said:Do you think becuse of the complexities used for cqpsk that signal integrity would be harder to come by compared to c4fm? I would think that this would be an issuse in areas where you would only get 1 bar of signal for example and decoding is not 100 percent where is a c4fm signal at 1 bar dose come in.
Think of it this way ...
A hand-held radio can put out 5 watts into a signal spread out over 12.5 khz or it can put the same energy into a 6.25 khz spread.
An FM discriminator will see the 6.25 khz signal as weaker because it only measures phase or deviation from a center frequency. A properly designed receiver built for CQPSK - an in-phase/quadrature phase design for example - would be able to capture phase and amplitude information.
So ... if you're using a FM discriminator to capture a CQPSK signal then yes you will be sacrificing range or signal quality for simplicity.
-rick
poltergeisty said:I can't wait for a trunker program for p25 9600 baud. I live in Colorado and it is all pretty much 9600 baud out here.
Thanks, I don't currently have a pro 96 any more. Did not like it but if I don't see anything for the os 535 or 296d uniden then I will probley have to go buy it again just for that purpose. :wink:dsnymj said:poltergeisty said:I can't wait for a trunker program for p25 9600 baud. I live in Colorado and it is all pretty much 9600 baud out here.
Check out Pro96Com (on the software downloads page under Trunked Radio Decoders). It decodes the 9600 CC data stream from a Pro-96.