How can you enjoy digital signals when it sounds so poor? Its a decent analoge reciever but verry buggy. Definitely not what you expect from the self claimed leaders in digital receivers.
I agree it does sound like CRAP in a bucket with corn.
How can you enjoy digital signals when it sounds so poor? Its a decent analoge reciever but verry buggy. Definitely not what you expect from the self claimed leaders in digital receivers.
I'm using again my MD380 DMR, my kenwood NXDN, my DSD+ .
1115 € for dPMR ...............
CTCSS/DCS is not working on memory channels when loaded with AOR Data editor. Anyone else have this issue? Thanks.
After almost 3 months of waiting, firmware 1810A has finally appeared for the DV10, using the cumbersome I/Q feature where you have to keep removing the SD here are some initial measurements.
With the "new feature" of being able to adjust the XTAL offset (something a user should never have to do) I still can only get my DV10 to within 180Hz of being on frequency.
Radio warmed up, 452.000 MHz AM signal 30% modulated with a 1kHz tone fed into an RSP1A and DV10 at the same time.
The RSP1A reads 20Hz off frequency, excellent.
The DV10 with an XTAL offset of:-
0000 is 1.1kHz off frequency
+5000 is 640Hz off frequency
+9990 (max available) still 180Hz off frequency
There are 1 set of measurements at 1 ambient temperature not across the -10 to +50C operating range.
The attached images show the 3 offsets selected and the resulting frequency error in sdr#
In each image the top is the RSP1A, below the DV10 I/Q recording.
If this is the best they can come up with in 3 months, its clear they cannot fix it with firmware.
I've not been here for some time and haven't read all the posts, but has anyone suggested that AOR might like to fit a hi-stab xtal? I don't mean an ovened one obviously, but xtals come in various grades from the cheap 50ppm types used for clock oscillators to the super stable ones intended for UHF multipliers. I'm sure they could get the drift down to something reasonable if they went for a higher-spec one.