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			47 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			47 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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|  __       __   ______      _____  ________      __    __ 
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| |  \  _  |  \ /      \    |     \|        \    |  \  |  \
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| | $$ / \ | $$|  $$$$$$\    \$$$$$ \$$$$$$$$    | $$  | $$
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| | $$/  $\| $$| $$___\$$      | $$   | $$ ______ \$$\/  $$
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| | $$  $$$\ $$ \$$    \  __   | $$   | $$|      \ >$$  $$ 
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| | $$ $$\$$\$$ _\$$$$$$\|  \  | $$   | $$ \$$$$$$/  $$$$\ 
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| | $$$$  \$$$$|  \__| $$| $$__| $$   | $$       |  $$ \$$\
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| | $$$    \$$$ \$$    $$ \$$    $$   | $$       | $$  | $$
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|  \$$      \$$  \$$$$$$   \$$$$$$     \$$        \$$   \$$
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|                                                          
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|                                                          
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|                                                          
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| Copyright (C) 2001 - 2014 by Joe Taylor, K1JT.
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| 
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| WSJT-X implements JT9, a new mode  designed especially for the LF, MF,
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| and  HF bands,  as well  as  the popular  mode JT65.  Both modes  were
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| designed for making reliable, confirmed QSOs under extreme weak-signal
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| conditions.  They  use nearly  identical message structure  and source
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| encoding.  JT65 was  designed for  EME (“moonbounce”)  on the  VHF/UHF
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| bands  and   has  also  proved   very  effective  for   worldwide  QRP
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| communication at  HF; in contrast, JT9  is optimized for HF  and lower
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| frequencies. JT9 is  about 2 dB more sensitive than  JT65A while using
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| less  than 10%  of the  bandwidth. World-wide  QSOs are  possible with
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| power levels of a few watts and  compromise antennas. A 2 kHz slice of
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| spectrum is  essentially full when  occupied by ten JT65  signals.  As
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| many as 100 JT9 signals can fit into the same space, without overlap.
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| 
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| WSJT-X offers a “bi-lingual” operating  mode in which you can transmit
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| and   receive  JT65   and   JT9  signals,   switching  between   modes
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| automatically as  needed.  Displayed  bandwidth can be  as large  as 5
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| kHz. If  your receiver  has as  upper-sideband filter  at least  4 kHz
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| wide, you can have all the typical  JT65 and JT9 activity on screen at
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| once, available for  making QSOs with a click of  the mouse. Even with
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| standard SSB-width IF filters, switching between JT65 and JT9 modes is
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| quick and convenient. Be sure to read the online WSJT-X User's Guide.
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| 
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| Project web site:
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| 
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| http://www.physics.princeton.edu/pulsar/K1JT/wsjtx.html
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| 
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| Project mailing  list (shared  with other  applications from  the same
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| team):
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| 
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| https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/wsjtgroup
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| 
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