INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Amateur Radio Technician Class Element 2 Course Presentation
Advertisements

Signal Encoding Techniques
Don Hinsman – N4VIP Alden Oyer – AG5S Alan Hill – N5BGC Ed James – KA8JMW.
GBRA 5 WEEK TECHNICIAN LICENSE CLASS - WEEK 2 OPERATING MODES Ham’sAreRadioactive!
EE302 Lesson 21: Transmission of Binary Data in Communication Systems
System Fusion by Yaesu Roger Reini, KD8CSE.
DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS.  The modern world is dependent on digital communications.  Radio, television and telephone systems were essentially analog in.
Presented by: Tim Watson, KB1HNZ
D-STAR Digital Smart Technology for Amateur Radio
Modulation                                                                 Digital data can be transmitted via an analog carrier signal by modulating one.
Modulation Modulation => Converts from digital to analog signal.
Digital communications. Hams have developed techniques for transforming 1’s and 0’s into tones into the same frequency range as human voice. So now a.
IT-101 Section 001 Lecture #15 Introduction to Information Technology.
 D-STAR is an open standard for digital voice and data on Amateur Radio  One of several digital modes in Amateur Radio  Developed by Japan Amateur.
D-STAR (Digital Smart Technology for Amateur Radio) —Some Basics George Tucker AARC Monthly Meeting 17 Nov 05.
Icom ID-800 Radio Project Miles Mann WF1F Marex-MG July 2008.
OCTOBER 23-24, 2012 VOCODER TECHNOLOGY
Digital Communications  El Paso Amateur Radio Club  August 22, 2003  Tom, WB5QLR.
PSK31 Digital Mode.
Technician License Course Chapter 5 Operating Station Equipment Lesson Plan Module 11: Transmitters, Receivers and Transceivers.
VHF/UHF Digital Modes and SCHEARTS by Marc C. Tarplee Ph.D. N4UFP ARRL Technical Coordinator SC Section.
Radio Signals Modulation Defined The purpose of radio communications is to transfer information from one point to another. The information to be sent.
Digital Communications. What is Digital Communications Communication using digital data –Digital Data = bits, nibbles, bytes…1’s and 0’s Two Broad Categories.
Technician License Course Chapter 2 Lesson Plan Module 3 – Modulation and Bandwidth.
How to Identify Digital Phone Modes on VHF/UHF David Witkowski, W6DTW Revision 1.2.
Wireless Communications Outline Introduction History System Overview Signals and Propagation Noise and Fading Modulation Multiple Access Design of Cellular.
Amateur Radio Licensure Week 6: Transmission Modes and Radio Components Seth Price, N3MRA New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology March 6, 2016.
Intro to DMR in Amateur Radio Anoka County Radio Club and Emergency Services, Inc. 01-Apr-2016 Shep Shepardson N0NMZ.
Signals Definition of Terms Modes – ways of conveying information. Modulation – the process of impressing or overlaying information to be conveyed onto.
IT-101 Section 001 Lecture #15 Introduction to Information Technology.
Digital Ham Radio An Introduction to DMR and Fusion
Lesson #1 – What is D-Star?
D-STAR InfoCon 2016 at Dayton Hamvention Part 1 – D-STAR Basics
PICAXE Microcontroller
Virginia DX Century Club
D-STAR InfoCon 2015 at Big Spring TX Part 1 – D-STAR Basics
Chapter 6 Digital Modes Bit – fundamental unit of data; 0 or 1
AMATEUR RADIO TRAINING
Chapter 5 Analog Transmission
D-STAR InfoCon 2016 at Dayton Hamvention Part 1 – D-STAR Basics
Slide 1 Portfolio Positioning Site Master VNA Master Spectrum Master BTS/Cell Master LMR Master Value Performance Models88941 Cable & Antenna1.6 / 4 /
Digital Communication
MotoTRBO/Digital Mobile Radio information.
Introduction to Digital Radio & PSK31
Overview Communication is the transfer of information from one place to another. This should be done - as efficiently as possible - with as much fidelity/reliability.
INTRODUCTION TO THE RASPBERRY PI Darrell Davis KT4WX
Bit rate Baud rate Goal in data communication is to increase the bit rate while decreasing the baud rate. Increasing the data rate increases the speed.
DATA TRANSMISSION AND RETRIEVAL
Choosing Your First Radio
Technician License Course Chapter 2
D-Star An Introduction to the JARL standard for Digital Voice and Digital Data on VHF/UHF/Above.
Introduction to Digital Mobile Radio (DMR)
DATA TRANSMISSION AND RETRIEVAL
A New Way to Communicate
Technician Licensing Class
Demonstration of digital systems
D-Star An Introduction to the JARL standard for Digital Voice and Digital Data on VHF/UHF/Above.
D-STAR (Digital Smart Technology for Amateur Radio) —Some Basics
Chapter 10. Digital Signals
Modulation Modulation => Converts from digital to analog signal.
D-Star An Introduction to the JARL standard for Digital Voice and Digital Data on VHF/UHF/Above.
Amateur Extra Q & A Study Pool
Which of the following is a form of amplitude modulation?
Which of the following is a digital communications mode?
Cellular Telephone Networks
Digital Voice Modes for Amateur Radio
Analog Transmission Example 1
Young Ladies Radio League (YLRL)
What is this thing called DMR ?
Physical Layer (2).
Presentation transcript:

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES IN AMATEUR RADIO By Darrell Davis KT4WX ARRL Technical Specialist

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES If you like this program: Fall asleep with your head forward If you dislike this program: Fall asleep with your head backward. All the heads should be forward when I am finished :-) - Ed Hare W1RFI, 2001

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES PROGRAM OUTLINE I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS II. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW IV. DIGITAL VOICE USAGE IN THE WEST CENTRAL FLORIDA SECTION

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS Digital Communications through Amateur Radio has been around since the 1950's. It is called Radio Teletype – RTTY. Originally done with surplus teletype machines. Today digital communications are facilitated with the personal computer.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS With the introduction of the personal computer in the late 1970's communications with personal computers via amateur radio took off.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS Packet Radio came out in 1982 with the first TNC-1 by Tucson Amateur Packet Radio. The TNC used 300 bits per second on HF and 1200 bits per second on FM and above 50 MHz. Other digital modes came into amateur radio in the 1980's as well.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS Amateur radio operators began to send still images by Slow Scan TV (SSTV). By 1990 the following digital communications modes were being used in amateur radio: RTTY, SSTV, ASCII, AMTOR, and Packet Radio.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS With the advent of the IBM PC Compatible computer and the sound card in the late 1990's many new digital modes came into existence. This no longer required an external modem between a computer and the radio.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE? By the early 2000s the following new digital communications modes were in existence: PSK31 and MFSK16. Many more numerous digital communications modes have come into existence as new sound card modes are developed. New modes required only new software!!

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS All these digital modes, with the exception of 50 MHz and above, were restricted by FCC rules to 300 bits per seconds and one bit per symbol or 300 baud. As a result the digital modes and the computers of the 1980's and early 1990's were suitable for keyboard communications, small text files, or small images, not voice transmission.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS THESE DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS MODES WERE NOT SUITABLE FOR DIGITAL VOICE MODES!! The bandwidth, bit rate, and symbol rate were simply inadequate, due to the technology available and FCC rule limitations.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS In the 1960's Narrow Band Frequency Modulation (NBFM) became common place on 50 MHz and above and was proliferated in the 1970's with the introduction of NBFM voice repeaters.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS In the 1960's Narrow Band Frequency Modulation (NBFM) became common place on 50 MHz and above and was proliferated in the 1970's with the introduction of NBFM voice repeaters. When NBFM signals get weak the signal begins to have a fading or “picket fence” sound if mobile.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS In the mid to late 1990's with the introduction of Digital Signal Processors it became possible to create a data stream from an analog signal, human voice or sounds. It was determined that digital voice needed a minimum of 3600-4800 bits per second in order to work properly.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS First amateur radio digital voice communications mode was D-STAR. Developed with government funding by the Japan Amateur Radio League in 1999 and openly published in 2001.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS In 2004, ICOM manufactured the first commercially available digital voice transceiver: ICOM 2200H (2 Meters only) with the optional UT-118 digital module.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS ICOM followed with the first monoband digital voice handhelds, then a dual band handheld, and finally a dual band mobile.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES I. HISTORY OF DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS Moe Wheatley, AE4JY wrote a paper for the 2007 Southeastern VHF Society annual conference describing a prototype homebrew D-Star radio. Project page: http://www.moetronix.com/dstar Paper: http://www.moetronix.com/files/vhfdvxpaper.pdf

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES II. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE? Digital Voice: Human voice or sounds are converted from analog to a digital data stream and then transmitted to a receiving station where the process is reversed.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES II. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE? Analog to Digital Conversion Frequency Modulation of Data Stream Power Amplification Digital Voice Transmitter Simple Block Diagram Digital to Analog Conversion Frequency Demodulation of Data Stream Front End Filtering and Amplification Digital Voice Receiver Simple Block Diagram

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES II. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE? Advantages: No mobile flutter – full quieting. Allows simultaneous transmission of other data: text, GPS coordinates, etc. Disadvantages: Cliff effect – When signal to noise ratio is insufficient, decoding stops. Analog will go further and can be received better in some circumstances.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES II. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE? Terms to Know: Bit Rate – how many bits per second in a transmission Symbol Rate – how many bits per symbol (pieces of information). Baud Rate – roughly how symbols per second. Modulation – method of modulation onto carrier.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES II. WHAT IS DIGITAL VOICE? Terms to Know: FDMA – Frequency Division Multiple Access. TDMA – Time Division Multiple Access. Vocoder – encodes analog to digital and digital to analog.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Digital amateur radio modes of the past sent text only and did not require much bandwidth or fast data rate. Faster data rates would be required to make digital voice a reality. Multiple bits per symbol would be necessary.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW There are five digital voice standards in use in amateur radio at the moment. They are: D-Star P25 NXDN DMR Yaesu System Fusion

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Developed in 1999 and 2000 by Japan Amateur Radio League and published in 2001. There are two modes in D-Star standard: Digital Voice (DV) Digital Data (DD)

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW D-STAR Digital Voice – DV Bandwidth: 12.5 Khz channel. Modulation: 2 Phase Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK). Bit Rate: 4800 bits per second (3600 for voice data) Symbol Rate: 2 bits per symbol. Vocoder: AMBE (DVSI)

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW D-STAR Digital Data – DD (1296 MHz and up) Bandwidth: 150 KHz. Modulation: 2 Phase Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying (GMSK). Bit Rate: 128 kbps. Symbol Rate: 2 bits per symbol. Had the option of doing 10Mbps on 10GHz backbone link – advanced at the time.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW D-STAR D-Star Sound: Equipment Availability: Commercially manufactured equipment available through only mostly Icom and one radio currently by Kenwood as of 2016.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW P25 development was fostered by a committee of the Association of Pubic-Safety Communications Officers (APCO). Phase 1 standard released in 2005 and Phase 2 standard released in 2012-2013.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW APCO Project 25 (P25) Designed in order to facilitate sending extra data (GPS Coordinates, text, etc.) along with a voice data stream to improve public safety communications and standardize communications between pubic-safety entities. Standard is open and published. There are eight standards in the P25 specification.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW APCO Project 25 (P25) Phase 1: 12.5 Khz channel FDMA Continuous 4 Level Frequency Modulation (C4FM), or Compatible Differential Offset Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (CQDPSK). 9600 bits per second 2 bit symbol rate. Vocoder – IMBE (DVSI) Non repeater – simplex only.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW APCO Project 25 (P25) Phase 2: 12.5 Khz channel TDMA (Time Slices) Modulation: Compatible Offset Quadrature Phase Shift Keying (DCQPSK). 12000 bits per second 2 bit symbol rate. Vocoder – AMBE+ (DVSI)

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW FDMA verses TDMA

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW APCO Project 25 (P25) Phase 3 (Trunked): Still under development.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW P25 P25 Sample Sounds: Equipment Availability: Available only currently as new or surplus equipment through commercial manufacturers (Motorola, Uniden, Kenwood, Icom, etc.) but very expensive. Surplus more affordable.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Digital Mobile Radio (DMR) Tier I and Tier II standards were first published in 2005 and the Tier III standards published in 2012. Standards were fostered by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and consists of four standards.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR – Digital Mobile Radio Tier I: Designed for HTs and limited to ½ watt. Tier II (conventional radio): 12.5 Khz channel TDMA (2 Time Slot) 6.25 Khz per time slot equivalent. 9600 bits per second. Continuous 4 Level Frequency Modulation. 4 bits per symbol

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR – Digital Mobile Radio TDMA Slot Timing Diagram

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR – Digital Mobile Radio Tier III (trunked radio): Supports trunked radio system including some TCP/IP capability. Same specifications of modulation and bit rate as Tier II.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR – Digital Mobile Radio Like P25 Phase 2, DMR is TDMA not FDMA. TDMA allows two users to occupy one 12.5 KHz narrowband channel (now the new wideband). It complies with the narrowband 6.25 Khz (2.5 Khz deviation) FCC requirement for Part 90 users as of 1/01/13 by providing two time slices per transmission.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR – Digital Mobile Radio DMR Sample Sound: Equipment Availability: Equipment available through commercial manufacturers but there are inexpensive DMR Radio now available through the Chinese two way radio manufacturers (Hytera, Tytera, Tait, etc.)

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR verses P25 Phase 2: DMR and P25 Phase 2 are not interchangeable. DMR uses four different frequency shifts in its implementation of C4FM. DMR uses different data frames than P25 does. However both standards are open and published.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW DMR – Digital Mobile Radio DMR Sample Sound: Equipment Availability: Equipment available through commercial manufacturers but there are inexpensive DMR Radio now available through the Chinese two way radio manufacturers (Hytera, Tytera, Tait, etc.)

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Standards developed by Yaesu in 2011-2012. This standard is proprietary but the standard has been published.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion 12.5 Khz channel Continuous 4 Level Frequency Modulation (C4FM). 9600 bits per second 4 bit symbol rate. Vocoder – AMBE+ (DVSI)

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion Has Four Modes of Operation: Analog FM Voice-Data simultaneous Mode Voice Full Rate Mode Data Full Rate Mode

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion Analog FM: Straight analog FM Mode

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion Voice/Data simultaneous mode: Runs voice and data concurrent. Each mode takes 6.25 Khz of the channel or ½ of channel.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion Voice Full Rate Mode: Runs voice data on the whole 12.5 Khz channel. Higher quality voice transmission.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion Data Full Rate Mode: Runs digital data on the whole 12.5 Khz channel. All digital data only.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion AMS – Automatic Mode Selection. In this mode the radio listens and switches automatically to mode that was heard within 1-2 seconds

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Yaesu System Fusion Yaesu System Fusion Sample Sound: Equipment Availability: Only Yaesu makes commercially available Yaesu System Fusion radios. Used gear does turn up at good prices.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW SUMMARY OF DIGITAL VOICE MODES Source: “Untangling Digital Voice above 50 MHz” Bob DeMattia, K1IW – QST April 2015 http://www.qsl.net/kb9mwr/projects/dv/yaesu/Untangling%20Digital%20Voice%20Above%2050%20MHz.pdf Type Codec Modulation Sharing Access P25 Phase 1 NXDN D-STAR DMR P25 Phase 2 System Fusion IMBE AMBE+2 AMBE 4-FSK 2-GMSK FDMA TDMA 12-bit NAC 6-bit RAN Call Signs Color Codes

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW NXDN The standard was developedin a join venture by Icom and Kenwood between 2003 and 2005. The Kenwood brand is Nextedge and the Icom brand is IDAS. 12.5 Khz channel, FDMA access, and C4FM Modulation.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW NXDN Has two 6.25 Khz narrowband channels in a 12.5 Khz channel. Standard was publically made available in 2011. Equipment Available: Must purchase commercially made equipment through Icom or Kenwood and prices are still high.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Homebrew and 3rd Party Digital Voice Options Wirelss Holdings LLC: DV4Mini, DV4Home, and DVMobile – Low power USB transceiver stick, home based and mobile multimode digital voice modems.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES III. DIGITAL VOICE MODES OVERVIEW Homebrew and 3rd Party Digital Voice Options MMDVM – Mulit Mode Digital Voice Modem: Takes two commercial radios and turns them into a mulit mode digital voice repeater. Software still in development.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES IV. DIGITAL VOICE USAGE IN THE WEST CENTRAL FLORIDA SECTION D-Star: Used to be widespread. Now only one left in Pasco as of last information. DMR: Predominant in Charlotte and Sarasota Counties. Some in Polk County Yaesu System Fusion: Predominant in Desoto, Manatee, and Pasco Counties. One in Polk County. Coming in Hardee County. APCO Project 25: A few in Pasco, Pinellas, and Polk County. NXDN: NI4CE Repeater System.

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES Questions? Discussion? Thank you for your attention and participation!!

INTRODUCTION TO DIGITAL VOICE MODES CONTACT INFORMATION Darrell Davis KT4WX 6350 Mills Road Fort Meade, FL 33841-9584 (863) 245-9923 Email: kt4wx@arrl.net Website: http://www.kt4wx.org