Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes
covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
There's a nice web site at http://www.hffax.de/ on this subject.
West Marine also has a SSB receive only unit for sale that might save you a penny or two over a transmitter setup. "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
Yes the lakes are covered. from Halifax N.S. I don't have their web
address but a search through canadian weather services should find it. T zachary alan schramm wrote: I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
If you just want to receive weatherfax and not talk to anyone you don't need
a "marine ssb" radio as commonly discussed here. You just need a good shortwave receiver with upper and lower sideband reception. You will save more than a few pennies over buying a "marine ssb". I can't recommend any specific make for this application but you would probably be fine with any Icom or Yaesu receiver that has digital readout and USB/LSB. Maybe try a ham radio newsgroup for recommendations on a good general coverage receiver. Tuning accuracy and stability would also be considerations. "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 17:24:13 GMT, zachary alan schramm
wrote: I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm Zac, As is apparent from my signature block below, I'm a bit of a radio fanatic when it comes to home use. However, for my Hunter 310 I bought an Icom R-75 receiver to feed my laptop for HF-Fax, Halifax (CFH) RTTY weather broadcasts and NAVTEX broadcasts. The receiver works well with either its AC power brick on AC shorepower, or directly from a 12v accessory socket. Best of all, it's a pretty good approximation to my mulit-$k rackmount receivers for US$450 (from Ham Radio Outlet). Another possibility you might consider (as I did) is the somewhat dated (but still very good) Yaesu FRG-100 (at the same price). As you probably know, the best freeware fax decoder software is WxSat, but I find the little $35 software combo SeaTTY to be a very good buy for decoding HF-Fax, RTTY and NAVTEX messages in a simple and convenient package. (I also have the Hoka Code300-32 suite of profesional decoders for my digital intercept hobby, but that's over-complicated extravagence for cruising weather broadcats.) Good listening, Al ================================================= Location: 42N39, 71W09 (Near Boston, MA) HF Antennas: 65ft TFD, 45ft T2FD, 28ft vertical, 65ft doublet HF Receivers: Ten-Tec RX340, RX320, Harris R2368, Cubic R3030A Decoders: Code300-32, Universal M-8000, PK-232MBX/DSP ================================================= |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
The Grundig Yachtboy used to be well regarded for fax reception. In
the Bahamas last winter we traveled with several boats that had them. No good. Very poor sensitivity. DOug s/v Callista "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 21:39:23 GMT, Albert P. Belle Isle
wrote: Zac, As is apparent from my signature block below, I'm a bit of a radio fanatic when it comes to home use. However, for my Hunter 310 I bought an Icom R-75 receiver to feed my laptop for HF-Fax, Halifax (CFH) RTTY weather broadcasts and NAVTEX broadcasts. The receiver works well with either its AC power brick on AC shorepower, or directly from a 12v accessory socket. Best of all, it's a pretty good approximation to my mulit-$k rackmount receivers for US$450 (from Ham Radio Outlet). Another possibility you might consider (as I did) is the somewhat dated (but still very good) Yaesu FRG-100 (at the same price). Zac, I forgot to mention another receiver option, the Ten-Tec RX320. It's a better receiver than either the Icom or Yaesu, using digital signal processing for its IF filtering and demodulation functions. It also runs on 12vdc, either from an included power brick or boat power, and only costs $300. However, it is a "black-box" computer-controlled receiver, that would require you to use additional (free) software to control it. The advantage of the R75 is that I can listen to broadcast programming (or voice weather broadcasts) without powering-up the laptop. Good listening, Al ================================================= Location: 42N39, 71W09 (Near Boston, MA) HF Antennas: 65ft TFD, 45ft T2FD, 28ft vertical, 65ft doublet HF Receivers: Ten-Tec RX340, RX320, Harris R2368, Cubic R3030A Decoders: Code300-32, Universal M-8000, PK-232MBX/DSP ================================================= |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
The YB 400 on a long wire will get a usable fax out of New Orleans out
as far as the Mona Passage if your Karma is right and you are very delicate with the tuning. Radio Shack used to sell the dual 120VAC/12VDC DX-394 for under $200 that was a really good SSB receiver for the money. I used it on several deliveries for fax reception. Unfortunately it was to good for Radio Shack so it was discontinued. Now they sell for close to new prices on ebay. Doug Dotson wrote: The Grundig Yachtboy used to be well regarded for fax reception. In the Bahamas last winter we traveled with several boats that had them. No good. Very poor sensitivity. DOug s/v Callista "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
Glenn Ashmore wrote:
Thanks for all the responses, I am looking into both the ten-tec and the dx-394. I'll see what I can find The YB 400 on a long wire will get a usable fax out of New Orleans out as far as the Mona Passage if your Karma is right and you are very delicate with the tuning. Radio Shack used to sell the dual 120VAC/12VDC DX-394 for under $200 that was a really good SSB receiver for the money. I used it on several deliveries for fax reception. Unfortunately it was to good for Radio Shack so it was discontinued. Now they sell for close to new prices on ebay. Doug Dotson wrote: The Grundig Yachtboy used to be well regarded for fax reception. In the Bahamas last winter we traveled with several boats that had them. No good. Very poor sensitivity. DOug s/v Callista "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
SSB Weatherfax Receiver
The Sony 7600G digital receiver covers all the short wave bands you will
need from 0.5 to 30MHz, with upper and lower sideband included for the weather fax reception. It also receives the regular AM and FM stations for news, sports, and weather info. This radio also operates on internal AA batteries, or external dc with a Radio Shack adaptor from 12volts to the 6 volts required for the Sony. Compact like a pocket book, it won't take up much space and is stable enough to stay on channel 24 hours a day. Use the included two foot telescopic antenna, or attach a wire to one of your stays or mast for dramatically more signal strength. Disconnect when in the presence of lightning storms. Al "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... Glenn Ashmore wrote: Thanks for all the responses, I am looking into both the ten-tec and the dx-394. I'll see what I can find The YB 400 on a long wire will get a usable fax out of New Orleans out as far as the Mona Passage if your Karma is right and you are very delicate with the tuning. Radio Shack used to sell the dual 120VAC/12VDC DX-394 for under $200 that was a really good SSB receiver for the money. I used it on several deliveries for fax reception. Unfortunately it was to good for Radio Shack so it was discontinued. Now they sell for close to new prices on ebay. Doug Dotson wrote: The Grundig Yachtboy used to be well regarded for fax reception. In the Bahamas last winter we traveled with several boats that had them. No good. Very poor sensitivity. DOug s/v Callista "zachary alan schramm" wrote in message ... I am interested in receiving weather fax charts, are the great lakes covered. I found software that will demodulate the signal without extra equipment so I was looking into a ssb radio. What kind would I need? I want to get the cheapest receiver I can but one that would produce a good signal for good charts. Let me know if anyone has any experience with this. -Zac Schramm -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Morad Antennas was weatherfax ANTENNA | Electronics | |||
weatherfax | Electronics | |||
gps receiver for JRC 1000 radar | Electronics |