Working on the GNURADIO gr-rds to try and find out why it appears to be
finicky with what source drives it.
Set up three sources. USRP1, RTL Dongle(NooElec Blue with 0.5ppm TXCO ) and
the HackRF.
Plugged a decent antenna and tuned to R2 (88.3MHz) a nice strong signal.
Whilst the radio work
Might want to look at inspectrum.
The size of the FFT can be varied, it has zoom and an overlay for
determining symbol timing and can handle large files.
No editing features however.
I don't anything about baudline.
The version I'm running requires qt5.
See
https://github.com/miek/inspectru
Greetings,
Recently I downloaded gnuradio for Windows to try as I do not have a
working Linux box at present.
The install went smoothly but upon starting gnuradio the command window
came up and gave the following errors:
Snip>>>
setting gnuradio environment
** (python.exe:10624): WARNING **: T
On 09/24/2016 12:34 PM, liverpudd wrote:
> Working on the GNURADIO gr-rds to try and find out why it appears to be
> finicky with what source drives it.
Unfortunately I don't know anything about RDS.
But as strange as this might sound, it almost appears as if the RDS
module is configured to use
Lyman,
Glad you were able to install GNURadio. The warnings you mentioned are
indeed known but are just warnings.
If you can be more specific about what didn't work, it would be quite
helpful.
GNURadio is more stable on Linux as that is the primary platform for most
users. This Windows install
The git version of inspectrum should do just what you want - you can select
a period of time with the cursors and export it by right-clicking the
spectrogram.
On 24 September 2016 at 20:44, Cinaed Simson
wrote:
> Might want to look at inspectrum.
>
> The size of the FFT can be varied, it has zoo