DIGITAC voting unit
Posted: Thu Nov 26, 2009 1:25 am
I have an 8 channel digitac voter which is also fitted with one TX card as it was formally used in a voting, rebroadcast station (trunk)
I wish to use it as a receiver only voting system where no signal RSSI encoding is used. Ie I wish to vote best signal from signal to noise measurement using none Motorola radio sets.
The simple question is, will the Digitac do this when re-configured in software ?
I have a personality programming manual for the unit, plus an installation manual.. When I power up the unit, after self test I get fail lights on each RX channel. I presume this is because a signal expected at the rx port is missing ? note I have not changed the personality settings from the original system.
If I apply audio to each RX channel (1Khz at -10dBm), the fail light remains on and no voting takes place. If I force the channel to vote by use of the toggle switch, then I get audio out on CH3 O/p 1Khz -10dBm.
The reason for the simple question above is to save lots of time programming and trying to get the unit to do something it is not designed to do.
Thanks for any help
Joe. U.K.
I wish to use it as a receiver only voting system where no signal RSSI encoding is used. Ie I wish to vote best signal from signal to noise measurement using none Motorola radio sets.
The simple question is, will the Digitac do this when re-configured in software ?
I have a personality programming manual for the unit, plus an installation manual.. When I power up the unit, after self test I get fail lights on each RX channel. I presume this is because a signal expected at the rx port is missing ? note I have not changed the personality settings from the original system.
If I apply audio to each RX channel (1Khz at -10dBm), the fail light remains on and no voting takes place. If I force the channel to vote by use of the toggle switch, then I get audio out on CH3 O/p 1Khz -10dBm.
The reason for the simple question above is to save lots of time programming and trying to get the unit to do something it is not designed to do.
Thanks for any help
Joe. U.K.