Pulsar FSK441 ユーザーズマニュアル

ページ / 18
Further Reading 
1.  A separate WSJT 4.6 Technical Manual (in preparation) provides technical 
specifications and details on how the WSJT modes work.  The Technical Manual 
will be posted at 
, the WSJT home 
page, when available. 
2.  In the meantime, technical information can be found in the Version 3.0 WSJT User’s 
Guide and Reference Manual, which is still available at 
.
   
3.  The first WSJT mode, FSK441, was described in QST for December 2001, in an 
article starting on p. 36.   
4.  JT44, a predecessor to the JT65 mode, was described in QST for June 2002 in “The 
World Above 50 MHz,” p. 81. 
 
Acknowledgments 
An earlier version of this manual was co-authored with Andy Flowers, K0SM.  I started over for the 
current version, but many remnants of Andy’s hard work remain.   
Bob McGwier, N4HY, goaded me into learning something about error-correcting codes, and Phil 
Karn, KA9Q, helped me to understand some of their subtleties.  Particular thanks are due to Ralf 
Koetter and Alexander Vardy, authors of a research paper entitled “Algebraic Soft-Decision 
Decoding of Reed-Solomon Codes.” This paper introduced me to the powerful decoding algorithm 
now used in the JT65 modes.  Through their company CodeVector technologies, Koetter and Vardy 
granted a license to adapt their computer code, which is protected under United States patent 
6,634,007, for noncommercial purposes within WSJT. 
Many users of WSJT have contributed in important ways to the program’s development. Shelby 
Ennis, W8WN, ran many dozens of schedules with me during the development FSK441 and JT6M, 
and likewise Jack Carlson, N3FZ, for JT65.  I learned that if Shelby and Jack can’t make a program 
crash, most other users won’t be able to, either.  Many other users—far too many to name 
individually—provided extremely helpful criticisms, suggestions, and feedback.  I should 
particularly mention Lance Collister, W7GJ, who has never tired of saying, in effect, “surely you can 
still get us one more dB!” All of these efforts are greatly appreciated. 
 
 
18