Chris,
The btech cables indeed do not provide actual PTT signaling, since the
audio connector on the iPhones and iPads do not have such signal
available. VOX keying does work if it can be adjusted to react fast
enough and if a long-enough txdelay setting is used on the iPhone app
side. I have used it myself, and quite a few others have used it as well.
I haven't used the Baofengs though (I don't have any), I've only tried it
with Kenwood D72 & D74 and chinese Puxing radios.
When setting it up, remember that the audio output level from the iPhone
to the radio is controlled by the iPhone volume control buttons. If it
doesn't key, or transmit anything, you may need to increase the volume.
The iPhone will remember a separate volume setting for the earphone
connector and switch to using and adjusting that whenever something is
plugged in there. The
aprs.fi app does not have a separate output level
setting, since it could not bypass the iPhone volume setting - there would
then be two gain controls which would both have to be adjusted to get the
desired sum gain instead of just one control.
The main drawback of VOX is that the transmitter stays on and sends a
carrier for quite some time after the packet data ends. It ties up the
channel and causes interference - many other stations have their squelch
open all the time, and they use a DCD circuit instead to figure when to
transmit. They will happily transmit on top of a carrier, as long as no
data is being sent. The local digipeater may well do this, and digipeat
your freshly-transmitted packet before your transmitter has stopped
keying.
Since the audio output on the connector is stereophonic, one method that
has been suggested before would be to provide the transmitted audio on one
channel, and a tone to trigger PTT on the other channel. A little
electronics circuit (analog VOX circuit without any delays built in) could
then ground the PTT line when a tone is received. A rectifier of the audio
signal, and a transistor, basically.
This does not require any modification to the
aprs.fi software, as it
already transmits the modem audio on both left and right channels. The
simple electronics probably would not care if the PTT signal would be a
single tone of X hertz, or an alternating 1200 bit/s data of two tones.
I think someone had drawn a circuit for this already, but I fail to find
the link to it now.
It'd be neat if someone could produce cables with such a circuit
commercially.
On Fri, 24 Sep 2021, Chris Clement wrote:
> I have a related issue and did some probing of the interface I bought. It is summarized in a graphic
> to preserve the table alignment.ptt3.png
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- Hessu