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<title>DominoEX Modes</title><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="modes.css"></head>
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<h2>DominoEX Modes</h2>
<p>
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<h3>General Description</h3>
<p>
DominoEX is a family of offset incremental multi-frequency shift keyed
modes with low symbol rate. A single carrier of constant amplitude is
stepped between 18 tone frequencies in a constant phase manner. As a
result, no unwanted sidebands are generated, and no special amplifier
linearity requirements are necessary. The tones change according to an
offset algorithm which ensures that no sequential tones are the same or
adjacent in frequency, considerably enhancing the inter-symbol
interference resistance to multi-path and Doppler effects.</p>
<p>
The mode is normally used without Forward Error Correction, as it is
very robust. The default speed (11 baud) was
designed for NVIS conditions (80m at night), and other speeds suit weak
signal LF, and high speed HF use. The use of incremental keying gives
the mode complete immunity to transmitter-receiver frequency offset,
drift and excellent
rejection of propagation induced Doppler.</p>
<h3>Protocol</h3>
<p>
These are unconnected, manually controlled message asynchronous simplex chat modes, normally used
without Forward Error Correction. The FEC option is rarely used. The default calling mode is DominoEX11.</p>
<h3>Coding and Character Set</h3>
<p>
A nibble-based varicode with ASCII-256 user interface is used. Lower case characters are sent faster. An ASCII-128
secondary character set allows a fixed (typically ID) message to be sent whenever the transmitter is idle.
Modulation is nibble-wise symbol synchronous, differential.</p>
<p>
The FEC option uses a binary varicode with modified ASCII-128 user
interface. Lower case characters are sent faster. Modulation uses two
dibit pairs, symbol synchronous, differential.</p>
<p>
The FEC option uses binary convolution to generate two dibits per varicode bit, and halves the corrected data rate
for the same symbol rate. Rate R=1/2, Constraint length K=7, default Interleaver L=4 (16 bits). The default
interleaver is too short for effective burst correction, and performs better with L=10 or more.</p>
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<caption><b>Operating Parameters</b></caption>
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<td><b>Mode</b></td>
<td><b>Symbol Rate</b></td>
<td><b>Typing Speed<sup>1</sup></b></td>
<td><b>Duty Cycle<sup>2</sup></b></td>
<td><b>Bandwidth<sup>3</sup></b></td>
<td><b>ITU Designation<sup>4</sup></b></td></tr>
<tr>
<td>DominoEX4<sup>5</sup></td>
<td>3.90625 baud</td>
<td>29 wpm</td>
<td>100%</td>
<td>173 Hz</td>
<td>173HF1B</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>DominoEX5<sup>5</sup></td>
<td>5.3833 baud</td>
<td>44 wpm</td>
<td>100%</td>
<td>244 Hz</td>
<td>244HF1B</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>DominoEX8<sup>5</sup></td>
<td>7.8125 baud</td>
<td>58 wpm</td>
<td>100%</td>
<td>346 Hz</td>
<td>346HF1B</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>DominoEX11<sup>6</sup></td>
<td>10.766 baud</td>
<td>80 wpm</td>
<td>100%</td>
<td>262 Hz</td>
<td>262HF1B</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>DominoEX16</td>
<td>15.625 baud</td>
<td>115 wpm</td>
<td>100%</td>
<td>355 Hz</td>
<td>355HF1B</td>
</tr><tr>
<td>DominoEX22</td>
<td>21.533 baud</td>
<td>160 wpm</td>
<td>100%</td>
<td>524 Hz</td>
<td>524HF1B</td>

</tr></tbody></table>
</center>
<br><b>Notes:</b>
<p>
1.&nbsp;<font size="-1"><small><big> <big>WPM is based on an average 5 characters per word, plus word space. Values based on sending 100 "paris " words.</big></big></small></font><br>
2. Transmitter average power output relative to a constant carrier of the same PEP value.<br>
3. This is the "Necessary Bandwidth" as defined by the ITU.<br>
4. A summary of the ITU Designation system can be found at <br>
</p><center><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_radio_emissions">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_radio_emissions</a></center><br>
5. Double spaced mode.<br>
6. Default and normal calling mode.<p></p>
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