home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Just Call Me Internet
/
Just Call Me Internet.iso
/
archives
/
com
/
radio
/
wefaxrec.arc
/
WEFAXINS.TXT
< prev
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-01-12
|
5KB
|
102 lines
WEFAX ON THE ATARI
instructions
This program enables the user to display and save pictures
received from a radio and a Kantronics TNC.
To use the TNC has to be connected to the radio and the Atari
computer in the manner given in the instructions. The RS232
cable needs the receive and transmit data lines connect as well
as the clear to send and ready to send and earth. The atari
computer and the TNC should be set to the same baud rate of 4800.
This is done by using a standard packet program or a terminal
emulator on the atari and set the baud rate on the TNC to 4800
with the command "ABAUD 4800" followed by "RESET". This puts the
TNC to 4800 baud. The computer is then put to 4800 baud, no
parity, 8 bits, one stop bit and the rts/cts hardware handshaking
should be enabled. Software (xon/xoff) should be disabled.
The Wefax program (called FACPROC.PRG) is run and the user can
run through a series of choices with alert boxes. The first
choice is made by the computer as it checkes the RAM size, if
there is less then 300K the program will exit, also it will exit
if the display is not high definition monochrome. The full
version requires 2MB but the program will detect the amount of
memory and will run a smaller image size for smaller machines.
The large version which needs 2MB uses all the lines output from
the WEFAX station, the small version uses 1 in 2 lines and a
smaller sampling rate, giving a smaller image. This does not
substantially reduce the quality of the printed output.
When the choice "TNC ready" is displayed the choice "YES" should
be followed be turning the TNC on.
There follows a series of self explanatory choices and when the
picture is complete then "F9 to save or abort" is displayed.
When you have clicked on "OK" then the function keys are enabled.
F2 inverses black to white, F5 makes a mirror inversion, F9
enables the user to save the image or exit. The left and right
arrow keys rotate the image across the screen so that the image
moves off to the left or right and reappears on the other end of
the picture. F10 rotates the image through a right angle
clockwise and F8 rotates the image anticlockwise through one
right angle.
If the begining of an image is missed then F1 will force a start
and similarly F3 will force a stop. F6 will abort the receive
process and give a choice of waiting for the synch signal or
aborting.
The mouse will move the window to another part of the picture
and when the option to "Save" is selected after pressing F9 there
is a choice of a snapshot of the picture, the area selected by
the mouse, the whole image or a degas save of the display.
Otherwise a GEM paint compatable .IMG file is produced. This IMG
file is not compressed and can take up to 650K approx (for the
large option) but the usual size of WEFAX images is about 180K or
less. The DEGAS file is always the same at 32K.
The .IMG file can be loaded into "HYPERPAINT" or "TIMEWORKS.DTP"
and other packages that can accept GEM.IMG files.
The save routine has been improved and takes only about 2
second to save the largest file with a hard disk but longer on a
floppy. Loading an image is quite lengthy and can take several
seconds, similarly, the rotate instruction can take about 1
minute. The other commands take less time, but there is a
noticable delay while nothing appears to happen. Please make
sure the mouse is away from the edge of the screen when any
option is selected as its proximity to the edge may cause the
instruction to be ignored.
There is also an auto-save option and up to 99 whole frame images
can be saved in succession automatically. A file selector box
appears and you choose the file name, the file extension is then
given automatically as ".001, .002 ... .099" whatever is written.
Stations transmitting WEFAX can be found on 132.7KHz (Offenbach)
4780.3 KHz, 7878.3 KHz, (all USB), and several others. A VLF
converter is useful for the LF stations. (Approximate
frequencies).
Note:- do not enter the WEFAX mode on the TNC as the program will
do this automatically.
Note:- In the larger machines, there is a choice between "small"
and "large" this refers to the width of the received image. The
narrow image is the 960 pixels, the wide image is 1280 pixels in
width. When the image is loaded into "Timeworks.DTP" the image
can be made in the correct proportion by selecting the "preserve
aspect ratio" option in timeworks as the image is saved in the
correct aspect ratio in both cases. The large version has a total
image size of 2280 by 2280 pixels so although this is not all
used by WEFAX signals, it is available to display and manipulate
large GEM.IMG files such as produced by a scanner. The extra
height is used by WEFAX to load all the scan lines in the "large"
option. If you are using 1MB the "large" option disallows
"Rotate" but both are available with 2MB and above. "Rotate" is
not available for machines with less than 300KB free.
Chris Strevens, G4ZHT (1993).