D-STAR

 

 

Click here to listen to live D-STAR on the AK4EG Gateway via USTREAM.
D-STAR is an acronym for Digital Smart Technologies for Amateur Radio and is a set of protocols for transmitting, receiving and distributing Amateur Radio digital voice and data.  It was begun in 1999 with funding from the Japanese government and administered by the Japan Amateur Radio League, being first published in 2001.
D-STAR can do digital voice (“DV”) and high speed digital data (“DD”) on the 23CM band, but it can also do digital voice and low speed digital data on the 70CM and 2M bands (“D-STAR lite”).  A D-STAR signal will provide better received signal quality than an analog signal of the same strength provided the D-STAR signal is above the minimum required threshold level (the so-called “digital cliff”).
D-STAR Digital voice is processed with the proprietary AMBE (Advanced Multi-Band Excitation) coding, which is the scheme used for several commercial satellite telephone systems and some XM Satellite Radio channels.  Not a few hams are critical of its use of this expensive, closed-source software.
The receive quality of the digital voice varies.  It has a total absence of white noise and is mostly natural sounding.  Sometimes there are artifacts, such as a hollow sort of sound to the voice, or something resembling an attempt by the person speaking to swallow a tennis ball when some of the packets get corrupted.
The ability of D-STAR to send and receive both voice and data communications, along with its interesting “gateway” internet connectivity properties (see below), outweigh its few faults and make it attractive to many hams.
When you’re working through the D-STAR gateway, your callsign is forwarded to a central server, which keeps track of the gateway repeater that received your signal.  If someone wants to contact you and has your callsign programmed into their URCALL field, the central server will route the transmission through the gateway repeater where you were last heard.  Generally, the central server is only a few minutes behind real time, so if you key into each gateway-equipped D-STAR repeater while travelling and show your home gateway repeater as RPT2, your home gateway repeater will keep track of your location and automatically route calls intended for you!
Does the gateway feature of D-STAR make it a valuable emergency resource?  Perhaps, but some agencies are leery of relying on what is essentially an internet connection during a crisis.  Of course, if the D-STAR network is up and running and able to pass traffic “when all else fails,” who’s going to complain?  Another thing to remember is that we are still on the leading edge of implementing D-STAR, and we won’t know its full potential until we experiment with it!

OCRA members known to be D-STAR capable:

K3VSA K4PHS KD4CPM KD4YJV KG4CFX KI4MXP KJ4EWX N2JFP W1REP W3AHL W4DAP

D-STAR Hardware (ICOM Radios):

At the present time, only ICOM is manufacturing D-STAR radio equipment.  Kenwood markets (in Japan only) a Kenwood-branded D-STAR radio, but it is actually built by ICOM.  These ICOM radios are either D-STAR upgradeable with the addition of the appropriate D-STAR Module, or D-STAR ready:

ID-1  23CM  mobile  (ready)
ID-800H  2M/70CM  mobile  (ready)
ID-880H  2M/70CM mobile  (ready)
IC-2200H  2M  mobile  (with UT-118)
IC-2820H  2M/70CM  mobile  (with UT-123)
IC-80AD  6M/2M/70CM handheld  (ready)
IC-91A  2M/70CM  handheld  (with UT-121)
IC-91AD  2M/70CM  handheld  (ready)
IC-92AD  2M/70CM  handheld  (ready)
IC-V82  2M  handheld  (with UT-118)
IC-U82  70CM  handheld  (with UT-118)

D-STAR Hardware (DV Dongle):

Besides radios, the D-STAR network can be accessed directly through a computer by using a device called the DV Dongle, which works through a USB port on either a PC or a Mac.

D-STAR repeaters currently operating or soon to be operating in North Carolina:

Burlington AK4EG G (gateway)
AK4EG A 1284.4000MHz
AK4EG B 444.8875MHz
AK4EG C 145.3200MHz
Charlotte KA4YMY C 145.1400MHz
KI4WXS G (gateway)
KI4WXS A 1284.0000MHz
KI4WXS B 443.8623MHz
KI4WXS C 145.1400MHz (soon)
Chapel Hill KR4RDU G (gateway)
KR4RDU B 442.5375MHz
Greensboro W4GSO B 442.8625MHz
Raleigh K4ITL B 442.2125MHz
K4ITL C 145.2600MHz (soon)

Tentative simplex frequencies for D-STAR in North Carolina: 145.600MHz (caution: may interfere with packet operations) 145.670MHz (caution: may interfere with packet operations) 441.0000MHz (national digital simplex calling frequency) 441.5000MHz

Programming your D-STAR Radio:Note: You would do well to purchase the programming software and cabling to allow you to use a PC for radio setup.  Several of these D-STAR radios use hard to read segmented displays and require you to jump through many button pressings and can therefore be tedious to do manually.

There are four parameters in which you’ll need to enter the information that will enable your D-STAR radio to operate:

  1. MYCALL –This stores your own callsign, which is sent whenever you transmit in D-STAR mode.
  2. URCALL –This stores the callsign of the station with which you wish to communicate.
  3. RPT1 –This stores the callsign of your local D-STAR repeater.
  4. RPT2 –Some D-STAR repeaters have “gateway” connectivity, which allow you to transmit and receive through a distant gateway equipped D-STAR repeater.  RPT2 holds the callsign of the distant D-STAR gateway repeater, if used.

More information about MYCALL:

  • D-STAR radios have provisions to store multiple MYCALLs, enabling your D-STAR radio to be set up to be operated by other operaters in your multi-ham family, or to store club or contest callsigns if appropriate.
  • On the V82/U82, the MYCALL parameter is a field named “MYC” and is eight characters in length.  The U81/U82 has provisions for six MYCALL entries, labelled “MYC.1″ through “MYC.6″ and you can select which MYCALL entry you wish to make active.
  • Your D-STAR radio will have the provision of displaying at power-on whichever MYCALL is currently active, which will help you make sure you’re not using an incorrect callsign identifier when you operate.  On the U81/U82, this handy feature is named “MYD” and can be enabled (“MYD.ON”) or disabled (“MYD.OF”).
  • Another parameter called CALL SIGN NOTE is a four character field that many people use to transmit the model radio they are using, such as “IC-82″ for the ICOM IC-V82 or U82.  On the V82/U82, this field is named “MYS”.  There are six such entries, “MYS.1″ through “MYS.6″, which are associated and transmitted along with “MYC.1″ through “MYC.6″.
  • Because the MYCALL information is sent upon keying your radio, “kerchunking” a D-STAR repeater without voice identification is permitted.  The repeater will know who you are!

More information about URCALL:

  • D-STAR has a feature called “callsign squelch” or “DSQL”, which is the ability to keep the receiver squelched to stations other than the station whose callsign is programmed into the URCALL field.  In addition to whatever stations you choose to program into your radio, you will also want to program one of your URCALL fields with the data “CQCQCQ” to allow you to transmit a general call or to hear everyone participating in roundtable and net operations.
  • You can override callsign squelch on the other person’s receiver by enabling either the “Break-In” function (“BRK.ON” to enable and “BRK.OF” to disable on the V82/U82) or the “EMR” function on your D-STAR transmitter (“EMR.ON” to enable and “EMR.OF” to disable on the V82/U82).  Using the EMR function will also automatically raise the audio gain on the distant end’s receiver up to Level 12 even if the gain had been set to minimum.  Obviously, either of these functions should be used with discretion.
  • On the V82/U82, the URCALL parameter is named “YUC” and has room for eight characters.  The V82/U82 has provisions for six URCALL entries, named “YUC.1″ through “YUC.6″ and you can select which URCALL entry you wish to make active.
  • You’ll be well advised to store “CQCQCQ” into YUC.1 since you will be using it a lot!

More information about RPT.1:

  • On the V82/U82, the RPT.1 parameter is named “R1C” and has room for eight characters.  The V82/U82 has provisions for six RPT.1 entries, named “R1C.1″ through “R1C.6″ and you can select which RPT.1 entry you wish to make active.
  • Because repeaters with the same callsign may be operating on different bands, an additional letter should be programmed into the eighth position of each “R1.C” entry.  This eighth letter is called the “port letter” or sometimes just “the switch” and follows this convention:
    • “A” for 1.2GHZ (this is the default if no port letter is entered)
    • “B” for 70CM
    • “C” for 2M
    • “E” if you want the repeater to echo your transmission back to you for test purposes
    • “G” if you’re using the gateway function on a repeater that is gateway equipped

More information about RPT.2:

  • On the V82/U82, the RPT.2 parameter is named “R2C” and has room for eight characters.  The V82/U82 has provisions for six RPT.2 entries, named “R2C.1″ through “R2C.6″ and you can select which RPT.2 entry you wish to make active.
  • Because repeaters with the same callsign may be operating on different bands, an additional letter should be programmed into the eighth position of each “R2.C” entry.  This eighth letter is called the “port letter” or sometimes just “the switch” and follows this convention:
    • “A” for 1.2GHZ (this is the default if no port letter is entered)
    • “B” for 70CM
    • “C” for 2M
  • The selection of this port letter is important.  You’ll want to make sure that at the distant end your signal is sent on the band you’re contact is monitoring.
  • The RPT.2 parameter must be enabled.  On the V82/U82, that function is named “RPT2″ and can be enabled (“RPT2.ON”) or disabled (“RPT2.OF”).

Here are several tutorials that show the setup process step-by-step:

Here is an interactive website that determines the data for each field for you:

D-STAR Software:

  • CHIRP –a software tool for cloning memories of ICOM D-STAR radios
  • d*Chat –a simple D-STAR kybd to kybd chat app for Windows
  • D-PRS Interface –a bridge program between APRS and D-STAR
  • D-RATS –a kybd to kybd app that also does file transfers, etc.
  • D-StarLet –a web based text messaging application
  • D-STAR TV –SSTV for D-STAR

Links to more D-STAR Information:

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