Thank you for the video! I have two SAGE 1822s and I use a Python Script that posts all logs to a Discrod server I run. Not as technichnical as what you guys do, but I enjoy seeing what the pros do. Even though I am into EAS as a hobby I still monitor my local primary station and several NWR stations. Since it is just for a hobby, I relay RWTs from the NWS and my LP :)
Can you show us your log template? I need to update ours as it doesn't have enough information. I would also like to setup that Sage reporting so this can me automated.
Why do you log reflected power? If it gets too high I'd imagine it could cause damage but what would too much reflected power do to the quality of the signal being broadcast?
@@BroadcastBlueprint Most stations don’t rebroadcast RWTs. We just log them. However it’s important to check that we also receive a RWT, so that we know our EAS decoders, and their monitors, are working.
Thank you for the video! I have two SAGE 1822s and I use a Python Script that posts all logs to a Discrod server I run. Not as technichnical as what you guys do, but I enjoy seeing what the pros do. Even though I am into EAS as a hobby I still monitor my local primary station and several NWR stations. Since it is just for a hobby, I relay RWTs from the NWS and my LP :)
Awesome work! A lot of people skip over documenting this stuff...... good work!
Can you show us your log template? I need to update ours as it doesn't have enough information. I would also like to setup that Sage reporting so this can me automated.
Why do you log reflected power? If it gets too high I'd imagine it could cause damage but what would too much reflected power do to the quality of the signal being broadcast?
So you need to recive a RWT and send the same RWT or just send one of your own?
@@BroadcastBlueprint Most stations don’t rebroadcast RWTs. We just log them. However it’s important to check that we also receive a RWT, so that we know our EAS decoders, and their monitors, are working.