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  • Icom Rs-ba1 Software
    카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 28. 22:54
    1. Icom Rs-ba1 Version 2
    2. Icom Rs-ba1 Remote Control Software

    Note: This post applies to RS-BA1 version 1.93. In version 1.94 (introduced on 30 aug 2017) the typos are corrected, the drop-down menu at the top is removed and a number of wizards are added to assist with configuration.The Icom RS-BA1 software is being discussed a lot. Some claim that it is totally crap. Others happily use it. I’ve tested the software with my IC-7300 and concluded that it works fine. Actually it works so much better than I expected.

    Even more, I can remote control my TS-2000 with it as well. So why these diverse opinions? My guess is that there is little knowledge on why Icom is doing things a certain way.

    This is confusing. Also the naming of the various menus (due to translation?) is confusing. Here it helps to understand the software, before configuring it from the documentation or internet sources. With this post I hope to create some more understanding, RS-BA1 deserves it. The RS-BA1 version 1.93 packageRS-BA1 consists of a program called Remote Utility that implements the client-server communication across the network and a program called Remote Control for controlling your rig from your PC.

    The first program is actually very generic and as such can be used with other transceivers as well. The second program is Icom specific, but supports multiple Icom transceiver models.Remote Control is multi-user. So settings in the program are your own settings and these are different from the local settings in the rig.

    Otherwise user A programs memory 1 and this is stored in the rig. Now user B programs memory 1 with some other value.

    Next time when user A uses the rig, memory 1 has changed unexpectedly. The Remote Control program is actually very smart and handles this for you.

    But if you assume that this program is just for controlling and programming the rig from your PC, you run into misunderstanding since you cannot program the rig memories with it. The Remote Utility programFor using a rig remotely, you need to transfer serial port data and stream receive and transmit audio. For this you need a server program that is direct connected to the rig, and a client program from which you control the rig. The client program will create virtual com ports and audio devices so that you can use your application software as if your PC was directly connected to the rig. This is exactly what Remote Utility does. There is no need for a virtual audio cable or virtual com port driver, it’s all included.The confusion starts with Remote Utility executable being both client and server.

    On the Server Setting screens, you configure your rigs and on the Remote Operation screens you select and connect to your rigs. When used as a client, you don’t configure rigs. That’s only done on the server and the client pulls this info from the server. The confusion continues since “Connecting” actually means Connected. It’s just badly translated.

    I must admit, that’s crap Now how do you set up the serverSelecting between server and client settings is done in the drop down box at the top. On the server-side you configure the user accounts that are allowed access (User List) and the rigs that you want to control remotely (Radio List). My Radio List looks like this:Note that you can configure a “rig” with only a cat port and no audio (IC-7300-CAT).

    This is the second (Remote) serial port on the IC-7300 that I wrote about.The third option in the drop down box is Network Setting. Just name your server and leave the rest untouched.That’s all. The server is active when the program is running. There’s no windows service behind it. When you close the program, the server stops.

    The client sideOn the client, select Radio Operation from the drop down box at the top. On the Server List tab, you have to specify the server (Name/IP and first port number) and the user account and password that you configured on the server. Then name the connection and you’re done. You can specify multiple servers! The result should look something like this:Do not enter any info in the Server Setting on the client! The Radio List is propagated when you connect to the server for the first time.

    The client automatically connects to the server the next time when you start the client.The client shows the connection name (DH4FR Remote) and the rigs that you configured on the server. If you connect to multiple servers, the Radio List shows all rigs configured on all connected servers. If a rig is in use, it is listed as busy.

    For each rig you can configure AF (receive audio) and MOD (transmit audio). Note that on the MOD screen, you can disable modulation, so make sure to check these settings. Local operation and monitoringLocal operation means using the client part (Radio Operation) of Remote Utility running as server. In this case, you don’t have to explicitly connect to the server, so no entry under Server List is needed.

    Under Radio Operation, you will see your local rigs in the Radio List. Local operation is a great way to test your setup. When a remote user is connected to a rig, this is shown like this:With the Monitor button you can listen in on this remote user. Select RX audio, TX audio or both.Quality settingsWhen configuring each rig on the server, you define the following audio settings: codec type, bit depth, sample rate and number of channels for the receive audio (for rigs with dual receive like TS-2000). These are upper limits for each rig. On the client, for each rig, you have the same selections.

    Here you can select a lower bit rate when your network connection is slow. Note that these features underline the multi-user, multi-rig, multi-server capabilities of Remote Utility which make it a unique program. Digital modes on the clientThe Remote Utility program creates a Virtual Audio “cable” pair for each rig. The Radio List shows the cables used for each rig. This looks like this in the Device Manager (Win 10):Also virtual COM ports are created as shown in the Radio List.

    These COM ports are not listed explicitly in Device Manager and this might be confusing. The following driver creates these ports:Start some digital mode program and select the virtual COM port and Virtual Audio device as shown in the Radio List and enjoy Using Remote Control with Remote UtilityI’ll write more on this later.But I hope this post so far will help to understand RS-BA1 better.

    Okay,Just got my new IC-7300 and I'm trying to get RS-BA1 setup and I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Here's a rundown of what I've done.basically I followed all the steps from the 43 minute video on Icom's website.Install the Icom USB driver on both my desktop and laptop.Install RS-BA1 on both my desktop and laptop.Connect the 7300 to the desktop by USB.Set USB CI-V to disconnected from Remote CI-V (allows higher than 19,200 baud).Set USB CI-V to 115,200 baud to allow for waterfall.Setup the desktop RS-BA1 Remote Utility as the server.

    It can connect locally to the 7300 successfully.Tested the RS-BA1 Remote Control locally (without using Remote Utility). It works.Tried testing RS-BA1 Remote Control locally by using Remote Utility.

    Doesn't work, unclear if it should.Setup the RS-BA1 Remote Utility on the laptop to connect to the desktop. It does.Tried to connect RS-BA1 Remote Control to Remote Utility on laptop. Doesn't work.Tried it all over with 19,200 baud, with and without USB CI-V linked to Remote. Still doesn't work.Setup port forwarding in my router and signed up for new DynDNS account.Tried it all again through dynamic DNS instead of direct local IP. Still doesn't work.Tried it all again at 115,200 and 19,200 from different laptop using Win7.

    My current laptop uses Win10.Got tired of screwing with it and decided to get on the air and worry about the remote stuff later.The weird part is that it all connects like it should until I get to the point of connecting the Remote Control program to the Remote Utility program on my laptop (or desktop, but not sure if that would ever work). I even get audio from the radio remotely on the laptop like I should.

    Icom Rs-ba1 Version 2

    I just can't control the radio!Any thoughts?Remote Software Settings:Base Software Settings:Radio Settings. Click to expand.Yup, can't use Remote. USB works sometimes. Course, I have a 7300 which isn't supported by any software yet, so have it set to the ID of a 7100 and the baud rate turned down to 19200. It almost works some of the time. I can't wait until WSJT-X and others support the 7300 natively because it's a real bummer when some new DX pops up and you try to call them and 17 seconds in to your transmission it drops out and gives a CAT error, which halts transmit.The really disappointing part is that the free W4MQ software for my old TS-480 worked great and was easy to setup.

    Buy icom rs-ba1 software low discount price

    Icom Rs-ba1 Remote Control Software

    The free Kenwood software that came with the TS-480 worked well, too. The $100 Icom software doesn't work reliably at all and is terrible to setup and poorly translated. I mean come on, for the money you're charging, you can't even have someone at Icom America, who speaks English natively, read over your status messages and button labels and tell you what they should say?

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