Interesting STANAG-4285 transmission heard on 14000 KHz/USB and sent me by my friend GrandBleu from radiofrecuencias.es (Figure 1)
Fig. 1 - STANAG-4285 segments |
The 35 sec segments seem a modified S-4285 waveform since they begin with a block, that I here refer to as "header", and which is not referenced in the standard. The header has a duration of 116ms and is modulated using PSK2, as you may see in Figure 2.
Fig. 2 - PSK2 modulation detected in the initial "header" |
I used the SA phase detector and its relative bitmap in order to "browse" the signal and to better indagate the header. Looking at Figure 3 you may see a 13.333ms repeated pattern: well, 13.333ms @ 2400 symbols/sec makes a duration of 32 symbols (31,999) or 32 bits, since the header is PSK2 modulated (ie 1 bit = 1 symbol).
Fig. 3 - 32-bits repeated pattern in the header of the heard S-4285 waveform |
Consequently, I tried a PSK2 demodulation of the headers of some segments and after their differential decodings I obtained bitstreams which exhibit a well-defined structure consisting of initial and final "01"s sequences and characterized by a 32 bits sequence which is six times repeated immediately before of the final "01"s sequence and that exactly matches the pattern seen in the bitmap of Figure 3.
[10100001001111001111100011011110]
Fig. 4 - differential PSK2 decoding of a header |
The same 32-bit sequence was found in all the headers I demodulated (just 3 of them are shown in Figure 5), even if it didn't appear in the same order I wrote it: one must consider the characteristcs of the SA's generic (!) PSK-n demodulator .
Fig. 5 |
And let's get to the data blocks. To identify which sub-mode is used I chose from time to time the various options made available by a S-4285 decoder (k500) until I found the option that had 100% confidence and 0 errors: that is, 300bps and zero length interleaving. As a test, I used a second S-4285 decoder and always got the same result even if the resulting bitstreams didn't seem structured. Although these decoders indicated 100% confidence and 0 errors (corrections), curiously they did not detect/show the 32-bit words used for signaling the Start Of Message (SOM = 0x03873C3C MSB first) and End Of Message (EOM = 0x4B65A5B2 MSB first): could it be sign of a "fake" decoding? Finally, I used a third, more sophisticated, decoder configuring it in "auto-detect" mode: this third test also confirmed the 300bps/N sub-mode but with the reporting of corrections and a resulting bitstream with a 40-bit/5-byte period that has - in my opinion - a bit more sense.
The 40-bit length period is due to the presence of a sequence that is four times repeated near the end of all the decoded segments (Figure 6). Note that the same considerations made above apply to the sequence in question.
[1101101000100111101001111111000111100101]
At first glance it could be an EOM/EOT signal but the bitstream should come from a higher level protocol (datalink layer) i.e. after the removal of the S-4285 overhead and therefore should have a different function.
Fig. 6 - a data blocks bitstream |
That datalink protocol (if any ) is at present unknown to me.
Back to the initial headers, I remembered having seen something similar a while back while I was analyzing Harris' serial PSK8 waveforms [1] and by demodulating their initial headers I found a correspondence between those headers and the one analyzed here: that is, a sequence of 32 bits of length which is repeated six times between sequences of initial and final "01"s (Figs. 7,8)
Fig.7 |
Fig.8 |
From the above it seems that L3Harris (and perhaps not only them) have added the "autobaud" function to some waveforms such as STANAG-4285, obviously it is only my hypothesis which has no direct or indirect confirmation: your comments and other submissions will be as usual welcome and may assist in resolving this matter.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WD9gBFzbGnmMdBFITTOYFf5AOTWCij4y/view?usp=sharing
(1) the “autobaud” facility enables the receiver modem to automatically adapt the transmitter’s data rate and interleaver configuration without operator intervention
[1] http://i56578-swl.blogspot.com/2021/11/harris-psk8-2400-bd-digital-voice.htm
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