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What is "allied mode" with regards to PSK31?

Amateur Radio Asked by Xunie on September 27, 2021

Wikipedia says:

Colloquial usage of the term ‘PSK31’ in amateur radio usually implies
the use of the most commonly used variant of PSK31: binary phase shift
keying (BPSK). BPSK uses no error control, but an allied mode, QPSK31
quadrature phase shift keying, uses four phases instead of two, to
provide a degree of forward error correction. It is simple to switch
from BPSK to QPSK if difficulties arise during a contact.

What is an "allied mode"? What are they talking about?

2 Answers

That was just added by someone who's primary language probably isn't English. What they meant to say is "QPSK31, a mode that is related to PSK31, uses..."

Other than that, the claim "it uses more constellation points, that's a means error-correction coding", is plain wrong.

The error coding used is this, just one sentence later:

A sliding window of five bits is used to select one of the four possible phase shifts, providing a means of error correction by spreading each bit of data across adjacent bits.

I'd word this completely differently. Maybe like this.

Error correction is used: a rate-1/2 channel code is implemented with a constraint length of 5 bits (i.e. the past 5 input bits are used to determine the next output two bits). Two bits of the resulting bitstream are then grouped into one QPSK symbol. Using QPSK instead of BPSK allows the doubled data rate to be sent through exactly the same bandwidth without reducing robustness.

The whole paragraph is confusingly worded, to put it mildly. I've reworded it to be clearer (and not make incorrect claims, like that you need 20 2-bit symbols to decode a constraint length 5 convolutional code – that's plain wrong).

Correct answer by Marcus Müller on September 27, 2021

In this case, "allied mode" can be replace with "associated mode" or "kindred mode." The phrase indicates that there is a relationship between the two modes, BPSK and QPSK, without specifying the particulars of the relationship. "Allied mode" is not meant to convey or identify any specific technical content.

Answered by Brian K1LI on September 27, 2021

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