| The AEA CP-100 | |
| Advanced
Electronic Applications definitely made a well built and attractive modem
in the mid 80's. The filtering is quite narrow making the CP-100 useful during contests. It's amazing how you can find them so cheap at Hamfests these days. |
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| AEA CP-100 View From the Rear | |
| I
could say the same thing I said about the CP-1. With that many connectors,
you should be able to do anything! Frequency-Shift-Keying (FSK) outputs have been added on the back for those who want to use the FSK function of their transceiver. |
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| AEA CP-100 Internal View | |
| This
unit came with the RS-232 option installed at the factory. The area in the upper left corner with the missing pair of fuses and empty six pin IC sockets are for the RTTY loop option. |
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| Home Brew RS-232 Board | |
| A
friend of mine has a CP-100 and did not want to fool with sound card programs.
I offered to install RS-232 capability so that he could use it with a PC.
This gave me a chance to see what it took to upgrade a CP-100. It sure was
easy. Later on, when I started making web pages, I borrowed his CP-100 to get pictures of the work I did on the RS-232 back then for my own web pages. |
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