docs: rename FAQ to Troubleshooting

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Mike Walters
2025-03-25 10:46:47 +00:00
parent a7d9d853ff
commit 1c691c4a56
3 changed files with 9 additions and 15 deletions

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Getting Help
============
Before asking for help with HackRF, check to see if your question is answered in this documentation, listed in the :ref:`FAQ <faq>`, or addressed in the `HackRF GitHub repository issues <https://github.com/greatscottgadgets/hackrf/issues>`__.
Before asking for help with HackRF, check to see if your question is answered in this documentation, listed in the :ref:`Troubleshooting <troubleshooting>` page, or addressed in the `HackRF GitHub repository issues <https://github.com/greatscottgadgets/hackrf/issues>`__.
For assistance with HackRF general use or development, please look at the `issues on the GitHub project <https://github.com/greatscottgadgets/hackrf/issues>`__. This is the preferred place to ask questions so that others may locate the answer to your question in the future.

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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ Welcome to HackRF's documentation!
:caption: User Documentation
getting_help
faq
troubleshooting
synchronization_checklist
hackrf_projects_mentions

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.. _faq:
.. _troubleshooting:
================================================
FAQ
Troubleshooting
================================================
.. _bigspike:
What is the big spike in the center of my received spectrum?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There is a big spike in the center of the received spectrum
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you see a large spike in the center of your FFT display regardless of the frequenecy you are tuned to, you are seeing a DC offset (or component or bias). The term "DC" comes from "Direct Current" in electronics. It is the unchanging aspect of a signal as opposed to the "alternating" part of the signal (AC) that changes over time. Take, for example, the signal represented by the digital sequence:
@ -23,16 +23,10 @@ There was a bug in the HackRF firmware (through release 2013.06.1) that made the
A high DC offset is also one of a few symptoms that can be caused by a software version mismatch. A common problem is that people run an old version of gr-osmosdr with newer firmware.
Solution
--------
----
How do I deal with the big spike in the middle of my spectrum?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Start by reading :ref:`our FAQ Response on the DC Spike <bigspike>`. After that, there are a few options:
There are a few options:
#. Ignore it. For many applications it isn't a problem. You'll learn to ignore it.