RTLSDR-Airband
gqrx
RTLSDR-Airband | gqrx | |
---|---|---|
21 | 18 | |
708 | 2,877 | |
- | 1.3% | |
7.0 | 8.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 11 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
RTLSDR-Airband
-
Listen to HD radio with a $30 RTL SDR dongle
You're all correct, except there are not that many $30 SDRs out there. Also, most SDRs have clearly superior capabilities to the RTL-SDR, though those capabilities often are not required.
BTW, for simple AM/FM demodulation I cannot recommend enough the handy https://github.com/charlie-foxtrot/RTLSDR-Airband. For example most of LiveATC.net feeds run on it.
-
Automatic recording app for Linux?
rtlsdr_airband, but again requires knowing the frequencies of interest ahead of time.
-
I'm back into it 2 years later
You may want to give RTLSDR-Airband a look. Its designed for analog AM/NFM voice traffic and can be configured to operate on any frequency your rtlsdr dongle can handle. It can also be configured to output to an mp3 file, in addition to other things like IceCast.
-
Raspberry Pi RTL_Airband
There’s an example service config file in the repo: https://github.com/charlie-foxtrot/RTLSDR-Airband/blob/main/init.d/rtl_airband.service
-
Streaming audio from local UDP source
I have been streaming the output from RTLSDR-Airband (https://github.com/charlie-foxtrot/RTLSDR-Airband) with icecast2 for several (5?) Years now, and I have some time and inclination to look at reducing latency (currently best is 10s, but often much more.)
-
Airband receiver
https://github.com/szpajder/RTLSDR-Airband Might be what you are looking for, although I don't know the performance requirements. It has a scan mode detailed here: https://github.com/szpajder/RTLSDR-Airband/wiki/Configuring-channels-for-scan-mode
- What software would I need to use to listen to airband? (mac or linux)
- Help\ideas for base station, some guidance needed
- timestampSDR
- Looking for (working) RF-Monitor
gqrx
-
Listen to HD radio with a $30 RTL SDR dongle
There's an issue open for this: https://github.com/gqrx-sdr/gqrx/issues/1104
I could really use some help from a software build expert. Gqrx and all its dependencies would need to be built in CI with Apple silicon support, and I don't know how to do that.
-
WebSDR – internet connected Software-Defined Radios
If you don't need the web interface and your usual desktop SDR software supports rtl-sdr tcp mode, you can easily set up a small board that calls rtl-sdr with the appropriate parameters so that it will wait for a remote connection from the above software, not unlike what happens with WebSDR, but you would be using your usual desktop SDR application which would be native and much more snappy than a web browser. Here's an example using gqrx.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74jDcHuDCmE
https://gqrx.dk/
-
SDR and software for Mac
GQRX works pretty well for me. There is also CubicSDR and SDRAngel afaik - you might just want to play around with them and see which you are most comfortable with.
-
Just got an RTL-SDR, what kind of fun stuff can I do with it?
SSB/CW (also (W/N)FM/AM/Raw) using GQRX
-
what kind of device could I listen to 900mhz radiowave transmissions? I want them very specific like 943.147mhz
For most signals (including analog AM and FM modes) you can use a laptop with an RTL-SDR USB dongle (fairly cheap), or another SDR, and a reasonably tuned antenna. Various RTL-SDR models can tune from around 500 kHz up to 1.75 GHz with 3 mhz of bandwdith, and works with free software like SDR# for Windows and GQRX for Linux. It works with lots of other software, too, for ham modes, digital modes, etc.
- GQRX on older Mac?
-
Crossfire low range?? RX Loss & RSSI DBM?? Beeps??
Some of the Crossfire modules have a rudimentary spectrum analyzer function on them that might help you identify if there are other devices operating in the 900MHz band around that area, but I'm not sure the nano TX is one of them. I have a couple RTL-SDR dongles or equivalent I'd use with GQRX as a cheap spectrum analyzer if possible.
-
macOS SDR
Good old GQRX for me https://gqrx.dk/
-
Looking for a good AM/FM Radio sollution
There is loads of software that will work such as SDR++, GQRX, CubicSDR, and SDRangel just to name a few. For HD radio reception, there is nrsc5. Nrsc5 only works with an rtl-sdr, so you will need one if you want to receive HD radio.
- Help\ideas for base station, some guidance needed
What are some alternatives?
openwebrx - Open source, multi-user SDR receiver software with a web interface
sdrangel - SDR Rx/Tx software for Airspy, Airspy HF+, BladeRF, HackRF, LimeSDR, PlutoSDR, RTL-SDR, SDRplay RSP1 and FunCube
rtl_433 - Program to decode radio transmissions from devices on the ISM bands (and other frequencies)
dumphfdl - Multichannel HFDL decoder
rtl-sdr - library for turning a RTL2832 based DVB dongle into a Software DefinedReceiver; mirror from https://gitea.osmocom.org/sdr/rtl-sdr
SDRPlusPlus - Cross-Platform SDR Software
AIS-catcher - AIS receiver for RTL SDR dongles, Airspy R2, Airspy Mini, Airspy HF+, HackRF, SDRplay and SoapySDR
CubicSDR - Cross-Platform Software-Defined Radio Application
wmbusmeters - Read the wired or wireless mbus protocol to acquire utility meter readings.