rpitx
hassio-addons
rpitx | hassio-addons | |
---|---|---|
35 | 3 | |
3,828 | 98 | |
- | - | |
5.7 | 0.0 | |
about 2 months ago | about 3 years ago | |
C | Shell | |
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.
rpitx
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Flipper Zero: Multi-Tool Device for Geeks
As someone with a HackRF PortaPack knockoff I got from ebay, I would agree that SDRs are better and cheaper than ever before. However, I think the average person will struggle with using a HackRF for more complex projects. I've used URH before, and while useful, it can be intimidating for beginners.
Also, while I like the RTL-SDR (and the price tag!), you can't transmit with it. While this isn't a deal breaker to everyone, if you'd like to clone a garage door remote, for example, you need to be able to transmit. While you could use something like a raspberry pi and rpix [0], but I think it is more work than it's worth for many. Also, multiple RTL-SDRs are required for higher bandwidth applications like ASTC TV or trunked radios.
With the flipper, I think the main draw for most is the point-click-done nature. Include the Android/iOS app and it makes it easy to configure on the go without a computer. The expandability is one of the main feature that will increase adoption over time compared to the HackRF+PortaPack which, from what I saw in the past, lacked longer-term support and regular updates and new features.
[0] https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx
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Rust SDR Amateur Radio Network Interface
HackRF One is an option. There are a number of others. Legality varies by country/frequency/power level.
Can also make a Raspberry Pi act as a transmitter (https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx), which could hit the zwave frequency but not the zigbee one. (Also, make sure to put a low pass filter on it.)
- FlipperZero: Month Battery Life with Firmware Update
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Looking for Low Voltage (5V) High Bandwidth (144MHz-420MHz) Amp (3-5 watts)
The warning at https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx#hardware suggests a bandpass filter will be needed but has no additional info. https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx/issues/40 looked promising but is closed.
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I can stream anything on a radio frequency
On a similar path, you might look at: rpitx
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Embedded Systems Weekly #128
RF transmitter for Raspberry Pi With this project you can turn your Raspberry Pi into an RF transmitter with only a filter to avoid interferences.
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Turn Raspberry Pi’s GPIO into an FM Transmitter
RPITX is the spiritual successor of your project!
https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx
And it does work with nearly every RPi.
And unlike only doing FM (97MHz-108MHz), it can emit from an IQ datastream from 10KHz to 1.5GHz.
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GNURadio for Pi?
Hey everyone, I've recently discovered that the Raspberry Pi can act as a radio tranceiver, and am hoping to use it for security research. While projects such as rpitx act as a great tech demo, they don't offer me the modularity/parametrization I was hoping for. Ideally the end state for this would be a cheaper/less effective HackRF.
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How easy is it to make a pulse generator and simple spectrum analyser using arduino or raspbery pi? Which one would be easier to do?
The RPITX project supposedly can generate signals up to 1.5GHz with an unmodified Pi, though, which is interesting... a true spectrum analyzer needs a receiver end, though.
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Je možno imeti svoj radio?
če si vešč z linuxom (no z GNU-linuxom da ne razjezim folka) pa najdeš en raspberry pi, ti lahk to pomaga https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx
hassio-addons
- 433MHz sensor receiver for RPi/HA
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433mhz adventure with rtl_sdr
I run an sdr radio as well and it's a great addition given the very low cost of 433mhz devices. I think I tried and failed to get that docker working but I did get the addon working and it's been very stable. Mine receives data from a bunch of temp/humidity sensors, and I also get many signals from neighbors too. The ridiculously long range of the 433mhz sensors is a nice break from the hit or miss zigbee stuff, which is often the same or higher cost per sensor/button.
- temperature/humidity sensor suggestions
What are some alternatives?
rpidatv - Digital Television Transmitter on Raspberry Pi
librpitx - Radio frequency transmitter library - Engine of rpitx
fl2k-examples - Example flowgraphs for osmo-fl2k
rtl_fl2k_433 - rtl_fl2k_433 - a generic data receiver and transmitter
hassio-addons - :heavy_plus_sign: Docker add-ons for Home Assistant [Moved to: https://github.com/home-assistant/addons]
carl9170fw - CARL9170 Firmware Source Repository
gnuradio - GNU Radio – the Free and Open Software Radio Ecosystem
mlat-server - Mode S multilateration server
rtl_433 - Program to decode radio transmissions from devices on the ISM bands (and other frequencies)
The Lounge - 💬 Modern, responsive, cross-platform, self-hosted web IRC client
FT8CN - Run FT8 on Android