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szatox
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 25, 2024 2:22 pm    Post subject: Hams, any opinions on hackrf? Reply with quote

I'm mildly interested in radio com, I've been occasionally looking at SDRs on the market and thinking about what I'd like to do about maybe joining the hobby, and I found this one device which _maybe_ would be a good start for me, but I'm not quite convinced and don't want to spend 500$ on a fancy paperweight, which is roughly what I'd need to cough up for the device and antenna.

So, hackrf.
+ wide frequency range, 1MHz - 6GHz.
- 8 bit ADC, I was surprised it can be this small and still work
- rx amp is said to be being easy to fry
- sold as a radio lab test equipment, it's unclear if it's only for legal reasons, or because it overall is a bad receiver with a very wide frequency range as its only redeeming quality

Does anyone here know this thing?
Would it make a scanner suitable for getting my feet wet? Is it sensitive enough to pick up signals form hams, weather broadcasts and so on?
Could I use it to snoop in on emcomms in case of disasters, or something like that? I mean, 500$ is 500$, would be nice if it had a second purpose besides being a new toy...
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 25, 2024 5:19 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am still in the same situation and started with a simple USB SDR and some software. I've started (and still are) with https://www.rtl-sdr.com/rtl-sdr-quick-start-guide/

So far I do not regret it and it is a very good starting point to get the feet wet and get to know if any better products will be necessary. Because a good product alone does not make something good. And yes it works with linux. Haven't tested it with gentoo yet.
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 25, 2024 6:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

That rtl doesn't go anywhere nearly as high into microwave spectrum, but man, I could get it so much cheaper it actually is a tempting suggestion.

What feats have pulled using this dongle?
I know I could google it, but there surely is a world of difference between anti-proffesionals (because money flows in the opposite direction) calling themselves amateurs and newcomers, so I can't really expect to get the results from brag stories born on the internet.
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PostPosted: Mon Nov 25, 2024 10:53 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Question is what exactly do you want to monitor?

Most microwave stuff is encrypted, I doubt many people are using FM or SSB or something that's not digital/QAM/CDM/... on microwave frequencies. Most of that stuff is on cellphones and stuff and that's really short range, encrypted, and illegal to monitor. Yes there's some satellite but most of that's also encrypted.

Emergency comms are trending to P25 and encryption on that is part of the standard.

Or are you just planning to listen on the amateur bands? Or what's left on analog/unencrypted?

I was thinking about getting an rtl-sdr but really haven't found a good use statement for it. Sure I could monitor anything I wanted but not much I really want to hear these days... Only thing is perhaps monitoring my power meter transmitting updates, but not much else. Otherwise I'd probably at most use it for a waterfall display for HF perhaps.

What I do need to do is get CAT control working on my hf rig... put in the UART but it's not working :(
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 1:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

> Question is what exactly do you want to monitor?
I don't know, I'm new to this business. I want to see what's on air.
Amateur bands sound good, meddling with wifi with its 40, 80 and 160 MHz wide channels is definitely out of the question; I'm not willing to pay the price of a rig big enough to capture this traffic (and regular wifi adapters are better suited for that job anyway), but bluetooth should be doable on pretty much any SDR reaching into 2.4 GHz band.
What else is there? Weather broadcasts? LoRa? Even if I'm unable to decode contents of some transmissions, I might still be able to figure out what kind of transmissions they are and maybe say something about the source.
Who knows, maybe hunting anomalies would be interesting. I won't know until I try.
The thing I liked about a radio scanner going up to 6GHz is that it should cover pretty much all frequencies with a practical use; I doubt there's anything going on in higher bands.

What's up with those encrypted emcomms? I saw some info about training camps for hams regarding participation, so it looked like it should be available for civilians too, even if you're required to get a license before you transmit anything. Or is it another case of different countries doing things differently?

Regarding legality, I'd rather focus on technical stuff here, like setting expectations for the signals I might be able to find and receive and what are those devices capable of (if you have any experience with them), since what's legal varies from country to country and needs to be sorted out locally anyway.
Fortunately I don't have to obey USA's legislation. Unfortunately, politicians here are just as good at wasting paper.
Did you know in my country it's technically illegal to own a hammer? It is a weight on a stick, which makes it legally a weapon, and if the weight is wider than the stick, it must be registered and you need a permission to own and use it. I mean, nobody will bother stopping you in a hardware store, but according to the weapons law it is _technically_ illegal.
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 2:54 am    Post subject: Re: Hams, any opinions on hackrf? Reply with quote

szatox wrote:
I'm mildly interested in radio com
First thing, learn how to turn an "old car radio" in to your own "personal, one mile radius" pirate radio station*.
Once you have this down, and understand how to "manually boost the range", "*why you should use a digital tuner", and turn "Szatox FM" into "Szatox FM (Now in Stereo!)", you'll have a solid grounding in the original ideas behind "radio comms" - with this under your belt, all the other questions will answer themselves (or at least furnish you with the knowledge of how to effectively express your end goal), the same as "I've never run Gentoo before, why should I run it on my server?" answers itself after running it for 6 months on your daily driver laptop would do the same.

It's a fascinating yet "relativity easy" topic to understand once you scratch the surface, and there is so much you can do in the $10 range to build your knowledge and understanding before you go buying "new toys", like talking to bored airline pilots and irate air traffic controllers...
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 7:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Here are two ready to use images for raspberry which include a lot of software to tinker with. It should give you an idea what software is available

https://github.com/luigifcruz/pisdr-image
https://github.com/dslotter/HamPi
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 10:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

eccerr0r wrote:

I was thinking about getting an rtl-sdr but really haven't found a good use statement for it. Sure I could monitor anything I wanted but not much I really want to hear these days... Only thing is perhaps monitoring my power meter transmitting updates, but not much else. Otherwise I'd probably at most use it for a waterfall display for HF perhaps.


That's been my experience. I don't have a clear need for an RTL-SDR, either, but it was cheap enough that I bought one anyway, just to see what it can do.

The problem I have with it is that all the signal processing is very CPU-intensive, and my computer overheats. So, other than running some sample applications, I haven't done a lot with it. Works fine under Linux, though, with GNU Radio and others.

BR, Lars.
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 2:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

> First thing, learn how to turn an "old car radio" in to your own "personal, one mile radius" pirate radio station*.
Some boys want to be astronauts, some want to be be astronomers. It is a good path to take, I'm just not quite sure I want start with with jumping all the way to the other side, especially since there is a thing I need completed before I can give my full attention to building something else from scraps.

> Here are two ready to use images for raspberry which include a lot of software to tinker with. It should give you an idea what software is available
Thanks, sounds good, I happen to have a spare Pi4, kinda wanted to turn it into a NAS, but this may actually be a better use for it.

> The problem I have with it is that all the signal processing is very CPU-intensive, and my computer overheats. So, other than running some sample applications, I haven't done a lot with it. Works fine under Linux, though, with GNU Radio and others.

How did it fare in terms of sensitivity and selectivity for example? Or did you just plug it in, saw that it talks to the computer and went back to a more specialized rig?
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 3:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

szatox wrote:

How did it fare in terms of sensitivity and selectivity for example? Or did you just plug it in, saw that it talks to the computer and went back to a more specialized rig?


I didn't test extensively, but it seemed broadly comparable with my Icom. The RTL-SDR (well, probably GNU Radio) actually offers better control over bandwidth than the Icom, if you can take the time to fiddle with it. So there might even be a better control of selectivity. But I live in a radio black-spot -- at the bottom of a valley, and with a stack of interference. It's on my to-do list to take all this equipment to the top of a hill and test it properly, but I never seem to get the time.

To be fair, the RTL-SDR was about one fiftieth the price of my Icom. It blows my mind that it works at all. It certainly works better than the price would suggest.

BR, Lars.
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 4:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The encryption on a lot of police/fire/etc. communication is mainly to prevent interference over making sure data isn't intercepted. Some of this emergency communication that happens over encrypted radio is also simulcast over the internet to prove that they aren't doing it for hiding communication versus ensuring interference free (mainly to prevent tricking first responders of fake emergencies.)

That is not to say amateur bands are still being used for emcom, after all ARES is all that along with the usual public service uses of amateur radio. And in the USA pretty much you're allowed to listen all you want, just don't decrypt if you're not the intended target of the communication (and of course no encryption on amateur bands.)

There are other things that may be interesting. A lot of weather satellites transmit their imagery unencrypted and you can receive the photos directly without waiting for it to show up on local news. But that doesn't show up in the microwave frequencies, it's like slow scan TV where it takes a while to receive a frame. (note that this differs from radar imagery which needs to be computed from on ground transmitters and you probably can't generate an image directly.)

This also differs from the USA NWS broadcasts that happen over FM. These are audio broadcasts and nothing special about them. Similar to the time transmitters like WWV.

The other aspect of (amateur) radio is that the expectation that you'll be transmitting. If all you're doing is listening, that's not really amateur radio... and transmitting is regulated mainly to prevent tragedy of the commons.
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 5:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

> To be fair, the RTL-SDR was about one fiftieth the price of my Icom. It blows my mind that it works at all. It certainly works better than the price would suggest.
Good to know. It is a vague answer, but it does work as a gauge.
Yeah, it blows my mind that an 8 bit adc is enough to pick any signal at all. Makes me wonder at what frequency do they sample that signal to make up for low spacial(?) resolution.

> The other aspect of (amateur) radio is that the expectation that you'll be transmitting. If all you're doing is listening, that's not really amateur radio... and transmitting is regulated mainly to prevent tragedy of the commons.
Yeah, I get that part. I might make it the second stop.
Thanks for details explanation of the other things, that should make a decent starting point
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PostPosted: Tue Nov 26, 2024 8:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I got a RTL-SDR just to dig deeper into LoRa stuff. I have a variety of LoRa transceivers from different manufacturers and of different specs and wanted to see if I could setup a radio to sniff stuff for more debugging.

I was never able to get anything to actually decode the LoRa broadcasts, but I was able to see them.

For ~$30 a RTL SDR is a great toy at the least and is essentially plug and play on Gentoo, you just need to get something like sdrpp.
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 27, 2024 7:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for your comments everyone, in the end I decided to go ahead and get the rtl-sdr dongle with a set of antennas suggested by the store.
While I'm waiting for delivery, what kernel modules should I ensure are available? The official howto seems to only mention stuff that must be blacklisted.

zen_desu, I see there is gr-lora_sdr in guru overlay.
Also, some time ago I stumbled over this experimental lora transmitter implemented completely in software. https://www.cnx-software.com/2024/03/28/lolra-project-transmitting-lora-packet-without-radio-using-ch32v003-esp8266-or-esp32-s2-mcu/ Actually using it is probably not a good idea, but it is an interesting piece (with really bad security implication for basically any processor with access to sensitive data)
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 27, 2024 9:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

szatox wrote:
Thanks for your comments everyone, in the end I decided to go ahead and get the rtl-sdr dongle with a set of antennas suggested by the store.
While I'm waiting for delivery, what kernel modules should I ensure are available? The official howto seems to only mention stuff that must be blacklisted.


In my experience, the driver that comes with dist-kernel (gentoo-kernel) just works.

szatox wrote:
zen_desu, I see there is gr-lora_sdr in guru overlay.
Also, some time ago I stumbled over this experimental lora transmitter implemented completely in software. https://www.cnx-software.com/2024/03/28/lolra-project-transmitting-lora-packet-without-radio-using-ch32v003-esp8266-or-esp32-s2-mcu/ Actually using it is probably not a good idea, but it is an interesting piece (with really bad security implication for basically any processor with access to sensitive data)


I'm the one who put gr-lora_sdr in GURU, but I was never actually able to get it to work lol.
https://github.com/tapparelj/gr-lora_sdr/discussions/106
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 6:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Encryption be the death of amateur radio.

Fortunately LoRa isn't amateur radio. While interesting, it's not really that interesting, it seems end user/end use focused rather than learning about radio. Alas seems the prepper club is interested in LoRa just due to it being turnkey infrastructure-less and you can even run encryption over it unlike amateur radio, which is likewise infrastructure-less.

Kind of makes the amateur hacked wifi-based mesh networks obsolete because LoRa doesn't need an amateur license to use?
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PostPosted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 2:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

> Encryption be the death of amateur radio.
What do you mean by that? I know encryption is not allowed on those bands, but that alone doesn't seem enough to spell doom.

Anyway, I've been playing with that rtl and trying different things for a few days.
Hooked up js8call to sdrpp (via netcat and pw-cat :( because it's audio sink is just smart enough NOT to work with pipewire directly, so had to use network instead), and I see quite some activity in 40m band, but here's something that really puzzles me: js8call picks up fragments of messages which seem completely drowned by the noise to me (SNR up to -28db), but at the same time it misses quite a lot of much stronger signals which look and sound just like js8call messages.
What am I likely to have screwed up? My time is synchronized with ntp; automatic time drift mode kinda helps sometimes, but not as much as I'd expect if it was an issue with a clock.
Also, turned down output volume in sdrpp quite a bit, since js8call's gauge was stuck in the red. I didn't think it's possible to overdrive a virtual wire carrying PCM numbers, but here we are.
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PostPosted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 6:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

If data is encrypted over amateur radio, then commercial use could use the bandwidth and claim plausible deniability that they were using it for amateur use, leaving no more bandwidth left for amateurs to play with and learn - which was the intent of amateur radio.

hmm. it's possible that the waterfall might look like valid data but it actually isn't? Not sure. Have not tried js8call, but used wsjt-x ft8 but using an actual transceiver with limited bandwidth. And yes it's possible to overdrive, if all the samples are 255 or 65535 it would show up as red and very strong signal, but odd harmonics were introduced with the railing and data is lost.
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PostPosted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

> If data is encrypted over amateur radio, then commercial use could use the bandwidth and claim plausible deniability that they were using it for amateur use
And then sue you for talking over them? That would be funny. Can companies even apply for ham licenses?
I don't know power dynamics there, but I always though the licenses exist mostly to keep the amateurs off of the commercial (and military) bands rather than the other way around. Are bands infested with civilians doing random things really that attractive to businesses which need relatively large volumes of data reliably delivered in a timely manner?

> it's possible that the waterfall might look like valid data but it actually isn't
It is possible, but not very likely in context of the bits I did decode: Several fragments of messages with understandable words, with most parts visible on waterfall but not received. A contact from a single sender participating in a ham contest, when there were like 10 other people on the same channel, who also went silent at about the same time. Stuff like that.

> yes it's possible to overdrive, if all the samples are 255 or 65535
Sure, having a bunch of those in a row would certainly indicate the signal got clipped, and I wouldn't be surprised seeing something like that after a conversion to analogue and back to digital, but the noise I have here was just generated in already digital format, and it sounds like proper static with occasional "dripping" of ft8.
Weird. I have a hard time imagining what could go wrong in this particular scenario. Even resampling the stream shouldn't make the ripples that much louder.

BTW, wsjt-x in portage is disabled by date. I tried to launch it, but it wasn't important enough for me to look for a newer version or patch the test out. There are more than enough other things to play with in the meantime
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 4:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

szatox wrote:
> If data is encrypted over amateur radio, then commercial use could use the bandwidth and claim plausible deniability that they were using it for amateur use
And then sue you for talking over them? That would be funny. Can companies even apply for ham licenses?
I don't know power dynamics there, but I always though the licenses exist mostly to keep the amateurs off of the commercial (and military) bands rather than the other way around. Are bands infested with civilians doing random things really that attractive to businesses which need relatively large volumes of data reliably delivered in a timely manner?

Possible, though they can switch frequencies or do CDM or something to avoid interference. Or of course do the loudness war, a business with kilowatt transmitters aren't getting interfered by 100W transceivers. They could just pick a person as a proxy for the company, no need to worry about a company.

The licenses are mainly to ensure people stay on frequency. For amateurs it's is a bit special because we get multiple frequency bands that all behave differently, and yes it's frequencies set aside so that people can learn without interfering with other licenses (as well as somewhat coordinated with the ITU). For all licenses, GROL or not, that they also want to make sure they understand even if you bought equipment, you are still responsible for it. Only exceptions are if your transmitters are fixed frequencies and power limited, then no license is needed (FRS, CB services, etc.)

There are still tons of businesses out there who can't wait to get a piece of spectrum but the FCC licenses cost too much -- except amateur, which was meant for education and hence cheap to allow people to learn radio and not have to pay (much -- amateur licenses used to be free) for it. Especially on these lower frequency amateur bands which are cheaper to make hardware for and have atmospheric propagation versus line of sight.

And yes things like ARES and other emergency services are trying to take advantage of amateur radio because they are doing a service and don't need an expensive FCC license. And even they are getting frustrated with the banning of encryption and competing with USA HIPPA requirements which may be necessary when handling emergencies.

Then also the perennial argument for authentication and proprietary codecs...
Quote:
BTW, wsjt-x in portage is disabled by date. I tried to launch it, but it wasn't important enough for me to look for a newer version or patch the test out. There are more than enough other things to play with in the meantime

Yeah there's a bug filed on it, technically you could just move the window aside and still use it, else just use the 2.6.1 version (or pick up a newer release candidate outside of portage.) The newest RC seems to work with the old ebuild with minimal changes.
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 9:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

mrbassie wrote:
Where do you find the gentoo coc online? I have nodoc in make.conf so I assume it hasn't snuck onto my desks.

Whilst absent-mindedly perusing this thread , it occurred to my brain that somehow my brain somehow filtered out the egregious title some how in my brian. Which mention's hams. Indded "Hams"

There is noway that this could possibly be ok.


Is everything OK over there? Serious question, this is 90% of the way to word salad and you are seemingly making up things to be upset about.

To give you the benefit of the doubt, "Ham Radio" is a common synonym for Amateur Radio.

Back on topic, an rtr-sdr is fine in terms of anyone's first SDR receiver. No tx but there is enough there to get you started listening and gaining familiarity with the tools. It's cheap enough to just get out there and you can buy more expensiveard capable gear when you have a need to.

Basically, unless your current project calls for something fancy I would start with the basics.
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PostPosted: Fri Dec 06, 2024 6:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Splitted few off-topic posts to Dustbin.
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PostPosted: Fri Dec 06, 2024 8:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I figured out that problem with js8call not decoding messages :lol:
I plugged it in alongside with with wsjtx this time, on a particularly active channel, and wsjtx decoded a whole lot of hellos with signal strength in range of -(7-20)db, while js8call got a single fragment at -28db.
They look, the same, they sound the same, but they differ enough they're completely incompatible (even though js8call can send arbitrary text, so it would make sense for it to be one-way compatible)
And the thing when js8call picked up some fragments but missed a bunch of strong signals, must have been 2 people at the same offset,one talking via js8 from far far away (invisible on the waterfall), and the fragments I got simply were lucky to avoid getting jammed by someone relatively close to me flooding the channel, possibly with wsjtx hellos.

> There are still tons of businesses out there who can't wait to get a piece of spectrum but the FCC licenses cost too much
I'm actually curious what kind of businesses (AKA what niche I'm overlooking). I don't think you mean telecoms, and pretty much anyone else would get a better deal just paying for access to the internet.
Well, I can see it working for ARES, but disasters don't strike daily.

> Basically, unless your current project calls for something fancy I would start with the basics.
Yes, that's pretty much what I'm doing here ^^
I see a new face. Hello, Kangie!
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PostPosted: Sat Dec 07, 2024 2:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ah ... true, not sure about the difference between a JS8call and FT8 packet. Yeah I think both are still on 15 second timers. Need to try JS8Call at some point. Recently tried PSK31 and it was tough to get a good packet through, it doesn't have any ... ecc ... or any other detection.

(I really need to figure out why CAT control isn't working on my transceiver. I added the ICs necessary but still seems dead.)

Any business that does on a site job (i.e. can't be wire-tethered) would love to have an FCC license.

This is disturbing but look at Walmart using radios to communicate to their employees that spread over their huge store. They are using a free band service (MURS), they realize they could be interfered but do not want to pay a license to get their own band. Construction sites likewise end up using FRS/GMRS to have the most inexpensive radio service possible. There are more... Some speak in code on FRS/GMRS it seems, I've heard some businesses using this free service to talk about serving their customers. Fortunately FRS (and MURS) it's actually legal to do business because it's so limited range due to power/antenna limits, GMRS is a bit more difficult due to licensing.
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