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AR15.COM
1/4/2015 1:07:51 AM EDT
1/6/2015 9:09:28 PM EDT
[#1]
Ok this may sound stupid, but what exactly is going on there?





1/6/2015 9:16:39 PM EDT
[#2]
Beyond my realm of comprehension!

Duh...
1/6/2015 9:18:42 PM EDT
[#3]
Not stupid at all.

I am using an RTL-SDR. It is a $20 (or less) USB stick that was made to watch over the air TV on. Some guys were able to write some drivers that allow them to be a general wide band software defined radio. That means any modulation type, AM, FM, SSB, CW.You can also dynamically adjust your filters and add/remove gain.

The software I am using is GQRX on linux. It gives you a display of what is happening 1MHz above and 1MHz below. That means I can see to all the repeater outputs from 146-148 at the same time.  I can tune in to any of them and hear the audio just like it was a handy talkie. Then you can bump up to 1090MHz and decode position information from aircraft.

What I am doing is using gqrx-scan to control GQRX over a TCP connection. It scans until it finds a signal. The terminal window is a program called DSD that decodes digital radio transmissions. Stuff like p25 and NXDN

So for $20 I have a scanner that can scan and decode digital radio. It isn't anywhere as fast as a store bought scanner but it is $20 vs $400.
1/6/2015 9:20:01 PM EDT
[#4]
That is about 100 kinds of awesome!



Do you have a link of where you bought yours from?




I actually have a Linux box sitting and doing nothing right now.
1/6/2015 9:28:47 PM EDT
[#5]
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QPTEY5M?psc=1

but wait there is more!

Hook it up to this and now you can look/listen to HF

but wait there is more!

If you really like it you can step up the price a little ($200) and get an Airspy. It has a 10MHz bandwidth. That is say 140-150 so easily all of 2m at once. Or bottom of 40m HF to above 20m HF (when used with upconverter listed above.

(I have one on pre order that should be here soon. Review sure to follow.)

but wait there is more!

Step it up to $400 when you are good and hooked and get a BladeRF. It covers 300MHz-3.8GHz (wifi and cellular) but wait for it.... 28MHz of bandwidth! They make a daughter board for it that also gives you on board HF. Oh and it can transmit
1/6/2015 9:31:45 PM EDT
[#6]

Quote History
Quoted:


http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QPTEY5M?psc=1



but wait there is more!



Hook it up to this and now you can look/listen to HF



but wait there is more!



If you really like it you can step up the price a little ($200) and get an Airspy. It has a 10MHz bandwidth. That is say 140-150 so easily all of 2m at once. Or bottom of 40m HF to above 20m HF (when used with upconverter listed above.



(I have one on pre order that should be here soon. Review sure to follow.)



but wait there is more!



Step it up to $400 when you are good and hooked and get a BladeRF. It covers 300MHz-3.8GHz (wifi and cellular) but wait for it.... 28MHz of bandwidth! They make a daughter board for it that also gives you on board HF. Oh and it can transmit

View Quote




 
1/6/2015 9:40:01 PM EDT
[#7]
Quote History
Quoted:

 
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QPTEY5M?psc=1

but wait there is more!

Hook it up to this and now you can look/listen to HF

but wait there is more!

If you really like it you can step up the price a little ($200) and get an Airspy. It has a 10MHz bandwidth. That is say 140-150 so easily all of 2m at once. Or bottom of 40m HF to above 20m HF (when used with upconverter listed above.

(I have one on pre order that should be here soon. Review sure to follow.)

but wait there is more!

Step it up to $400 when you are good and hooked and get a BladeRF. It covers 300MHz-3.8GHz (wifi and cellular) but wait for it.... 28MHz of bandwidth! They make a daughter board for it that also gives you on board HF. Oh and it can transmit

 



Another option is the HackRF. HackRF has 20MHz to somewhere north of 7GHz, with 20MHz bandwidth.  Here's a comparison between BladeRF, HackRF, and USRP with slightly outdated information on the HackRF

HackRF details below:

HackRF One specs

   half-duplex transceiver
   operating freq: 10 MHz to 6 GHz
   supported sample rates: 2 Msps to 20 Msps (quadrature)
   resolution: 8 bits
   interface: High Speed USB (with USB Micro-B connector)
   power supply: USB bus power
   software-controlled antenna port power (max 50 mA at 3.3 V)
   SMA female antenna connector (50 ohms)
   SMA female clock input and output for synchronization
   convenient buttons for programming
   pin headers for expansion
   portable
   open source
1/6/2015 9:40:12 PM EDT
[#8]
Quote History
Quoted:

 
View Quote View All Quotes
View All Quotes
Quote History
Quoted:
Quoted:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00QPTEY5M?psc=1

but wait there is more!

Hook it up to this and now you can look/listen to HF

but wait there is more!

If you really like it you can step up the price a little ($200) and get an Airspy. It has a 10MHz bandwidth. That is say 140-150 so easily all of 2m at once. Or bottom of 40m HF to above 20m HF (when used with upconverter listed above.

(I have one on pre order that should be here soon. Review sure to follow.)

but wait there is more!

Step it up to $400 when you are good and hooked and get a BladeRF. It covers 300MHz-3.8GHz (wifi and cellular) but wait for it.... 28MHz of bandwidth! They make a daughter board for it that also gives you on board HF. Oh and it can transmit

 


For around $350 you can get a HackRF with up to 20MHz in bandwidth but covers  10MHz - 6GHz

https://greatscottgadgets.com/hackrf/