430mhz data transfer

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Revision as of 01:03, 19 March 2013 by Ameba (Talk | contribs)
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Mesh networks using 2.4 Ghz wifi are becoming popular, but are they really practical for anywhere other than extremely densely populated cities? It would be better to have something more practical which could give access to those in the countryside, as well as on vehicles and boats.

A way to get around the range limitations of 2.4GHz wifi, could be to convert it directly down to a lower frequency, meaning we no longer have the near line-of-sight limitation of typical 802.11. A couple of wireless cards are able to do just this. Simply take 2.4GHz, chop off the 2 and you have 400MHz. There is an amateur band just above 400Mhz - the International Telecommunications Union allocates 430-440MHz for amateurs, and in some countries its wider.

Dl435.jpg

Singapore based Doodle labs produce the DL435-30 transceiver board and Canadian XAGYL Communications produce the XC420M. Both are mini PCI cards which operate at 420-450MHz and can work with linux wifi drivers. The problem is bandwidth; at microwave frequencies the 10MHz bandwith used by 802.11 wifi is not much, but at 400MHz it is a big chunk of the spectrum and likely to interfere with other things - many common radio controlled devices operate on 433MHz. Luckily it is possible to configure 802.11 to squeeze into 5Mhz.

The advantage, compared with packet radio or other data transmission techniques is that the hardware/firmware/software for 802.11 systems is already widely used and needs only modifying slightly. The computer 'sees' the 430MHz wireless card as a normal 2.4GHz wifi device, with the usual channels etc.


Contents

software

The cards 'appear' to be normal 2.4GHz wifi cards, so not many software changes are required. The Ubiquiti Routerstation, comes with OpenWRT Kamikaze. Most of the experiments I have read about use DD-wrt, which has an easy to use web-based interface with a build in option to change the channel with to 10 or 5 MHz (necessary on 430MHz). However, DD-WRT is commercial software, not open source, and the trial version does not allow ssh access. nbd from the OpenWRT project gave quick instructions on how to get the routerstation working with the DL435-30 with a 5MHz channel width, after flashing the firmware from http://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/trunk/ar71xx/

opkg update

 # install the right wireless driver
 opkg install kmod-ath5k

 # re-run wifi device detection
 wifi detect > /etc/config/wireless

 # edit /etc/config/wireless, enable wifi, set
 # 'option chanbw 5'

It is also useful to install the LuCI web user interface.

antennas

A simple 1/4 wave antenna is 14cm long. The links below show some other designs.

amplifiers for 70cm

The UK foundation amateur power limit is 10w. I wonder what amateurs would think about people using these frequencies for this kind data transfer because even at 5Mhz bandwidth, it would hog the band a bit.

These links are to build a considerably more powerful amplifier.

other stuff
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