Compared with the MD-380... different batteries, chargers, and more...
A jack of many hobbies and a master of none - spending lots of time on amateur/ham radio, running, and technology.
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
Monday, August 1, 2016
Emoji Gun Control
Labels:
Apple,
Guns,
iPhone,
Technology
Hamvention to Greene Co Fair and Expo Center
Well, let's make it official - we're moving to the Greene County Fair & Exposition Center - See you in 2017! More detaild to follow!— Dayton Hamvention (@hamvention) August 1, 2016
Labels:
Ham Radio
Makeshift TYT MD-380 Scanner
Detective work with the MD-380...
Ham Radio 2.0: Episode 51 - Unboxing the Alinco DR-735T Mobile Radio
Alinco DR-735T...
NooElec and AmateurRadio.com SDR Giveaway
Head over to AmateurRadio.com to have a chance to win one of fifty SDR receivers given away by NooElec.
Labels:
Ham Radio,
Software Defined Radio
Friday, July 29, 2016
SDR Limits
From the linked article:The Problem with Software Defined Radio https://t.co/adnsZEjh6p— hackaday (@hackaday) July 29, 2016
The key feature of the LimeSDR, and all boards derived from Lime Micro’s tech is the LMS7002M. It’s a Field Programmable RF transceiver with coverage from 100kHz to 3.8GHz, a programmable IF filtering from 600kHz to 80MHz, and — this one is important — on-chip reconfigurable ‘signal processing’ and a fast USB 3.0 interface to a computer.
Labels:
Ham Radio,
Software Defined Radio
APRS: Xastir and Raspberry Pi
WZØW's Xastir on the Raspberry Pi:
"A while back I got interested in APRS. My only 2m radios were a Kenwood TM281A in my car, and a dual band HT. Neither had TNC capabilities built in, though, so the first order of business was to get a TNC that I could use on one or both of these radios. I had seen an article by Jerry Clement, VE6AB, in the May 2015 issue of QST about a bluetooth-capable TNC fromMobilinkd that works well with HT tranceivers and APRSDroid on Android smartphones. I decided to give it a try, and it worked well, as advertised.
Then I started wondering, if I used a Bluetooth USB adapter on a Raspberry Pi, could I use Xastir to set up APRS on my base station. The punchline of the story is yes, I could."
Labels:
APRS,
Ham Radio,
Raspberry Pi
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