Ha, I will give this a try. My current setup: I have a Browni portable TV [0] from the 1960ies in my home office (20 EUR on Ebay 13 years ago, still working perfectly), hooked on a composite to coaxial adapter, hooked on a HDMI to composite adapter, hooked on an old Chromecast. Even the audio works perfectly. But using the build-in antenna of the Browni would be even better.
The standard ham radio cry of "think of the spectrum" applies here. It's great as a demo but please don't intend to use it for anything serious, this is likely outputting harmonics into areas of the RF spectrum that people care about.
1W is a fairly massive amount of power though, a typical small DIY project will output a couple of mW. So unless you very explicitly start amplifying it after your oscillator there most likely will not be too much power radiating out unless you hook it up to another stage or a directed antenna (which gives you a passive way of boosting the radiated power by concentrating the output on a more narrow angle).
Yep, you're right. However, since Walkie-Talkies' power is around that level, I thought it'd be a good example to build upon.
Regardless of the power level, thinking about spectrum and trying not to create harmful interference is important IMHO. I live in a place where listening FM in stereo mode is impossible due to interference and radio transmissions around me. Even Wi-Fi cannot penetrate beyond next room.
We've looked how spectrum looked here with a listen-only SDR. It wasn't pretty. My friends' exact words were "Dude, that's not what I see at home. This is some serious traffic."
Radio waves travel for long.
I remember getting local AM radio tunes 100 km away from the border of my province where in theory the radio is being set for.
Broadcast AM radio stations here use hundreds of kW of output power.
This is a bit bashed GPIO pin on a 3.3V microcontroller that has a max current rating of 12mA per pin. Even if that piece of wire used as an antenna here were capable of loading the pin up to its max output, it'd be something around 0.004W - and in reality it'll likely be an order of magnitude or two lower than that. That's at least 8 orders of magnitude less power, and even allowing for the inverse square radiation power pattern, this this is only gonna be detectable at single digit meters in all likelihood.
This _is_ a bad idea, spectrum noise and interference wise, but it's unlikely to have enough power at either its intended transmit frequency any of its nasty harmonics to make it outside the rooms it's in. You probably might not want to take this to hospital with you, or on that camping trip near the radio telescope, but I wouldn't think twice about firing this up in my home workshop...
I have a raspi zero whose only job is to set its clock frequency to 104.1 MHz and modulate it with Daft Punk’s Daftendirekt every morning for a clock radio that I picked out of the trash.
Well below the 5 mW power limit but it comes through clear in the same room.
Edit: for the first week I was broadcasting over the local NPR station. There were likely people on commutes nearby getting interference from me, so I switched to dead space.
Outputting a TV signal isn’t inherently a problem, surely? Every VCR and 1980s home computer has a circuit that does the same thing. Would only be an issue if you run it through an amp and antenna, rather than just running a wire to a TV, right?
Bitluni and CNLohr are two of my favorite hardware hackers to watch on streams/videos. They both have such creative ideas and intense passion for getting the ideas working no matter how many walls they hit. Lots of fun to follow along even if it’s way beyond my understanding half the time.
Wow this is hacking in the most literal sense: using something in a way it was not designed for. Even avoiding nyquist problems by abusing some mirror effects if I understood that correctly.
I would guess it's VHF channel 3, which is from 60-66MHz, with the NTSC video carrier (Luma) on 61.25MHz, audio on 65.75MHz, and the Chroma carrier some nasty number about 3.58MHz above the Luma carrier.
In my country, VHF TV transmissions started going out in the 60s when colour came in, and were fully turned off in the 80s.
Modern DTV runs over UHF channels (replacing the previous analog transmissions between 2009 and 2012)
PAL generally runs on an 8MHz channel, and encodes colour in an entirely different way (each alternate line is reversed, meaning that small errors cancel out - where in NTSC you had a "Tint" control to adjust to any errors).
Even new systems have them, probably because the radio on the chip is something SDR-ish; also, there is equipment that still transmits analog signal, just not over the air (think CCTV et al.).
So yeah, the receivers are still shipped, just ~nobody tunes into their ranges anymore.
They don’t come with antennas though (and houses don’t have them anymore), so the majority of devices are unable to tune to anything. In my country everything has moved to digital and the spectrum sold for mobile use.
If you have something that generates the signal, and something that receives it, the antenna is just a wire between those two (of course, you better power them off the same source).
New TVs still have analog tv decoding from what I've seen. It's the same frequencies as digital tv, and if they have a composite video input, it's the same process, so not very much extra to support it.
There may only be a few OTA broadcasters left on analog in the US, but I don't know how far the digital transition went in developing markets. I'd bet there's some rural cable systems still running analog as well.
Analog TVs have been indispensable for the marginalised, under-represented children living in remote areas to receive education during this pandemic lockdown.
As the availability of Internet, Devices capable of receiving online courses has been taken for granted, many who are not privileged not only missed education for several months now but also lost communication with their schools.
I've been thinking about inexpensive compute capable device capable of receiving analog TV via SDR and also communication through LoRAWAN[1] to address this. Now I'll also explore ESP8266's ability to receive analog TV signals.
I suggest doing something useful: Tiny emergency transmitter at Marine VHF16. This is voice-only channel, so maybe it should just repeat prerecorded message at every hour. Rescue services can pinpoint the source, so nothing fancy needed. Activating this transmitter would be illegal, but me myself prefer life in prison to death.
47 CFR § 97.403: Safety of life and protection of property.
> No provision of these rules prevents the use by an amateur station of any means of radiocommunication at its disposal to provide essential communication needs in connection with the immediate safety of human life and immediate protection of property when normal communication systems are not available.
I'm sure there must be something that covers it, but I'm not sure it that.
That seems to only apply to amateur stations, which 47 CFR defines as stations in an amateur service. I.e., ham radio stations.
I've got a ham radio license, so it would cover me if I transmitted outside of the ham bands, or exceeded power limits, or used an unauthorized modulation method to try to help save lives and protect property, but for someone without a ham license I think we'd have to look elsewhere for legal cover.
I can't really imagine this having any advantages over a PLB which are fairly inexpensive and already built to be waterproof and impact resistant. PLBs are monitored from orbit by COSPAS-SARSAT and modern versions have active location reporting which nearly guarantees fairly rapid reception and location fix. Satellite monitoring of aviation guard (121.5) has been officially ended by COSPAS-SARSAT and I'm not sure it ever monitored marine radio. Radiolocation of VHF 16 can be done but is going to be substantially more time consuming and less accurate than a COSPAS-SARSAT report - accuracy requires having nearby vessels properly equipped or sending an aircraft.
They are not inexpensive. In Finland you need a Radio Operator Licence and pay some 20€ annually and also you have to pay for reprogramming the special "National ID". And thus this mostly useless device costs 400€: https://www.marnela.com/product/1304-01261
Some 40 years ago I made 2 Mhz emergency Morse transmitter from RCA Cosmac, because I planned to spend a summer on Antarctis. It worked quite well with long ass wire antenna. But they do not monitor that frequency anymore and nobody understands morse.
GPIO 3 means "The third pin with General Purpose I/O functionality" - a generic pin that can be used for custom protocols. In the case of ESP8266, the pin is also used for I2S SD (data pin of the I2S bus), and this is what is actually used, because the I2S implementation in ESP8266 can work at 80MHz.
I don't seem to find the specifications of the I2S in Raspberry Pis, all I can find is in the range of kHz. So probably it cannot be done.
Not sure about frequencies nor NTSC but I've transmitted from Ohio to New Zealand with no amplifier (once) using WSPRRYPI and there is also https://github.com/F5OEO/rpitx
[0] https://www.radiomuseum.org/r/cbc_browni_transistor_tv_space...
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