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home QRZCQ - The database for radio hams 
 
2024-04-28 20:11:27 UTC
 

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M3AHQ

Active QRZCQ.com user

activity index: 1 of 5
sticker

james maloney

ne312bw Tyne-Wear Uk
England

EU
england
image of m3ahq

Call data

Last update:2021-04-07 18:00:18
Continent:EU
Views:162
Main prefix:G
Latitude:54.9687710
Longitude:-1.5122300
Locator:IO94FX
DXCC Zone:223
ITU Zone:27
CQ Zone:14

QSL data

Last update:2020-12-03 15:43:51
eQSL QSL:no
Bureau QSL:no
Direct QSL:no
LoTW QSL:no

Biography

INFO:- NEW QTH MOVE 2013 ALL ANTENNAS HF-VHF-UHF ARE NOW GROUND MOUNTED SO DONT EXPECT GREAT SIGNALS GUYS 73s



SDR REMOTES ON AIR STATUS http://status.sdrspace.com/onair.xml


online sdr-radio remotes user = guest password = fortknox

M3AHQ SDR-RADIO V2.3 REMOTE DVB-T 500khz-6m Nooelec Upconvertor,60ft Endfed long Wire Unun Balun

M3AHQ SDR-RADIO V2.3 REMOTE DVB-T 25mhz -1300mhz 6m,10m,2m70cms quadband vertical base

M3AHQ SDR-RADIO V2.3 REMOTE DVB-T 25mhz -54mhz Antenna Antron 99



{{{ ONLINE }}}

M3AHQ: KiwiSDR Software-Defined 10khz-30mhz Receive


KIWISDR RECEIVER http://kiwisdr.com/public/

KIWISDR SERVER MAP http://rx.linkfanel.net/

DRAGONFLY SDR RECEIVER 16bit ADC 1KHZ - 1800MHZ

New Project:-Raspberry Pi,Hackrf One,OpenWebrx

A SHORT REVIEW OF THE KIWISDR: 10 KHZ – 30 MHZ WIDEBAND NETWORK SDR
The KiwiSDR is a 14-bit wideband RX only HF software defined radio created by John Seamons (ZL/KF6VO) which has up to 32 MHz of bandwidth, so it can receive the entire 10 kHz – 30 MHz VLF/LF/MW/HF spectrum all at once. However, it is not a typical SDR as you do not connect the KiwiSDR directly to your PC. Instead the KiwiSDR is a cape (add on board) for the Beaglebone single board computing platform. If you’re unfamiliar with the Beaglebone, it is a small computing board that is similar to a Raspberry Pi. The KiwiSDR is designed to be a low cost standalone unit that runs 24/7, connects to your HF antenna and internet network, and shares your 10 kHz – 30 MHz reception over the internet with up to 4 simultaneous users.

Because the KiwiSDR is a network SDR, instead of connecting it to your PC it connects to your home internet network, allowing you to access it from any computing device via a web browser. Direct access to the SDR is not possible (actually it seems that it is, but it’s not easy to do), and all the computing is performed on the KiwiSDR’s on board FPGA and Beaglebone’s CPU before being sent to the network. Thus raw ADC or IQ data is never touched by your PC, your PC only sees the compressed audio and waterfall stream. So a powerful computer is not required to run the SDR. In fact, a mobile phone or tablet will do just fine.

In comparison, a $299 USD wideband non-networked SDR such as the LimeSDR uses a 12-bit ADC and can do up to 80 MHz of bandwidth over USB 3.0. But even on our relatively powerful PC (i7-6700 CPU, Geforce GTX 970 and 32 GB RAM) the LimeSDR can only get up to about 65 MHz on SDR-Console V3 before performance becomes too choppy.

But the real reason to purchase a KiwiSDR is that it is designed to be shared and accessed over the internet from anywhere in the world. You can connect to over 137 shared KiwiSDRs right now over at sdr.hu which is a site that indexes public KiwiSDRs. To achieve internet sharing, the KiwiSDR runs a modified version of András Retzler’s OpenWebRX software. OpenWebRX is similar to WebSDR, but is open source and freely available to download online. The standard OpenWebRX is also designed to support the RTL-SDR. Of course if you don’t want to share your receiver over the internet you don’t have to, and you could use it on your own local network only.

Some applications of the KiwiSDR might include things like: setting up a remote receiver in a good noise free location, helping hams give themselves propagation reports by accessing a remote KiwiSDR while they are TXing, listening to shortwave stations, monitoring WSPR or WEFAX channels, education, crowd sourced science experiments and more.

Hardware
The KiwiSDR PCB plugs directly into the expansion ports of the BeagleBone PCB. On the KiwiSDR PCB is the FPGA which handles most of the DSP processing, two shielding cans which contain the HF and GPS RF front-ends, two SMA ports (one for a wideband HF antenna, and one for a GPS antenna), an Ethernet port, and a 2.1mm DC 5V power jack. There is also a terminal block connector for directly connecting a long wire antenna and ground to the unit.

There is no WiFi on the KiwiSDR so it must be connected to an Ethernet cable, although it is possible to use a cheap wireless Ethernet to WiFi adapter or router like a TP-Link N300 to connect it to WiFi. The KiwiSDR doesn’t require much network bandwidth, so WiFi connection speeds are more than adequate



{{{{{ DMR RADIO }}}}}

438.82500mhz

Raspberry Pi 2 Dual Mmdvm Board Beofeng Dual Band Dm860

DIGITAL VOICE DASHBOARD

https://www.aprsdirect.com


Aprs Beaconing I Use A Mx Pro Android Box it Saves Tying Up A Pc

http://www.sdr-radio.com

http://status.sdrspace.com/onair.xml

Equipment

Shortwave Listening:-hackRf One,KiwiSdr,Rtl DongleS

SdrRadio Software:-Various


Old School Scanners:-Realistic Pro 2021,Realistic Pro 2006,realistic pro 2042



{{{ ANTENNAS }}}


Dualband Antenna Diamond X30

2.4ghz Yagi Beam Rotatable

Antenna Antron 99 10m/11m,6m

Quadband Vertical Antenna 6m,10m,70cms,1200mhz

EndFed Unun Balun Long Wire,Various Configurations

  

Rev. e1982f2133