Difference between revisions of "Lean DVB receiver..."

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m (M0AEU moved page Lean DVB reciever to Lean DVB receiver...)
 
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We need to make clear that this is NOT the "Portsdown DATV Receiver", just an added capability within the transmitter. The Portsdown receiver will be based on the MiniTioune software with a new Serit tuner.
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We need to make clear that this is NOT suitable to be used as a main receiver, just an off-air local monitoring capability within the transmitter. For reception of other stations you should always use a [[MiniTioune|MiniTioune USB receiver with a new Serit tuner.]]
  
 
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F5OEO had included F4DAV's innovative LeanDVB receiver software within the Transmitter software build, and from software release 201612310 this is included in the core functionality of the Portsdown transmitter. The software is described on page 18 of CQ-TV 252 and at http://www.pabr.org/radio/leandvb/leandvb.en.html and can be configured from the Portsdown transmitter Console Menu.
 
F5OEO had included F4DAV's innovative LeanDVB receiver software within the Transmitter software build, and from software release 201612310 this is included in the core functionality of the Portsdown transmitter. The software is described on page 18 of CQ-TV 252 and at http://www.pabr.org/radio/leandvb/leandvb.en.html and can be configured from the Portsdown transmitter Console Menu.
  
On a Raspberry Pi 3 using an RTL-SDR, it will receive anywhere between 24 – 1766 MHz and decode at up to 500KS/s and display on the touchscreen LCD. I used an RTL-SDR from http://www.rtl-sdr.com/buy-rtl-sdr-dvb-t-dongles/ but there are cheaper ones available.
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On a Raspberry Pi 3 using an RTL-SDR, it will receive anywhere between 24 – 1766 MHz and decode at up to 1000KS/s and display on the touchscreen LCD. I used an RTL-SDR from http://www.rtl-sdr.com/buy-rtl-sdr-dvb-t-dongles/ but there are cheaper ones available.
  
 
[[File:LeanDVB2.jpg|400px]]
 
[[File:LeanDVB2.jpg|400px]]

Latest revision as of 08:25, 19 May 2018

We need to make clear that this is NOT suitable to be used as a main receiver, just an off-air local monitoring capability within the transmitter. For reception of other stations you should always use a MiniTioune USB receiver with a new Serit tuner.


F5OEO had included F4DAV's innovative LeanDVB receiver software within the Transmitter software build, and from software release 201612310 this is included in the core functionality of the Portsdown transmitter. The software is described on page 18 of CQ-TV 252 and at http://www.pabr.org/radio/leandvb/leandvb.en.html and can be configured from the Portsdown transmitter Console Menu.

On a Raspberry Pi 3 using an RTL-SDR, it will receive anywhere between 24 – 1766 MHz and decode at up to 1000KS/s and display on the touchscreen LCD. I used an RTL-SDR from http://www.rtl-sdr.com/buy-rtl-sdr-dvb-t-dongles/ but there are cheaper ones available.

LeanDVB2.jpg

The software is not as good as MiniTioune at digging signals out of the noise, and sometimes takes a while to lock, but is well worth playing with as a stand-alone test receiver. It uses the same parameters (frequency, SR, FEC) as are set for the Portsdown transmitter, either through the console interface or on the touchscreen.

For those of you who want to try to improve it's capability by tweaking the sample rate, the settings can be adjusted in the file /home/pi/rpidatv/scripts/leandvbgui.sh on the Portsdown software build. It is a shell script, so you will just need to restart the receiver to apply the new settings. If you find improvements, please publish them here and I will put them in the core build.