• exabrial 12 hours ago

    > Simple home-made driver for the SX1276 and SX1262 LoRa chip

    Beware of what nailed the Meshtastic people: These chips don't have temperature dependent crystal oscillators. Transmitting more than a few milliseconds causing a temperature rise, throwing the clock off, causing transmission warpage, causing timing errors, causing transmission failures.

    • ShakataGaNai 11 hours ago

      Temperature Compensated Crystal Oscillators (TCXOs) is what they should be looking for. And to be clear you can get SX1262 variants with such, eg: https://wiki.seeedstudio.com/wio_sx1262/

      For the detailed run down, see https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/f/f/b/4/2/SX1262_AN-Recommen... page 14

      > In the case of an SX1262 operating at +22 dBm in the US 902 – 928 MHz band, the frequency drift measured during the maximum LoRAWAN™ packet duration stays below the maximum limit, provided thermal insulation is implemented around the crystal during PCB design.

      > At extreme temperatures (below -20 °C and above 70 °C), it is recommended to use a TCXO.

      > For any other frequency bands corresponding to longer RF packet transmissions at +22 dBm, it is recommended to use a TCXO.

      • buckle8017 7 hours ago

        Theory and reality are different here.

        As used in the meshtastic devices this chip does actually fail doing normal Lora transmission under reasonable conditions.

        I know because I've seen the exact failure.

      • Neywiny 12 hours ago

        You mean they don't have temperature compensated? What you described is temperature dependent

        • exabrial 10 hours ago

          too late to edit now :)

        • bigfatkitten 11 hours ago

          This is a radio module issue, not a chip issue.

          Cheap modules have cheap crystals, better ones have a TCXO.

          • oakwhiz 8 hours ago

            The chip itself supports using a TCXO instead of a regular crystal

          • embedding-shape 10 hours ago

            Chat/text over LoRa always sounded intriguing! I'm merely a 1000km away from Sicily (which antirez say they wanna cover with the network at first), I wonder if it would be possible to do what AM radio does, bounce against the ionosphere and get huge ranges for transmission? Maybe it would need way too much transmission power? Maybe hopping all the way P2P style makes more sense, although surely would be slower.

            • mikeytown2 9 hours ago

              Checkout MeshCore; we're doing 400 miles using 12 hops going from north Vancouver to Eugene Oregon https://analyzer.letsme.sh/map?lat=47.36113&long=-122.20419&...

              • embedding-shape 8 hours ago

                > 400 miles using 12 hops

                What's the E2E latency on that, for curiosities sake :)

                • mikeytown2 4 hours ago

                  6 seconds or so

                • toomuchtodo 5 hours ago

                  Can you recommend any outdoor node hardware that can provide services for both MeshCore and Meshtastic? Cost is not an issue, optimizing for “plug in and does All The Things.”

                  • mikeytown2 4 hours ago

                    You'd need two radios, one antenna stacked on top of each other. Z offset of a minimum height of 1m/3'. In the X,Y offset of 0,0. You want high gain 8-10db antennas in this arrangement; you'd need more space between if you use lower gain antennas.

                    If you're looking for parts the Diamond BC920 is the best antenna. Station G2 with a $100 3-4mhz cavity filter for each frequency as well.

                • bigfatkitten 10 hours ago

                  Not at 900MHz. Skywave propagation mode is only available under about 30MHz. Above that, the signal reliably continues on into space.

                  At frequencies this high, you’re realistically limited to near line of sight paths.

                  • embedding-shape 9 hours ago

                    > Not at 900MHz

                    Shame, but at least now I understand why, thanks :)

                    > you’re realistically limited to near line of sight paths

                    Wonder exactly how far one would be able to get up to reach 1,000km line of sight, assuming you put both points equally far up. Guessing it's the curvature of the earth that gets in the way at that distance?

                • amingilani 10 hours ago

                  Unlikely since the most ISM bands are UHF (EU is 868 MHz) and skywave propagation (what you’re referring to) is characteristic of HF radiation (3-30MHz). VHF/UHF radiation passes through the ionosphere instead of refracting.

                • LelouBil 12 hours ago

                  I tried doing something like this on an ESP32 last year, I wanted to understand how to do an actual mesh with devices that can't transmit and receive at the same time, but I didn't find documentation.

                  I managed to get 2 devices communicating across town at least ! (After having antenna issues)

                  • mytailorisrich 11 hours ago