Saturday, December 16, 2023

New WSPR receiver from RemoteQTH


RemoteQTH is a small company in the Czech Republic and they have just announced the release of a new receiver for WSPR. 

It can be used from 0.1 to 28 MHz and is described as follows..."The openWSPR receiver is a stand-alone HF receiver for WSPR. Just connect an antenna, internet and a DC power supply and you're ready to go! With this tiny receiver you can decode and relay WSPR messages to WSPRnet.org. 

Since the entire project is open source, receivers can be easily reprogrammed to receive signals other than WSPR. The nanoPi board inside runs Raspbian OS and several user programs, which are automated by custom scripts, making the receiver completely maintenance-free."

It is selling for €125 which at first glance sounds expensive but I guess one of the main features of this WSPR receiver is that it doesn't require an external PC or computer to run. All of the decoding is done inside the unit. All you need to do is connect the various cables, configure it, connect an Ethernet cable and it uploads the spots to WSPRnet.

Looking at the size of the box relative to the SMA or Ethernet connector then it's really small and just a few cms across.

Future products... They are also developing a separate transmitter module.


They have no information on this in terms of power output but 200 milliwatts seems to be the norm.

It's also interesting to see that they are developing a series of band pass filters...


I think these will be attractive to users of other WSPR products as well as all you need are the connecting SMA patch leads.... no construction, soldering or winding of torroids. 


The photo above shows the surface mount components inside the filter.

Nearly all of these low power WSPR transmitters have a square wave output and require some sort of filter to remove the higher harmonics. This is usually done with a low-pass filter rather than a bandpass filter which tends to have slightly more loss.

Where bandpass filters shine is with the receiver module as they keep all of the potentially large signals on the lower bands out of the front end of the receiver. I think these standalone filter modules may be of interest to anyone with a SDR receiver and who want to concentrate on one band.

Link... More info on the RemoteQTH website

Disclaimer: Just to clarify, no-one paid for this post or sent any product to me for review. These are new products that I think people will be interested in.

Addendum: Since putting up this post, someone hs asked about whether the receiver can hop between bands? Does it run WSJT-X? And what is the performance of the receiver?

I looked at the files section of the site and found a circuit diagram. The receiver schematic shows the input RF going straight into an IC without any preceding RF stage amplification. This might be ok on the bands on the lower bands like 40m or 80m but is it going to be sensitive enough on bands like 10m / 28 MHz?

The input has a single LC parallel circuit which suggests that it is intended for single band use. If these components are left out then an external band pass filter is required for each band.

2 comments:

Frank K4FMH said...

Nice post! The ONE issue with the current WSPR RX offering is that it doesn’t yet do band-hopping! So, it’s a single band until yiu manually change it. I cndurned this via a YouTube comment and reply.

IF they implement band-hopping in the RX and upcoming TX devices, they will be killer!

73,

Frank
K4FMH

Michal OK1M said...

Yeees...

openWSPR Receiver Band Hopping FW update is out!
https://remoteqth.com/openWSPR_rx.php
Changelog:
- New band hopping feature: the receiver can now be configured to change frequency at selected times
- Improved Linux kernel for higher receiving sensitivity
- Web interface reworked with new design and quick filtering/sorting options
- Easier acces to the web interface: the receiver can now be reached using mDNS address and outputs its IP address to a file on USB drive
- Additional bug fixes and minor improvements .)
73 Michal OK1M