> Hal Murray wrote:
> If the two signals are not encoded identically, there should be an
> interesting signal when one of the transmitters is off and the other is on.
> Has anybody looked for that sort of pattern?
> Is there a map of the dead spots? Any time-nuts live in/near one?
Yes. Here
The European segment of the KiwiSDR network has a number of SDRs with good 100
kHz reception.
There is even a crude Loran-C display of sorts (use the “extensions” menu).
http://sdr.hu/?q=kiwiSDR
A good example, Haparanda, Sweden:
http://sm2byc.ddns.net:8073/?ext=loran
The great
Yeah, sorry. Nobody expects the Spanish Inquis, er, Slashdot. Design doc also
here:
<https://github.com/jks-prv/Beagle_SDR_GPS/blob/master/docs/design.review/KiwiSDR.design.review.pdf>
On Mar 21, 2016, at 3:16 AM, jimlux wrote:
> and jks.com appears to be slashdotted, very, very slow
I'll adopt Didier's notation here
Although it's marketed as an SDR for the BeagleBone, this project contains an
open source 12+ channel software-defined GPS receiver:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1575992013/kiwisdr-beaglebone-software-defined-radio-sdr-with/
It's very easy to experiment
Quoting Poul-Henning Kamp :
Has any of you played with this:
http://www.sparkfun.com/products/8238
www.gpscreations.com/Products_GPS1A.html looks like a version you can
still purchase. But for the $500 they want I'd spend a little more and
get a real SDR useful for other projects