-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 250
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Interference from 900MHz (?) Neptune R900 water meter cellular transponder #305
Comments
It's extremely unlikely that your R900 is transmitting enough that rtlamr can't receive anything from your power meter. I'd fire up an application like SDR# and have a look at the spectrum between 902 and 928 MHz. |
I am 99% sure it is the problem.
So pretty near certain problem is the R900. |
One possibility is that the signal from the R900 is high enough power it's overloading the receiver, even though it's not within the sampled bandwidth, try reducing the dongle's gain. I'd still recommend having a look at the received spectrum with something like SDR# before messing with rtlamr's settings. |
If I am understanding things correctly, I think this rtl-sdr spectrum analyzer picture explains the problem... Other than the coincidence of the R900 Neptune device being installed just when I started having trouble grabbing rtlamr signals, I don't know what else has changed around my house that would account for such a strong, new signal. Any thoughts on what to troubleshoot and/or do beyond moving the center frequency of rtlamr away from 912MHz? |
That is the DC offset of the receiver, it will always be present at 0 Hz (relative to the sampled spectrum), you'll find no matter where you tune, it'll follow you around. In any case, rtlamr is immune to that spike because manchester coding has odd symmetry and it cancels out. Can you provide a screenshot of the full 2.4 MHz of spectrum? |
2.4MHz from where to where? |
Set the receiver to 2.4 MHz sample rate, and tune to 912.6 MHz. |
That looks suspiciously empty. What is the gain set to, and is AGC enabled? Do you have another known-good receiver you can test with? |
Sorry, I must have taken a bad snapshot. |
Still suspiciously empty. I'd expect to see a much wider signal causing interference, or a lot of short bursts all over the spectrum. What is your gain set to? |
I should also note that the interference is less late at night -- as evidenced by the fact that in the past hour I have been able to pick up my electric meter even with the default center frequency. So the interference is presumably less at this hour. |
Now here is something really weird.. Some possibilities could include:
Given the key symptoms:
This has become quite the mystery for me... |
I'm thinking more and more that you are right and that it's not the R900 -- indeed, I spoke to the city engineer and the R900 cellular unit doesn't broadcast anything in the 900MHz band but rather via an LTE network. The strong temperature correlation has me suspecting our neighbors' AC Will know for sure soon since I got the city to swap out the LTE anyway for a 900MHz packet version -- it works for me since then I can read the packets using your rtlamr code and they get to redeploy the scarce cellular transmitters elsewhere where they need it. I'll post back to confirm when I am certain. |
Just a correction to my previous post - even the LTE device does have a 900MHz transmitter though it seems to transmit readings about every 2 hours This compares with up to about once per minute for standard packet R900 -- though the consumption data only changes at most once every 15 minutes (which is how often I believe it queries the register). I guess the city engineers don't even know the capabilities of the devices they are installing... Also, it reports in 100ths of a cubic foot of water -- or just under 10oz which is not bad... |
Flow meter, water flow meter, air flow meter, gas meter, gas leak detector, natural gas leak detector manufacturer. |
I have been using rltamr to read my electric meter for many months now without issue -- the meter transmits a message every couple of seconds.
About a month ago, I stopped receiving regular messages from the electric meter. Sometimes no messages would be sent for a day or more. When messages were sent, it was mostly for a couple of hours at night.
At first, I thought there was an issue with my electric meter signal transmission. Maybe the transmitter was getting flakey? Maybe it relied on a battery that was running low (though that seemed unlikely for an electric meter). Maybe the incredibly hot weather was causing the transmitter to fail during the hot days but worked a little during the cooler nights?
Then I remembered that our water company installed a new meter and transmitter. In particular, they moved from a local transponder to an LTE cellular one -- specifically a Neptune R900 -- which happens to operate in the 910-920 MHz range.
Unfortunately, the transmitter is only inches away from the electric meter.
Using my laptop with an RTL-SDR dongle and antenna, I verified, that I could only get rtlamr packets) from in front of the meter or on the side opposite the Neptune R900. I couldn't get any signal in my house.
So it seems like the R900 transmission is almost completely blocking the electric meter rtlamr messages.
Given that the R900 uses a battery, I am surprised that it transmits seemingly constantly given that it essentially totally blocks the electric meter rtlamr signals that I know are transmitted about every 2 seconds. Perhaps it's faulty?
Alternatively, I will try to get the water company to move the transmitter further away from the electric meter.
Is there any way though to filter out the R900 signal?
Any other suggestions????
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: