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Supported boards

dl9rdz edited this page Oct 9, 2019 · 17 revisions

Important note (valid for all devices): You need the 433 MHz version (the 433 MHz receiver is used as 403 MHz receiver). The 868/915 MHz version will not work!

Recommended boards:

TTGO LORA v2.1_1.6

Advantages:

  • Small board with on-board 0.96" OLED display
  • Great RF sensitivity (better then LORA v1.0 boards) - a BIG difference!
  • SMA antenna connector (easier to connect external antenna)

Disadvantages:

  • only reset button, no second button (but pins of the board can be configured as "touch pins", so just solder a small piece of wire and use it as button by touching it)

TTGO T-BEAM 1.0 (new version, with charger IC AXP192)

Advantages:

  • Also great RF sensitivity, quite the same as the board above
  • Integrated GPS (allows displaying distance and direction to radiosonde)
  • Integrated battery holder and charger (18650 cell)

Disadvantage(?):

  • No integrated display (but, if you prefer a larger 1,3" OLED or 2" TFT display, its actually an advantage, as you can connect a display in your preferred size)
  • Larger than other boards, adding a tiny flat LiPo to a v2.1 yields a more compact device

Note that some pins are used differently than on the older T-Beam v0.7. Instructions how to connect additional things you find on the internet for the v0.7 might not be correct for the v1.0.

  • You can connect a I2C OLED display to pin 21/22 (SDA/SCL) the same way as you can with the old T-Beam 0.7
  • You cannot swap SDA/SCL in software, because SDA/SCL is also used to communicate with the power management chip
  • For the same reason, you should not connect a SPI display to pin 21/22 (you sometimes find such suggestion for T-Beam 0.7)

The code has been tested with the following boards:

TTGO LoRa v1.0

First board supported, works fine, but sensitivity of 403 MHz reception is not as good as with other boards. I got my board as "Wemos® TTGO LORA SX1278 ESP322 433 MHz" from Banggood in early 2019. It seems to be identical to the "LILYGO TTGO LORA" currently sold by Banggood (untested).

The board has a second button (in addition to reset button) that can be used to control the software, and an on-board 0.96" OLED display.

The board has a tiny I-PEX connector on board for the antenna (so you need an adapter cable for connecting an antenna with a more common SMA connector)

HELTEC TTGO LoRa

In terms of board layout (pin connections) from a software point of view very similar to TTGO LoRa v1.0.

No information on reception sensitivity compared to other boards.

TTGO T-BEAM (old version v0.7, TP5400 charger IC)

It is supported and can be a nice board after hardware modifications.

Advantages:

  • On-board GPS. Allows you automatically display distance/direction to sonde

Advantages/Disadvantage:

  • No integrated display (see T-Beam 1.0)

Disadvantages:

  • Larger than the other boards
  • Inconsistent quality. My board has two problems (but apparently other people have slightly better luck):
    • When connected to USB (in particular without battery in battery holder), the coil of the battery charger makes very annoying audible noise (seems like all boards are somewhat affected by this problems, but mine makes particular load noise, for others its just a little noise).
    • Battery charger chip causes HUGE RF interference in particular in battery-only operation. (https://vimeo.com/341131491)

You can eliminate the quality problem by disabling the battery charger chip and directly connecting a battery to the 5V power supply. You cannot (should not in order to avaid hazards) charge the battery via USB after this modification.

(Detailed version: The 868/915 MHz version contains the SX1276 receiver chip. The chip supports both 433 MHZ and 868/915 MHz, but using different input pins. The board connects the antenna to the 868/915 MHZ input pin, the 433 MHz pin is unconnected. Theoretically the 868/915 MHZ version can be modified to work as 403 MHz receiver by directly connecting the antenna to the right pin of the chip, but this requires somewhat advanced SMD soldering skills...)

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