User:Bertrik Sikken: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 103: | Line 103: | ||
=== Inexpensive ultrasonic player === | === Inexpensive ultrasonic player === | ||
see [[UltrasonicPlayer]] | |||
Revision as of 16:49, 2 October 2016
User info Bertrik Sikken | |
---|---|
Name | Bertrik Sikken |
Nick | bertrik |
Tagline | heb ik niet |
You can reach me at bertrik@sikken.nl or bertrik@gmail.com
Studied Electrical Engineering at Twente University.
Main interests:
- reverse-engineering things (USB stuff, mp3 players), working on http://rockbox.org
- studying bats and making electronics for recording/listening to bat sounds
- radio stuff, in particular software-defined radio
Projects I work(ed) on (refresh):
Project ideas
This is a list of ideas I'm thinking about, but have not fully developed into an actual project yet.
investigate STM32F103 microcontroller
The STM32 family of microcontrollers looks quite interesting.
You can buy inexpensive STM32F103 boards with the following functionality:
- Cortex M3 processor running at 72 MHz
- 64 kB flash, 20 kB RAM
- 2x ADC with 1 microsecond conversion time
- USB interface
The plan is to get a bunch of these and play with them, for example see if it is fast enough to sample ultrasonic audio and store it on an sd card (so it can be used as a super cheap bat call recorder).
See this page for more information on using these in the Arduino environment.
investigate quadcopter remote control
It turns out that the typical little cheap Chinese quadcopters use a remote-control protocol that can be easily recreated using the famous NRF24L01+ chip (< $1 and easily connected to an arduino). This gives nice opportunity to either:
- transmit our own control signal, to control a quadcopter from something different than the manual remote control, e.g. automatic control
- receive the control signal, so the manual remote control that comes with a quadcopter can be used to steer other things (like a model car).
I haven't found a good overview of quadcopter remote control protocol specifications yet, there seem to be plenty examples of "here-is-the-code" however.
TTN gateway info panel
Problem: if you're running a gateway for the-things-network (TTN), you can see packets coming in by following the packet forwarder log file, but it gives very limited and rather cryptic information. For example, you don't see which node sent a message, so you have no idea how many unique nodes are sending data through your gateway.
This idea is about creating a simple info panel that you can run directly on the TTN gateway itself. The plan is to write this in Python. A typical gateway probably already runs some sort of Linux distribution which has the python binaries available or allows them to be installed easily. Using Python also means that you don't need a compiler/Makefile/etc.
Basic operation of this utility:
- the gateway software is configured to send its data not just to TTN but also to the gateway info panel utility (running on "localhost"), using the poly packet forwarder
- the utility listens on a specific UDP port, accepting data according to the Semtech v1 protocol.
- it parses the plain JSON metadata (modulation parameters, like frequency, LoRa mode, SF, BW, etc.)
- it also parses the payload bytes, part of the payload is not encrypted, so we can extract the message type, device address and sequence number (FCNT).
- all incoming packets are shown in a table-like view in the console using the ncurses library.
Initially, the utility will just keep the packets in memory, so it just shows things that happened since you last started it. Later, we can decide to store the data, for example in a database.
The information shown can be just the incoming messages in order of arrival, one line per message. Alternatively it could show a kind of node-centric view, one line per device with info only on the latest message from that node.
mini word clock in dutch
Basically an monochrome 8x8 word clock, in Dutch, showing local time in the Netherlands.
This git repo has the current code.
See here for a demo running on an arduino nano.
The plan is to run this from an ESP8266 instead of an arduino nano, so it can get the time from the internet using NTP. The time offset will be fixed to Dutch local time, i.e. GMT+1 taking into account summer time. Summer time will be determined using the general rule "from 2:00 local time on the last sunday of March until 3:00 local time on the last sunday of October".
Inexpensive CO2 sensor
TODO: move this to its own page.
Status: works as a basic MQTT sensor, see topic "bertrik/co2" on test.mosquitto.org
See this github repo for code.
Use the MH-Z19 sensor module (about E22,-) to measure the CO2 concentration and an ESP8266 (like a WeMos D1 mini board) to push the measurement data over the internet to a MQTT server. Possibly I can use ESPEasy which makes configuration easy (through a web interface), I'd have to add support for this particular sensor -> ESPEasy seems pretty complicated to get changes accepted, has existing bugs that are not addressed, probably better to write my own custom code.
Understanding LoRa
Ultimate goal is to create an SDR algorithm to decode LoRa without the need for dedicated LoRa hardware. This could be useful when tracking HABs transmitting LoRa for example. See DecodingLora and EncodingLora.
In particular, I should definitely check out this gr-lora project. Perhaps make it work for decoding balloon telemetry modes.
Cypress PSOC5
Play with the Cypress PSOC5 platform, which combines a ARM Cortex-m3 processor with configurable analog blocks. I'm thinking of combining it with a 24 GHz doppler radar sensor, to process the signal and present it as a USB audio device (stereo signal contains I and Q parts). See RadarOnAStick.
Android HabAlert app
see HabAlertApp
Inexpensive ultrasonic player
see UltrasonicPlayer