So, I’ve been watching a few intros on meshtastic, just to get the basics down, but I believe my situation requires a proper long term plan. Basically, I live practictally in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by mountains, and there are unlikely to be any other meshtastic nodes around, so I will probably need a setup that is partially based on repeaters,

I’m thinking something like this, where my entry into the ordeal is done in multiple stages. It is my understanding that diving into meshtastic quickly becomes an addiction and a hunt for more nodes, and I don’t see this as a problem in itself, I just want to figure out what to expect in terms of neighboring nodes.

  1. Simple handheld device. Nothing fancy. Something simple and cheap to bring with me when I’m traveling. While I doubt I’ll be able to see any nodes at home, I travel often, so it would still be usable and hopefully fun to toy around with.

  2. Semi-permanent car install for longer range. Partially as a repeater for my handheld radio, and partially to log and see where I can find “neighbors”. As a lot of the aforementioned travel is done by car, I think this is a viable strategy in preparation for step 3.

  3. Installing a solar powered repeater on a nearby mountain. So, if I find out that I do have other radios not too far away, I think it’s safe to say that I will need a repeater or two on one of the mountains that surround me. We’re talking solar panels, and something that can run basically unattended. Long range is key here.

  4. If the above work and I end up linking to a larger pool of nodes, then I might go for something fancier at home.

How much does this strategy make sense?

UPDATE: A wisblock starter kit is now on its way. Should enable me to do some research and data collection, and I’ll go from there. I’m willing to bet that I need to hike this 1200m summit nearby this summer, tho.

  • Bigboye57@midwest.social
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    2 days ago

    One addition, you do not have to break the bank on any of this. If you are tech savvy and can do basic soldering I would suggest piecing your nodes together yourself. If you are looking at the 100 dollar solar nodes you can do that for much much cheaper yourself with a bit of work.

    • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      2 days ago

      I do a lot of hobby electronics, so building a repeater more or less from scratch is the plan, yes.

      I still think the car setup is needed, at least temporarily until I’ve found some potential neighbors that I can reach with a repeater. I very much doubt I’ll be able to reach anyone without them, as I live here:

      …gotta get over those mountains. And that picture was taken from one of the few locations reachable by car, and I’m willing to bet better positions can be reached by foot. But NFW I’m hiking all the way up there just to test - I wanna map out other nodes in the region first.

      EDIT: Unless needed later, the car setup might be repressed as a rooftop repeater so I can reach a summit repeater from my pocket node.

      • Bigboye57@midwest.social
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        2 days ago

        Beautiful picture. My car setup if my handheld on my dash and a USB feeding it power if it needs to recharge. It has worked well for me

        • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          2 days ago

          How easy is it to wire in a pocket node to a laptop for datalogging? While the form factor isn’t much of an issue (I intend to print my own case), I was wondering what sort of I/O protocol (if any) these devices usually support.

          • Bigboye57@midwest.social
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            2 days ago

            There is a python CLI you should look into. This gets out of my comfort zone so likely not using the right terminology but you can connect via serial and they will dump very detailed logs over that connection. I am not sure if those detailed logs are saved though, or you would need to capture live.

            I have used this for troubleshooting but there is loads of information being passed over.