diff --git a/content/posts/2023/49-observe-your-neighbours-weather-stations/index.md b/content/posts/2023/49-observe-your-neighbours-weather-stations/index.md index 3211a9c..53cafab 100644 --- a/content/posts/2023/49-observe-your-neighbours-weather-stations/index.md +++ b/content/posts/2023/49-observe-your-neighbours-weather-stations/index.md @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ aliases = '/posts/2023-07-30-observe-your-neighbours-weather-stations' summary = '''Another simple and short snippet for *rtl_433* on Linux (and probably FreeBSD).''' date = '2023-07-30T09:10:10+02:00' -lastmod = '2023-11-18T21:58:00+0000' +lastmod = '2024-03-12T05:04:15+0000' categories = [ 'amateur-radio', 'computerstuff' ] tags = [ 'linux', 'freebsd', 'sdr', 'wx' ] @@ -28,6 +28,10 @@ Then we should be able to run the program like this: $ rtl_433 -C si -M hires -M level -M stats -Y auto ``` +This will look per default on 433.29 MHz, other available frequencies are 315, 345, +868 and 915 MHz. To listen on other frequencies add `-f 868M` to the command above +for example. + I've installed this on a laptop running Ubuntu. ![Preview](preview.png "A preview image showing some test entries basically from an old weather station.")