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  3. RFM69 antennas comparison

RFM69 antennas comparison

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  • zboblamontZ zboblamont

    @sundberg84 Not a great fan of PCB trace antennae, although I fully understand the advantage of small footprint. A whip or dipole antenna is problematic in terms of incorporating neatly, but will outperform the PCB a large factor.
    Horizontal polarisation when received by a vertical cuts the gain considerably, at vhf/uhf etc up to 20dB, not sure the level at 2.4GHz as the wavelength is fairly short, but there will certainly be some attenuation on the outer fringes.
    The other problem with horizontal polarisation is that the radiation lobe tends to be directional, so if nodes are at range you may have to compromise direction to 'catch' the edge of the radiation lobe.

    sundberg84S Offline
    sundberg84S Offline
    sundberg84
    Hardware Contributor
    wrote on last edited by sundberg84
    #19

    @zboblamont - must admit I have a little hard time to fully follow your explanation and the terminology - but if I understand you correctly the answer is, yes I might have some loss if the radio is lying down.

    Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
    MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
    MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
    RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

    zboblamontZ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • sundberg84S sundberg84

      @zboblamont - must admit I have a little hard time to fully follow your explanation and the terminology - but if I understand you correctly the answer is, yes I might have some loss if the radio is lying down.

      zboblamontZ Offline
      zboblamontZ Offline
      zboblamont
      wrote on last edited by
      #20

      @sundberg84 Sorry, yes there will be a loss.
      This site may better demonstrate it graphically down the bottom...
      link text

      sundberg84S 1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • zboblamontZ zboblamont

        @sundberg84 Sorry, yes there will be a loss.
        This site may better demonstrate it graphically down the bottom...
        link text

        sundberg84S Offline
        sundberg84S Offline
        sundberg84
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by sundberg84
        #21

        @zboblamont - perfect!! Thanks!
        Edit: from your link I could google more and found this: http://www.edaboard.com/thread294139.html

        Because meander type is a monopole, the polarization is almost the same as a standard vertical monopole antenna (or the duck antenna in your setup).
        So, the best coupling between antennas (giving the best communications between modules) is to place both antennas in vertical position (keeping the module using the printed antenna in the position shown in the picture).

        Edit2: https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/3459/nrf24l01-align-direction-position
        https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/212/antenna-101

        Controller: Proxmox VM - Home Assistant
        MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - W5100 Ethernet, Gw Shield Nrf24l01+ 2,4Ghz
        MySensors GW: Arduino Uno - Gw Shield RFM69, 433mhz
        RFLink GW - Arduino Mega + RFLink Shield, 433mhz

        zboblamontZ 1 Reply Last reply
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        • gohanG Offline
          gohanG Offline
          gohan
          Mod
          wrote on last edited by
          #22

          I usually try to put the antennae in vertical alignment since the communication direction is mainly horizontal

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • sundberg84S sundberg84

            @zboblamont - perfect!! Thanks!
            Edit: from your link I could google more and found this: http://www.edaboard.com/thread294139.html

            Because meander type is a monopole, the polarization is almost the same as a standard vertical monopole antenna (or the duck antenna in your setup).
            So, the best coupling between antennas (giving the best communications between modules) is to place both antennas in vertical position (keeping the module using the printed antenna in the position shown in the picture).

            Edit2: https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/3459/nrf24l01-align-direction-position
            https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/212/antenna-101

            zboblamontZ Offline
            zboblamontZ Offline
            zboblamont
            wrote on last edited by
            #23

            @sundberg84 The way to imagine field strength on an antenna is that it is circular looking on the end of a dipole, varying in strength from essentially zero at one end to max at the centre back to zero at the other end.
            Under ideal conditions, the field is like the balloon explanation in the other link. Unless your receiver is hugely different in height to the sending antenna, the reception will be identical throughout 360 degrees at the same distance.
            Rotate the antenna 90 degrees however and the the field forms principal lobes to front and rear, max facing centre on both sides, reducing to minimum facing the ends, viz this which makes the antenna directional compared to it's vertical orientation.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • gohanG gohan

              I wanted to share my finding following my RFM69 signal scanner I previously built. I used 2 types of antennas:

              • Coil Spring from alixpress

              • Hand made like the one mentioned by @sundberg84 in [his project](https://www.openhardware.io/view/389/EasyNewbie-PCB-RFM69-HWW-edition-for-MySensors

              I let them run several hours reporting TX power since the new rfm69 driver adjusts power output to the default target RSSI of -80db
              0_1508679176407_upload-2f1bd39a-66be-4992-b5f2-12d14acbc24e

              The test was done on the same spot (my desk) and the gw about 5 meters away (1 floor difference, and a couple of walls in between; gw running the coil spring antenna).
              I am currently testing the SMA antennas and results are better than the hand made antenna with a TX power of 35/40% instead of 55/60%. My guess is the hand made antenna had to be squeezed inside the box getting a wrong orientation, while the SMA one is outside and it can stay perfectly vertical.

              0_1511186543222_upload-8de8638c-a16c-4bbc-8a5b-0e841224a304

              YveauxY Offline
              YveauxY Offline
              Yveaux
              Mod
              wrote on last edited by
              #24

              @gohan I ran into this HopeRF antenna paper. Addresses a lot of different antenna types.

              http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

              zboblamontZ 1 Reply Last reply
              3
              • YveauxY Yveaux

                @gohan I ran into this HopeRF antenna paper. Addresses a lot of different antenna types.

                zboblamontZ Offline
                zboblamontZ Offline
                zboblamont
                wrote on last edited by
                #25

                @Yveaux Excellent summary, yet well worth reading through.

                What I found fascinating elsewhere was where 2.4GHz compressed PCB antennae such as the zig-zag pattern underperformed compared to their U or J type countertparts, despite identical claims as to gain, which is bidirectional.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • gohanG Offline
                  gohanG Offline
                  gohan
                  Mod
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #26

                  It is more or less related, but just this evening I had the garden sensor going out of range for 2 hours (from 6 to 8 pm). It happened a few time in the past but for shorter periods. Looking at the TX power it seems there is something affecting the communication from time to time. It would be nice to know the source since I live in the countryside and I have only another house near mine... I have to make other outdoor sensors to see if I get the same pattern
                  0_1510006640457_upload-ad2e44c4-c9ca-4f1c-a31b-3aea5f4b1c60

                  TmasterT 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • gohanG Offline
                    gohanG Offline
                    gohan
                    Mod
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #27

                    Added in OP the first test of the SMA antenna

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • gohanG gohan

                      It is more or less related, but just this evening I had the garden sensor going out of range for 2 hours (from 6 to 8 pm). It happened a few time in the past but for shorter periods. Looking at the TX power it seems there is something affecting the communication from time to time. It would be nice to know the source since I live in the countryside and I have only another house near mine... I have to make other outdoor sensors to see if I get the same pattern
                      0_1510006640457_upload-ad2e44c4-c9ca-4f1c-a31b-3aea5f4b1c60

                      TmasterT Offline
                      TmasterT Offline
                      Tmaster
                      wrote on last edited by Tmaster
                      #28

                      @gohan
                      Hi. i know that its 3 months + old discussion .but i only read now :)
                      i have the same problem,probably same time that hapens to you. my nrf24 modules between front gate and gateway stops comunicating at end of day.
                      My bet it that signal its already on limit ,(at 50m between gate and home), and at the end of day ,air humidity increase and signal just don't arrive. I already change antennas but signal strengh it's on limit and some days are worst than others.

                      Now i will change all my nrf24 for rfm69's (they arrive today) and try again at 868mhz and simple wire antenna(dipole).
                      Just for confirm; are the grownd plane from rfm69hw good enought? or i need something more than a piece of wire on ANA pin ?

                      i'm a arduino fan .Even sometimes don't undestanding how to use it :P

                      zboblamontZ rozpruwaczR 2 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • TmasterT Tmaster

                        @gohan
                        Hi. i know that its 3 months + old discussion .but i only read now :)
                        i have the same problem,probably same time that hapens to you. my nrf24 modules between front gate and gateway stops comunicating at end of day.
                        My bet it that signal its already on limit ,(at 50m between gate and home), and at the end of day ,air humidity increase and signal just don't arrive. I already change antennas but signal strengh it's on limit and some days are worst than others.

                        Now i will change all my nrf24 for rfm69's (they arrive today) and try again at 868mhz and simple wire antenna(dipole).
                        Just for confirm; are the grownd plane from rfm69hw good enought? or i need something more than a piece of wire on ANA pin ?

                        zboblamontZ Offline
                        zboblamontZ Offline
                        zboblamont
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #29

                        @tmaster Pending @gohan's response, I suggest you try a simple 1/4 plain wire whip initially.
                        You are using not simply different devices with differing characteristics but different frequencies, penetration of 2.4GHz and 868MHz wavelengths are not the same, lower frequencies have better penetration.
                        Should you require additional gain either to reduce transmission power input, or to increase effective radiated power it is easy enough to add a mirror 1/4 later to make it a dipole should you desire...

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • gohanG Offline
                          gohanG Offline
                          gohan
                          Mod
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #30

                          You could also use a PA LNA radio on the gateway and maybe on node. Also trying different antennae on the radio, as previously suggested, is an option. RFM69 have a good advantage of reportig signal strength (I published a small signal scanner for RFM69 in the My Project section) that gets handy in detecting blind spots.

                          zboblamontZ 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • TmasterT Tmaster

                            @gohan
                            Hi. i know that its 3 months + old discussion .but i only read now :)
                            i have the same problem,probably same time that hapens to you. my nrf24 modules between front gate and gateway stops comunicating at end of day.
                            My bet it that signal its already on limit ,(at 50m between gate and home), and at the end of day ,air humidity increase and signal just don't arrive. I already change antennas but signal strengh it's on limit and some days are worst than others.

                            Now i will change all my nrf24 for rfm69's (they arrive today) and try again at 868mhz and simple wire antenna(dipole).
                            Just for confirm; are the grownd plane from rfm69hw good enought? or i need something more than a piece of wire on ANA pin ?

                            rozpruwaczR Offline
                            rozpruwaczR Offline
                            rozpruwacz
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #31

                            @tmaster I had similar problems with nrf24 and also decided to switch to rfm69. I used nrf2rfm69 board to replace nrf24 modules. As an antenna I use a simple 1/4 wavelength flexible wire with isolation. And it works far more better than nrf24 even at 0dBm tx power. The modules are only twice the cost of nrf24 and perform much better. I guess the frequency (I use 868MHz) is the key factor here.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • TmasterT Offline
                              TmasterT Offline
                              Tmaster
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #32

                              :+1: :ok_hand:
                              thanks

                              i'm a arduino fan .Even sometimes don't undestanding how to use it :P

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • gohanG gohan

                                You could also use a PA LNA radio on the gateway and maybe on node. Also trying different antennae on the radio, as previously suggested, is an option. RFM69 have a good advantage of reportig signal strength (I published a small signal scanner for RFM69 in the My Project section) that gets handy in detecting blind spots.

                                zboblamontZ Offline
                                zboblamontZ Offline
                                zboblamont
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #33

                                @gohan I meant to ask about that scanner project... Is this now fully realisable under v 2.2 ?

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • gohanG Offline
                                  gohanG Offline
                                  gohan
                                  Mod
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #34

                                  I guess so, I was using development branch at that time, so I am expecting to work the same on 2.2

                                  1 Reply Last reply
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