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Posted in Arduino Hacks, Misc Hacks Tagged arduino, atmega328, fm radio, TEA5767 ← How To Nail A Technical Presentation Fail Of The Week: How I Killed The HiPot Tester → ...
Arduino enthusiasts looking for a new project to keep them busy over the weekend may be interested in a new Arduino FM Radio Project, which uses an ATmega328-based board to communicate with a ...
since HD Radio is "overlaid" on the existing FM carrier, any FM tuner can "receive" the HD signal. you aren't going to be able to do anything with the digital bitstream unless you incorporate a ...
Building on that concept, the next objective was to create an even smaller FM radio compact enough to fit inside an earbud.
Posted in 3d Printer hacks, Arduino Hacks, Musical Hacks Tagged 3d printed, arduino, fm radio, Nokia 5110 LCD, TEA5767 ← You Can Build Anything Out Of What Is Holding Your 97 Eagle Talon Together ...
Short-range radio specilaist LPRS has introduced a stacked module that allows Arduino boards to communicate wirelessly with other Arduino boards or PC hosts. The system uses the supplier’s easyRadio ...
It is compact, lightweight, and works great with any Arduino or Arduino compatible that supports Uno-style shields. The HamShield is the product of 12 months of design, engineering, and prototyping.
^.^ Very nice find! That's some quality RE work there. Either done by someone who really, really knows RF, or someone "guided" by someone who might have known a few things about the encodings ...