del_boy
Member
- Location
- Herefordshire
Do you need to put that in range of your wifi at home or unless you have wifi in the buildingsAndy suggested the ntrip master, I’ve it ordered, looks a set up that’ll suit me better
Do you need to put that in range of your wifi at home or unless you have wifi in the buildingsAndy suggested the ntrip master, I’ve it ordered, looks a set up that’ll suit me better
I have WiFi in the building I’m putting it in, main reason why I chose thatDo you need to put that in range of your wifi at home or unless you have wifi in the buildings
Thats my biggest problem, the shed apex is alot higher and more open but no wifi, house is more shaded and harder to try and put a mast up on but wifi in the houseI have WiFi in the building I’m putting it in, main reason why I chose that
Can you run a shielded Ethernet cable to your shed? Our internet actually goes into the outbuilding then, Ethernet to the houseThats my biggest problem, the shed apex is alot higher and more open but no wifi, house is more shaded and harder to try and put a mast up on but wifi in the house
It looks worse than it actually is.Just had a quick scroll through again and does seem quite complicated
Just had a quick scroll through again and does seem quite complicated
Follow my guide, when you're working through it a step at a time, it's simple enough. If you're just reading it in a one-er, I guess it does look a bit much. When you're doing it for real, not so muchJust had a quick scroll through again and does seem quite complicated
Henry Ford said when asked how anyone could build such a complex car,Follow my guide, when you're working through it a step at a time, it's simple enough. If you're just reading it in a one-er, I guess it does look a bit much. When you're doing it for real, not so much
What are the benefits of using the raspberry pi over the ntrip master? Once both are setup are there any advantagesFollow my guide, when you're working through it a step at a time, it's simple enough. If you're just reading it in a one-er, I guess it does look a bit much. When you're doing it for real, not so much
I'm sure I can tailor the f9p to output a wide range of messagesNtrip master seems to be the cheapest if that is all you need.
F9p on its own can only generate rtcm messages to suit F9p. Raspberry pi running rtkbase can generate other rtcm messages to suit any receivers you might have or want to support.
I have on occasions ran my Pi on ethernet cable, rather than WiFi. I have seen that recommended to avoid having any unsecure WiFi devices connected to your home network.
I fancied having a raspberry pi to play with, which large swayed my decision. Though when I got mine, the 3b were largely unavailable or cosy as much as a 4b. The 4b is fine, but a bit more power hungry than the older models, causing them to run fairly hot. I haven't looked up the 5b to see what they are like.
I'm pretty sure if you want to use an NTRIP feed via 4G modem on JD Starfire, that you will have to also have a JD Mobile RTK subscription on top of any subscription for third party RTK.For a jd star fire 6000 what type modems could you use rtk on ntrip account? Can any off the shelf one be used or dose it need to be a specific one?
Sierra modems work fine, I've had GX450 and V55 working with rtkbase no problem.We have been using the old reichard 2g modems but there obsolete now John deere do there own modem just wondered what else is compatible we use v55 sierra ones on anything else
That sounds right, only show two decimal places iirc.I have base station all set up, had a few problems but most sorted now. When I check rtk2go map it shows my position to be 2-300m off where it should be? Any ideas?