Radio Group/Pager
Pager | |
---|---|
Primary Contact | Asj |
Created | 27/03/2024 |
Location | Screen Printing Area |
GitHub / Repo | GitHub |
Status | Complete |
Type | Members Project |
QR code |
We have a pager transmitter running from within the hackspace running on 439.9875MHz (although it's not connected to DAPNET). The station has been allocated the callsign MB7PNH (Pager Nottingham Hackspace), and is built using an Adafruit Feather LoRa board, which has an RFM69 module. There are more details about this, and the PCB, on Aaron's website.
Realistically, giving the hackspace a pager transmitter offers very little benefit. For some reason I am addicted to building useless infrastructure which serves little practical purpose.
I want to receive pager messages!
Of course you do, pagers are very cool. While someone did manage to modify the Motola Advisor (which has a cult following, thanks to the film Hackers), it might not be well documented how to do so. It likely requires two crystals to be replaced with very specific values. However, not all hope is lost. Modern pagers are still manufactured and can be easily configured to use the appropriate frequency. One such example is the AlphaPoc 602R, although an almost identical model (possibly OEM) can be found on AliExpress slightly cheaper.
If you just want to mess about and already have a Flipper Zero, you can install the POCSAG application using the Flipper app on your phone. This needs a small config tweak to add the appropriate frequency to your config file. This will let you sniff (all) pager messages sent on that frequency using the hackspace's transmitter. The main disadvantage of this is that you'd have to leave the POCSAG app running whenever you want to receive pager messages.
MQTT Topics
Transmission of pager messages using MB7PNH without an amateur radio license is against the law - these topics are not listed on MQTT Topics or use the nh/
topic prefix for that reason You must have an amateur radio license to transmit messages via this node. These topics are available via jarvis.
Topic | Description |
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pocsag/send |
Sends a pager message to a specific RIC. RIC and message are separated with a pipe symbol e.g. "300424|Hello Aaron!" |
pocsag/power |
Taking a value of either "ON" or "OFF" - this can be used to power down the transmitter if there is an issue (this is a requirement for unattended nodes). |
pocsag/status |
Sending an empty message to this will return:
It's probably worth subscribing to |
RICs
The addresses for these have been generated randomly. There is nothing stopping you from programming a pager to receive messages as these RICs, if you happened to have a pager and wanted to receive notifications while you're in the space. You do not need an amateur radio license to receive pager messages. 👀
RIC | Purpose |
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754542 | Receive alerts for Hackspace Instrumentation, e.g. service becomes unavailable or back up again. This was added to the Discord bot as it was already processing these status messages. |
307040 | Hackspace Doorbells, also sent via Discord bot. |
224 | Automatic date and time. This is compatible with AlphaPoc (and similar pagers). Not sure about others... This can actually be sent to any RIC that the pager is subscribed to - it just has to be in the right format to set the date/time, and won't result in a notification appearing. It's sent from a shell script every two hours. This is literally just mosquitto_pub -t 'pocsag/send' -m "224|YYMMDDHHMMSS$(date +%y%m%d%H%M%S)"
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Responding to a failure
If there is a failure with this pager node, or it's reported that it is causing interference, it should be powered off immediately. If physical access is available, this can be done by unplugging the pager. If it needs to be done remotely, a message can be sent over MQTT to turn off voltage regulator on the Adafruit Feather. This can be done from jarvis by running
mosquitto_pub -t pocsag/power -m OFF
The default state after plugging in the transmitter is off and if the connection the MQTT server is lost, the power is fail safe to off. This is done by the ESP8266 pulling the Adafruit Feather's ENable pin low, shutting off the 3.3v regulator, which powers the Feather's processor and the RFM69 module. A separate voltage regular taps the voltage off USB in order to keep the ESP8266 powered.