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submitted 5 months ago by ikidd@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I need a few of these for rpi's around the farm. Tired of dealing with LoRa.

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[-] ikidd@lemmy.world 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

At this point, I've found a carrier that does 10GB for $17 a SIM (and I could probably get away with less data for cheaper), and I'd be fine with that. I have several rPis that act as hubs taking in LoRa data from things like solar pumps, water bowls and bins, but backhauling to the central server over LoRa is a pain, and we don't have LoS to all of them so using radio bridges is spotty. Some sites are 10km away over hills. And moving everything to MQTT would make my life easier than my custom BS programming that has devices talking to each other directly.

We don't generally have issues with phones and where I do, I can probably put up an antenna if the dongle has an external port, or I'm willing to spend extra $$ for an uplink with external. I currently have a Microhard LTE-CAT4 that I use on one remote site that seems to get good reception, but that unit is pretty pricy and I have to fart around with network cables and power when I could just be plugging in a USB dongle.

I see a lot of cheap ones on Amazon, but I was hoping someone had a common Linux specific model they know works, because most of those look pretty janky.

[-] etchinghillside@reddthat.com 2 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

MC7455 - https://a.aliexpress.com/_mMEGTFw

Random Enclosure - https://a.aliexpress.com/_m0pHSD2

I’m picking an older LTE only chip that I’m familiar with and a compatible enclosure. There might be cheaper.

It’s far from plug and play as you’ll either need to come up to speed with AT command or research if some libraries interact it. Edit: I’d look at what OpenWRT is using - I’ve plugged these into those and had a relatively plug and play experience.

Entirely possible this isn’t what you’re looking for - what’s a link to one of these dongles on Amazon?

[-] ikidd@lemmy.world 2 points 5 months ago
[-] etchinghillside@reddthat.com 1 points 5 months ago

Ah , interesting - hadn’t seen them like that before – but the premise looks the same to what I was suggesting.

In the video on the product you can see them mucking with AT commands. OpenWRT seems to be using https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/network/wan/wwan/modemmanager so I think you’d just want to confirm the chips on those dongles have had success with ModemManager - and then be running ModemManager from your Pis.

this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2024
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