I have a neighbor with a ham radio setup in the tens thousands of dollars, big ass tower on the foor and everyrthing. It's so powerful that it broadcasts into my to my old yamaha radio tuner, and even into my headphones.
The problem not being that it happens, I've gotten used to it and he uses it infrequently enough that it's not even worth buying a better shielded cable.
What I want to know is if there is any way to make it clearer, it's fairly garbled, and I can't understand it past when he repeats numbers.
>>60185654
Look into buying a little SDR. They look pretty fun. Th Pi might have radio functionality kike that? Not sure.
>>60186135
Who cares buy a R Pi anyway.
>>60186135
This, a cheap chink radio is another nice option. My Baofeng UV-5R works pretty well
>>60185654
If his radio stuff is interfering with your electronics, you should tell him. If he doesn't fix it, you can report him to the FCC.
There are ways to fix this shit, it's pretty common, but he should know better.
>>60186135
aw yis, SDRs are great fun. using link related and a usb to go adapter with any smartphone makes a neat little cheapo receiver
https://www.amazon.com/NooElec-NESDR-Mini-Compatible-Packages/dp/B009U7WZCA/
also can confirm >>60186170 uv5r is decent for hobbyist use
>>60188566
Your electronics are required to accept interference, that's what the little sticker on the bottom says.
If you are receiving interference from a licensed radio operator who is using their equipment within their required limits (lowest power necessary for activity and license limits) you can talk to them. The FCC expects that you can resolve things like grown adults.
The same expectation exists when your shitty non-conforming
>>60188852
... garbage electronics cause interference for radio users. The only difference is that your out of spec electronics are actually breaking the law and can be reported to the FCC.