Version 7 (modified by 9 years ago) ( diff ) | ,
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Welcome to the Lantaarnpaal WiFi project
Aim and scope
The aim of the project is to develop a node built inside the famous, historic Leyden street lantern. A street lantern has interesting potential to function as a wifi spot: optimum locations, availability of electric power (at least at night), easily recognizable for users (such as tourists).
There are also challenges:
- no local internet connection;
- power is switched off during daylight hours (at least for the coming years);
- hardware should not interfere with historic character;
- possible radio interference.
Local internet connection
Potential solutions:
- wifi interlink to nearby Wireless Leiden node
- use of ethernet over power line, for instance using Corinex powerline adapters
The Corinex manual is available in svn [Corinex_CXP-HDC_LVC_UserGuide http://svn.wirelessleiden.nl/svn/projects/nodebouwdocumentatie/Corinex_CXP-HDC_LVC_UserGuide_v1.0.pdf].
Power supply
As long as power is switched off during daylight hours we will need a local battery. The battery should be as small as possible and allow a large number of discharge cycles.
Hardware configuration
The antennas should be placed inside the hood and above the mirror plate (see the drawings. One solution would be to use a raspberrypi-2 or -3 with usb-wifi-dongles. Raspberry Pi 2 is based on Broadcom BCM2836 SoC, which includes a quad-core Cortex-A7 CPU running at 900 MHz and 1 GB RAM. There are 4 usb ports. Ideally the poweradapter and battery pack should also be located inside the hood (no installation work in lantern base).
Radio interference
In the setup with wifi-interlinks (5 GHz) and two accesspoints (both 802.11g and 802.11a) there are four antennas in the hood, closely spaced (30 cm). Moreover the construction of the hood may interfere with the radio signals.
Art project
The basic idea is to put a led display behind the little square window in the hood to show some artistic image. For instance the GPIO could be used in combination with a RGB dot matrix display. Several display connections are available on the raspi.
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