fm_transmitter

Use Raspberry Pi as FM transmitter. Works on any RPi board.

This project uses the general clock output to produce frequency modulated radio communication. It is based on idea originaly posted here: http://icrobotics.co.uk/wiki/index.php/Turning_the_Raspberry_Pi_Into_an_FM_Transmitter, but does not use DMA controller in order to distribute samples to output (clock generator),so sound quality is worse as in PiFm project and only mono transmition is available but this makes possible to run it on all kind of boards.

How to use it

To compile this project use commands below:

sudo apt-get install make gcc g++
make

Then you can use it by typing:

sudo ./fm_transmitter [-f frequency] [-r] filename

WAVE Files

You can open WAVE files or read audio data from stdin, i.e.:

sox star_wars.wav -r 22050 -c 1 -b 16 -t wav - | sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 -

Instructions to convert mp3 to compatible wave file

sudo apt-get install sox
sudo apt-get install sox libsox-fmt-mp3
sox my-audio.mp3 -r 22050 -c 1 -b 16 -t wav my-converted-audio.wav

USB sound-card

To use a USB sound-card type this:

arecord -D hw:1,0 -c1 -d 0 -r 22050 -f S16_LE | sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 -

Some devices have problems with the one up (there is a warning in the terminal like buffer overflow after a few seconds - the transmitting is slow and will stopp), then you can use the following:

arecord -D plughw:1,0 -c1 -d 0 -r 22050 -f S16_LE | sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 -

Law

Please keep in mind that transmitting on certain frequencies without special permissions may be illegal in your country.

New features

  • works on RPi 1, 2 and 3
  • reads mono and stereo files
  • reads data from stdin
  • based on threads