Weather Satellite Decoder
Receive and decode weather images from NOAA and Meteor satellites.
Uses SatDump for live SDR capture and image processing.
Antenna Guide
137 MHz band — your stock SDR antenna will NOT work.
Weather satellites transmit at 137.1–137.9 MHz. The quarter-wave
at this frequency is ~53 cm,
far longer than the small telescopic antenna shipped with most SDRs
(tuned for ~1 GHz). You need a purpose-built antenna.
V-Dipole (Easiest — ~$5)
coax to SDR
|
===+=== feed point
/ \
/ 120 \
/ \
/ deg \
53.4cm 53.4cm
- Element length: 53.4 cm each (quarter wavelength at 137 MHz)
- Angle: 120° between elements (not 180°)
- Material: Any stiff wire, coat hanger, or copper rod
- Orientation: Lay flat or tilt 30° toward expected pass direction
- Polarization: The 120° angle gives partial RHCP match to satellite signal
- Connection: Solder elements to coax center + shield, connect to SDR via SMA
Best starter antenna. Good enough for clear NOAA images with a direct overhead pass.
Turnstile / Crossed Dipole (~$10-15)
53.4cm
<--------->
====+==== dipole 1
|
====+==== dipole 2
<--------->
90 deg rotated
+ reflector below
- Elements: Two crossed dipoles, each 53.4 cm per side (4 elements total)
- Angle: 90° between the two dipole pairs
- Phasing: Feed dipole 2 with a 90° delay (quarter-wave coax section ~37 cm of RG-58)
- Reflector: Place ~52 cm below elements (ground plane or wire grid)
- Polarization: Circular (RHCP) — matches satellite transmission
Better than V-dipole. The reflector rejects ground noise and the RHCP phasing matches the satellite signal.
QFH — Quadrifilar Helix (Best — ~$20-30)
___
/ \ two helix loops
| | | twisted 90 deg
| | | around a mast
\___/
|
coax
- Design: Two bifilar helical loops, offset 90°
- Material: Copper pipe (10mm), copper wire, or coax outer shield
- Total height: ~46 cm (for 137 MHz)
- Loop dimensions: Use a QFH calculator for exact bending measurements
- Polarization: True RHCP omnidirectional — ideal for overhead satellite passes
- Gain pattern: Hemispherical upward coverage, rejects ground interference
Gold standard for weather satellite reception. No tracking needed — covers the whole sky.
Placement & LNA
- Location: OUTDOORS with clear sky view is critical. Roof/balcony/open field.
- Height: Higher is better but not critical — clear horizon line matters more
- Antenna up: Point the antenna straight UP (zenith) for best overhead coverage
- Avoid: Metal roofs, power lines, buildings blocking the sky
- Coax length: Keep short (<10m). Signal loss at 137 MHz is ~3 dB per 10m of RG-58
- LNA: Mount at the antenna feed point, NOT at the SDR end.
Recommended: Nooelec SAWbird+ NOAA (137 MHz filtered LNA, ~$30)
- Bias-T: Enable the Bias-T checkbox above if your LNA is powered via the coax from the SDR
Quick Reference
| Wavelength (137 MHz) |
218.8 cm |
| Quarter wave (element length) |
53.4 cm |
| Best pass elevation |
> 30° |
| Typical pass duration |
10-15 min |
| Polarization |
RHCP |
| NOAA (APT) bandwidth |
~40 kHz |
| Meteor (LRPT) bandwidth |
~140 kHz |