Use the Raspberry Pi as an FM transmitter. Works on every Raspberry Pi board.
Just get an FM receiver, connect a 20 - 40 cm plain wire to the Raspberry Pi's GPIO4 (PIN 7 on GPIO header) to act as an antenna, and you are ready for broadcasting.
This project uses the general clock output to produce frequency modulated radio communication. It is based on an idea originally presented by Oliver Mattos and Oskar Weigl at PiFM project.
To use this software you will have to build the executable. First, install required dependencies:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install make build-essential
Depending on OS (eg. Ubuntu Server 20.10) installing Broadcom libraries may be also required:
sudo apt-get install libraspberrypi-dev
After installing dependencies clone this repository and use make
command in order to build executable:
git clone https://github.com/markondej/fm_transmitter
cd fm_transmitter
make
After a successful build you can start transmitting by executing the "fm_transmitter" program:
sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 102.0 acoustic_guitar_duet.wav
Where:
- -f frequency - Specifies the frequency in MHz, 100.0 by default if not passed
- acoustic_guitar_duet.wav - Sample WAV file, you can use your own
Other options:
- -d dma_channel - Specifies the DMA channel to be used (0 by default), type 255 to disable DMA transfer, CPU will be used instead
- -b bandwidth - Specifies the bandwidth in kHz, 100 by default
- -r - Loops the playback
After transmission has begun, simply tune an FM receiver to chosen frequency, You should hear the playback.
On Raspberry Pi 4 other built-in hardware probably interfers somehow with this software making transmitting not possible on all standard FM broadcasting frequencies. In this case it is recommended to:
- Compile executable with option to use GPIO21 instead of GPIO4 (PIN 40 on GPIO header):
make GPIO21=1
- Change either ARM core frequency scaling governor settings to "performance" or to change ARM minimum and maximum core frequencies to one constant value (see: https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=152692 ).
echo "performance"| sudo tee /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq/scaling_governor
- Using lower FM broadcasting frequencies (below 93 MHz) when transmitting.
You can transmitt uncompressed WAV (.wav) files directly or read audio data from stdin, eg.:
sudo apt-get install sox
sox acoustic_guitar_duet.wav -r 22050 -c 1 -b 16 -t wav - | sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 -
Please note only uncompressed WAV files are supported. If you receive the "corrupted data" error try converting the file, eg. by using FFMPEG:
ffmpeg -i not_wav_song.webm -f wav -bitexact -acodec pcm_s16le -ar 22050 -ac 1 song.wav
sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 song.wav
Or you could also use 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
sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 my-converted-audio.wav
In order to use a microphone live input use the arecord
command, eg.:
arecord -D hw:1,0 -c1 -d 0 -r 22050 -f S16_LE | sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 -
In cases of a performance drop down use plughw:1,0
instead of hw:1,0
like this:
arecord -D plughw:1,0 -c1 -d 0 -r 22050 -f S16_LE | sudo ./fm_transmitter -f 100.6 -
Please keep in mind that transmitting on certain frequencies without special permissions may be illegal in your country.
- DMA peripheral support
- Allows custom frequency and bandwidth settings
- Works on every Raspberry Pi model
- Reads mono and stereo files
- Reads data from stdin
Included sample audio was created by graham_makes and published on freesound.org