Close

Vinduino Low Power Wide Area Network

A project log for Vinduino, a wine grower's water saving project

Monitoring soil moisture at different depths to determine when to irrigate, and - more importantly - how much water is needed. Save 25%!

reinier-van-der-leeReinier van der Lee 02/21/2016 at 21:470 Comments

We are hard at work to get first vineyard trial installations done by early April.
Too busy for frequent update logs, but here's a snapshot of what's going on.

There will be an updated design for the Vinduino remote node. See picture below.

Updates include:


As I am still working on finalizing the schematics and PCB, there is no update on Github yet.
Below schematic is not finalized, but provided here for a high level impression.

Range experiments using the FCC approved GlobalTech modules show a range of at least 6 miles. I had one unit set up on the balcony of our house in Temecula, and the other unit was connected to a GPS receiver on the roof of my car, reporting GPS coordinates and RSSI (radio signal strength) every 10 seconds. The data was imported in Google maps, showing the coverage. See picture below.

Basically, for all the wineries located around the main winery road, Rancho California road, there is good coverage. There is another wine trail road, De Portola, that does not have full line-of-sight coverage from my vineyard location. Based this data, we assume that the whole wine region can be covered with a star topology using only 2-3 central hubs. Assuming hourly transmissions per node, we can support up to 300 remote nodes per hub.

In collaboration with Luke Beno's Analog.IO project we are step-by-step resolving the issues of managing a network of this scale.

Discussions