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SDRplay RSP1A vs just using an RTL-SDR dongle — is it actually worth it

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so ive been messing around with an RTL-SDR v3 for about a year now, mostly doing aircraft stuff and occasionally poking around the ham bands just to see whats out there. honestly the dongle has been great for what it is, no complaints considering i paid like $30 for it.

but ive been reading more about the RSP1A and the specs look a lot better on paper — 1kHz to 2GHz, 12-bit ADC vs the 8-bit on the RTL, better dynamic range etc. the price isnt insane either, like $120ish depending where you find it.

question is whether the real-world difference is actually noticeable for general HF monitoring and stuff like that or if im just going to end up with a more expensive dongle that still needs a good antenna to do anything useful. i already have a decent wire antenna out back so thats not the issue. been using SDR# mostly but also tried SDRangel a bit. anyone made that jump and have a take on it?

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Made that exact jump about two years ago and yeah the HF difference is real, not subtle. the 8-bit dynamic range on the RTL dongles is fine until you have any strong signals nearby and then everything kind of smears together. the RSP1A handles that a lot better. i was trying to copy some weak WSPR signals on 40m with the RTL and kept getting wiped out by a local AM broadcast station even with a bandpass filter inline. switched to the RSP1A and it was night and day, like the strong signal just stopped mattering as much.

SDRuno is the native software for it and its... fine. not my favorite interface but it works well with the hardware. i ended up using it with SDR# through a plugin for a while but honestly just got used to SDRuno. if youre already doing HF monitoring regularly i think you'd notice the improvement pretty quick.

HackRF is another option if you want TX capability too, though its receive performance is actually worse than the RTL in some ways, higher noise floor. people forget that. its great for transmit experimentation and the bandwidth is huge (20MHz) but for pure receive monitoring the RSP1A or even an Airspy would probably serve you better. just something to factor in depending on what direction you want to go with this stuff.

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