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Realtek RTL SDR £15 Dongle Explored

The Realtek RTL2832U dongle is probably about the most useful thing that a ham can spend £15 on. It’s a USB dongle that you plug into your PC, and with the installation of a piece of free software, you have a powerful Software Defined Radio (SDR) that can receive signals from 24MHz right up into the GHz range.

The Realtek RTL2832U Radio Tuner USB Stick
The Realtek RTL2832U Radio Tuner USB Stick

We’ve already put together a page on this device (see Realtek SDR for under £20), but we’re now adding this dedicated page to help with purchase, installation and usage of this handy little dongle.

Realtek RTL2832U SDR Dongle Availability

Realtek RTL-SDR DongleHere’s where to get the original RTL-SDR dongle (R820T chipset), or the second generation blue model with the R820T2 chipset offering slightly better performance:

  • Realtek RTL-SDR (R820T) at Amazon
  • Updated Realtek RTL-SDR (R820T2) at Amazon (improved performance)
  • Realtek RTL2832U Dongle on eBay UK

The dongle can be used as a Freeview receiver, DAB radio receiver and even for aircraft tracking, but on this page, we’re concentrating on using this for FM and SSB amateur radio signals, to keep it simple.

SDR# Software Defined Radio package
SDR# Software Defined Radio package

 

Setting up the RTL Dongle as an SDR

Don’t install any of the software that comes with the dongle. Instead, do the following:

  1. Go to airspy.com/download and download “Windows SDR Software Package”
  2. Extract the contents of the file you’ve just downloaded to a folder on your PC. We opted for c:\sdrsharp\
  3. Run the file install-rtlsdr.bat – This will download and install the drivers for the RTL dongle
  4. In the \sdrsharp\ folder, you will see a file called Zadig.exe – Run this to install the drivers

If you don’t see your RTL dongle in the pulldown list, go to Options > List All Devices. Our dongle showed as “Bulk-In, Interface (Interface 0)”. Select your dongle, and press the install driver button

Installing the Zadig drivers for use with SDRSharp
Installing the Zadig drivers for use with SDRSharp

Once Zadig has installed the drivers, you’re good to go.

Starting SDR#

With the drivers installed, go to the /sdrsharp/ folder and select SDRSharp.exe to start the program.

From the pulldown at the top left, select “RTL-SDR / USB” as the source, and press the Start button (black ‘Play’ symbol)

The first thing you will want to tweak is the RF gain – which by default is set to 0. Go to ‘Configure’ (the cog symbol on the toolbar), and increase this. I have played with either setting the slider to 20dB, or using the “Tuner AGC” checkbox, and both seem to give decent results.

SDR# RF Gain Setting
SDR# RF Gain Setting

 

SDR# Realtek Settings
SDR# Realtek Settings

Next, it’s a case of setting up the main SDR settings – some of these are personal preference and can be tinkered with. Assuming you’re after something suitable for amateur radio, try the following:

  • NFM (Narrowband FM)
  • Bandwidth=7500
  • Squelch: ticked and set to 80
  • Order: 500
  • Snap to grid: Unticked
  • Step size; 12.5kHz
  • Correct IQ: Ticked

If you want to try out something that will work easily, try switching to WFM (Wideband FM) and tune to a broadcast radio station between 88 and 108MHz – If connected to even a basic aerial, you should be able to tune in to am FM broadcast station to confirm that you can receive and tune into radio signals.

Problems with the RTL Dongle

Here are a couple of common issues that we’ve discovered along the way… hopefully these answers may help…

No signals received

  • Use the Configuration button (cog-shaped icon) and check that the RF gain isn’t set too low

Signals, but can’t hear anything?

  • Check you have the right mode… NFM (Narrowband FM) or USB for 2m amateur comms
  • Make sure the “Unity gain” box is not ticked
SDR# Centre Spike
SDR# Centre Spike

Large peak in the middle of the screen ?

  • Tick the “Correct IQ” button

Not showing the right frequency?

  • Ours too. The fix was to tune to a known frequency and then enter a frequency correction. We did this in Configuration (the cog icon). We entered a frequency correction (ppm) of “57”, which worked for us – but other dongles may have a very different offset.

I need a better antenna!

  • The one supplied with the Realtek is pretty basic – much better to connect to a decent antenna. If you’re after a connector, try this one: Portable MCX Adapter Cable at Maplin – I snipped off the supplied plug and replaced it with a BNC.

Having a problem we’ve not listed here? Get in touch, or add a comment below and we’ll try to help.

 

Handy SDR# Add-ons

There are lots of handy plug-ins for SDR# – We’re keen on the “Frequency Manager + Scanner plugin”, which can turn your RTL SDR into a scanner – www.sdrsharpplugins.com

Low-price HF SDR?

Looking for an HF dongle that can cover the HF bands? Try the SDR Radio, which is based on this dongle’s chipset.

Handy Links

  • Using the RTL-SDR dongle on a Raspberry Pi
  • List of software that can be used with the Realtek SDR
  • Freeview, DAB, FM, Aircraft and Amateur radio for under £10

Comments (37) on “Realtek RTL SDR £15 Dongle Explored”

  1. Ricky (M6DII) says:
    7 September 2014 at 06:35

    Great Help Pete, I was up early this morning configuring SDR. Your simple plain talking instructions made it easy to configure and be up and running.
    So thanks for that !!!

    Reply
    1. Pete M0PSX says:
      7 September 2014 at 23:18

      Really glad to hear it was useful Ricky – Thanks for the feedback, and enjoy the dongle!

      Reply
  2. jon says:
    6 December 2014 at 18:02

    Hi,do you know of a way to run the RTL dongle on Linux,linuxmint17 ubuntu derivative,.
    I do have Win7,but do my VHF/UHF on Linux and use Cqrlog.
    Jon. G8CCL

    Reply
    1. chris_debian M6BSN says:
      5 August 2015 at 19:44

      This may be of use:

      http://linuxtracker.org/index.php?page=torrent-details&id=cf412240ffcaad6edaace0a2bca0ca410d2ac353&_m=3n.004f.1425.ea0ao00hou.t5w

      Reply
    2. NC7u says:
      9 May 2019 at 06:38

      Using Mint 19.x just install any of the Ubuntu methods.

      Reply
  3. Ottavio says:
    10 January 2015 at 15:28

    Hello, I bought a similar dongle from Amazon USA some time ago and never used it until recently. Yesterday I installed both SDR# (with Zadig drivers) and the supplied BLAZE software (with Realtek DVB drivers). The two applications seem to neuter each other. If you install zadig, you can’t watch tv, if then you install the realtek drivers you can’t use it as an SDR tuner.

    Is it something I have to live with or is there a solution?

    Thanks

    Ottavio

    Reply
    1. Pete M0PSX says:
      10 January 2015 at 15:51

      Something you have to live with – Windows can only have one driver per active USB device.

      Reply
  4. Paul Jenner says:
    5 July 2015 at 00:01

    Hi there,

    I downloaded the program SDR radio Pro. Downloaded the three dll’s as well, as per your instruction. Program starts up alright. Alas I cannot add my newly arrived Realtek USB dongle. I cannot get it installed. SDR Radio Pro says : “nothing found, sorry” when I try tp add the Realtek in the “radio definitions / search / RTL SDR USB menu. Windows also says that the “new found device” might not be installed properly.

    Can you be of any assistance ?

    T.i.a.

    Paul.

    Reply
  5. Paul Jenner says:
    5 July 2015 at 00:02

    sorry, wrong email subscription. Should be pauljennner@live.nl

    Reply
  6. Rainaldo says:
    16 October 2015 at 16:20

    i need binary file eeprom this dongle my dongle damege removed in use.
    Tank!

    Reply
  7. Gerry says:
    18 October 2016 at 21:22

    Hi, Have managed to get the dongle “recognised” and can tune in broadcast radio stations, on the “tail” of the dongle antenna. ( chopped it off and put a tv joiner on, to connect to my HF antenna, or to a Digital TV antenna)

    Have managed to get digital tv working… BUT..

    cannot get any M.W. or S.W. broadcast or Amateur radio signals on my long wire.. Got a “proper” communications receiver that works well on the long wire. Find signal on Rcvr, then go to RTL dongle (sdr) and no movement on the waterfall, nor sound from the same frequency.

    Reply
  8. Paul says:
    18 October 2016 at 21:41

    Rtl dongles don’t do such low frequencies. You need some sort of step up device to get the signal into the area where the rtl has it’s sensitivity.

    Reply
  9. John Griffiths says:
    13 October 2017 at 22:05

    Hi Pete et al,
    I have set up the dongle as per your instructions and all appears to be correct. Unfortunately even when trying your WFM suggestion, I get peaks showing and when I place the tuner on them they give a VFO etc message, but I cannot get any station sound. I can get background hiss elsewhere. I have tried your suggestions to date, but still no station sound. I am running Windows 10. Any other suggestions for a complete novice?. Thanks, John.

    Reply
    1. Pete M0PSX says:
      13 October 2017 at 23:47

      If you’re local to Essex, I can take you through setting up the dongle at Monday’s Skills Night in Danbury. Alternatively, tinker with the SDRSharp settings under Audio and AGC – it’s probably something in there.

      Reply
  10. Keith Middleton says:
    18 July 2018 at 17:51

    Hi. I was looking for a sdr dongle to receive our hf ham bands, as I see it with the RTL sdr I would nead to use a up converter If this is the case what would you suggest. Many thanks for your help.
    Best 73′
    Keith Middleton.
    G4EJH.

    Reply
  11. Chris says:
    19 April 2019 at 11:00

    I have an RTL.SDR, not a ‘stick’ but a little black box with 2 SMA sockets, one marked UV the other HF, sold as covering 100kHz to 1.7GHz. I followed your instructions and it seems to work fine on VHF, but when I try to tune HF or medium wave with a long wire in the HF socket I get nothing. Any ideas? Also I can’t find what the change-over frequency is between the two sockets.
    Thanks for your most helpful instructions.
    Chris.

    Reply
  12. Rich says:
    30 June 2019 at 18:20

    Hi, I just bought one of these off Ebay. Installed all the same software as you that came on the disc. I can get some Radio channels but no TV whatsoever. What can I do? I’m in South Essex btw

    Reply
  13. Rob says:
    4 September 2019 at 04:02

    Hi,

    When I press the start key (black triangle) all I get isa message saying can not start air spy? any ideas??Please TIA

    Reply
  14. Vaughn says:
    8 December 2019 at 16:57

    Ok, so trying to make this work on a Raspberry Pi 3. Did all the downloads and followed the instructions, but my Pi will not install the drivers for this device. I’m using Rasbaian made form Noobs, and so think I need the Linex version of the drivers. These I have tried for both the 32 and 64 bit files but still no luck. every time I try to run the setup files, it opens them in Geney, a compiler. One compiles, the other is missing a part, but after this neither will run and install, both crash and give an error in the command line box, execute format error. then go no further.

    Can you help in any way please

    73s Vaughn

    Reply
    1. Pete M0PSX says:
      8 December 2019 at 17:06

      Hi Vaughn,

      Try this tutorial for getting the RTL running as an SDR… https://www.essexham.co.uk/raspberry-pi-as-an-sdr.html

      Pete

      Reply
  15. John Cliff says:
    11 April 2020 at 16:49

    Pete M0PSX.
    Hi there. You are doing a great job helping people out there with the use of SDR dongles.
    I kept insisting to my grandson to take in every thing he was taught at school and at home. It obviously sunk in. He reads a lot of these comments and express grief at some peoples questions. He ask’s me why they have asked that and another question. I then tell him because they have not learned to read. He is only 6 years old and can see now why it is so important that he did as asked in his education.
    73 de John – G0WXU

    Reply
  16. 2e0pas says:
    19 April 2020 at 22:52

    Sorry am a bit perplexed about this.
    You say buy one of these Dongle Sadr then you say but do not install any of the software that comes with
    And instead download airspy.c/download and Windows software package then want is the pinot in buying the Dongle. And later you say get the portable Mac adapter cable at marlin sorry maplin is no more in 2020 and replace the plug with a bunc
    Can you tell me what I am to buy
    Andy 2e0pas

    Reply
  17. john myers says:
    12 May 2020 at 18:12

    Hi can anybody help when i plug the dongle in windows 10 it sets up its self. i follow instructions for airspy but when i open Zadig.exe it says about replacing driver which is a system driver. if i do that some of my usb devises dont work any more ie keyboard (wireless ) so when i try to run airspy and select my dongle “RTL-SDR / USB” it says cannot access RTL device any ideas ??????????? John.

    Reply
  18. john myers says:
    12 May 2020 at 18:16

    Got it going now on funcube dongle pro setting

    Reply
  19. john myers says:
    12 May 2020 at 18:27

    All i can hear on funcube is my self when i talk lol

    Reply
  20. Kevin C says:
    19 May 2020 at 14:58

    No signal ? buy a usb extansion cable & try that – I found there was too much QRM from my ( replacement) laptop power brick – but once I could get the usb stick further away – bingo !

    Reply
  21. mw7cbw says:
    5 September 2020 at 00:57

    Hi, I’m struggling with the dongles. I have the nooelec smartee with bias t and ham-it-up nano converter. I’ve also got nooelec push button balun. What exact length of wire aerial should I be using for HF (Do I use dipole or end-fed) as I don’t have access to swr and atu? I’ve adjusted -125MHz and have cubesdr installed on apple, gprx and openwebrx on raspberry pi. Struggling with configuration on openwebrx with two dongles, as above with smart??? No bias t in addition.
    Thank you. Hope this makes sense to someone.

    Reply
  22. AdriHD says:
    15 September 2020 at 23:44

    Funny I should come across this (and you Pete) :-) I just came off your recent course.

    I’ve been struggling with these dongles too.The LimeSDR and ADALM Pluto ones seem to behave. For some reason the rtl8232u/R802T2 mix are a nightmare with noise.

    I might be doing something wrong, but I believe that the Rafael R802T2 is a quirky, but I’m probably overlooking something causing the inherent noise.

    Anything between 20k – 40M (using direct sampling as well as tuning) and ~50 – 70Mhz is noisy as heck. It sounds like there’s a noisy motor nearby causing it. When I pop past the ~500 Mhz area it sorts itself out, but then Freeview etc… bands kick in…

    I’m running out of them myself, as well as coil wire, ferrite rings, caps and the rest. I’m pretty sure that the noise is locally generated? Or I have a setting wrong (one or the other).

    Any ideas?

    Cheers,

    Ade

    Reply
  23. AdriHD says:
    15 September 2020 at 23:51

    @mw7cbw I didn’t notice your post there a moment ago? Weird…

    I’m in the same boat. Only different is I’m not using an upconverter. I’m literally using direct sampling on the lower bands and back to IQ.

    Funnily enough I’m mainly on apple too and have struggled with VMWare + etc… but had to resort back to an older HP Windows laptop, but same issues.

    Also about the RPI, they aren’t very RTLSDR friendly if they’re not a RPI 3 or 4+ When a higher sample rate is demanded from USB, the RPI can’t keep up with the power drain for starters, then even with a powered hub, it can’t handle the number of buffers (and the sheer size of them) so the kernel keels over.

    I did see an article about rtl_tcp and a few mods adding/altering ring-buffers which make a HUGE difference, but still strain the raspberry. Google up “rtl_tcp ring buffer” and you’ll see it’s the first post. When I get some time, I’ll play with that too.

    Reply
  24. Jessica McMartin says:
    18 November 2020 at 10:27

    Hi I’m thinking about getting the dongle. Do I need to get a small antenna as I seen other dongles on Amazon come with small mad mount antenna’s

    Reply
    1. Pete M0PSX says:
      18 November 2020 at 10:33

      Most of the ones I’ve seen on Amazon do come with a small mag-mount, but for better results, a larger /better antenna is advised

      Reply
      1. Ant says:
        14 July 2021 at 03:44

        Pete,
        Can you tell me if the Rtl-sdr.com or nooelec a better buy and worth the extra cash ?

        Reply
  25. John cliff says:
    3 January 2021 at 04:18

    After reading through most of the comments, it appears that users do not understand the basic principles of the importance of the correct antenna for the use on a particular frequency band. For a wide band coverage, a “Disk-cone”style or type of antenna is very useful. It does not however give any signal gain to were you want to receive. They are made for a set frequency bands. The larger they are. Then the wider range they have. Another important thing is not to overload the dongle with too strong a signal. Trial and error will tell you where you are going wrong. Keep experimenting and trying new ideas. A great deal of fun can be had with this type of receiver for the price. Make sure you read the setup instructions and totally ignore the driver provided on the mini disk. That is to use the device for its original intended purpose as a TV tuner. The latest ones appear to have been improved well for stability on the tuning. i.e the accuracy the actual receiving frequency . They are more costly but you gets what you pay for.
    73 de John – G0WXU.

    Reply
  26. Philip Ball says:
    23 January 2021 at 13:47

    I’m getting excellent results with the Nooelec NESDR SMArt v4 SDR. About £30 but it’s frequency stabilised (0.5 ppm). Also, it’s built into a decent aluminium case which helps with heat dissipation (these things can get quite hot). I use mine mainly for the civil aircraft band and have a half wave dipole in the loft tuned for 127.5 MHz.

    Reply
  27. Peter says:
    25 July 2022 at 10:26

    Pertinent comments from John.
    We do need an external antenna to the dongle, such are far more efficient than the internal antennæ that are fitted inside mobile telephones, or the far more limited antennæ inside WiFi and Bluetooth dongles, or in Bluetooth headphones.
    And yes we do need to tailor the size of the antenna for the frequency(ies) we wish to receive or listen to, for better response. Something like 5-20metre of wire is OK for reasonable short wave reception, and one can be even more specific for certain of those bands. For VHF/UHF bands one really needs to think of the very wide coverage one can have, and maybe find room for a discone.
    As is stated elsewhere an active antenna can be used to cover reception of wider swathes of spectrum, these are useful even with the compromises made in them, and the ground or counterweight they use.

    Reply
  28. Edwin Holt says:
    10 February 2024 at 21:14

    Hi, I’m a bit of a newbie to all of this. My RTL-SDR arrived. Plugged it and and got started without any problem. What I don’t understand is the NFM settings suggested. I’m confused by the bandwidth 7500. What unit is that. How does that relate to NFM frequency.
    Regards
    Ed

    Reply
    1. Pete says:
      10 February 2024 at 21:42

      Amateur transmissions are normally NFM (narrow). Broadcast radio stations would be WFM (wide). Bandwidth depends on the signal you’re decoding so will vary.

      Reply

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viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
CookieDurationDescription
apbct_pixel_urlsessionCleanTalk set this cookie to provide spam protection.
__cf_bm30 minutesThis cookie, set by Cloudflare, is used to support Cloudflare Bot Management.
Performance
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
CookieDurationDescription
_gat1 minuteThis cookie is installed by Google Universal Analytics to restrain request rate and thus limit the collection of data on high traffic sites. For details of this cookie, go to Google's Privacy & Terms site
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
CookieDurationDescription
CONSENT2 yearsYouTube sets this cookie via embedded youtube-videos and registers anonymous statistical data.
ct_screen_infosessionCleanTalk sets this cookie to complete an anti-spam solution and firewall for the website, preventing spam from appearing in comments and forms.
UID1 year 1 month 4 daysScorecard Research sets this cookie for browser behaviour research.
_ga1 year 1 month 4 daysThe _ga cookie, installed by Google Analytics, calculates visitor, session and campaign data and also keeps track of site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookie stores information anonymously and assigns a randomly generated number to recognize unique visitors. For details of this cookie, go to Google's Privacy & Terms site
_gat_gtag_UA_*1 minuteSet by Google to distinguish users. For details of this cookie, go to Google's Privacy & Terms site
_gid1 dayInstalled by Google Analytics, _gid cookie stores information on how visitors use a website, while also creating an analytics report of the website's performance. Some of the data that are collected include the number of visitors, their source, and the pages they visit anonymously. For details of this cookie, go to Google's Privacy & Terms site
__gads1 year 24 daysThe __gads cookie, set by Google, is stored under DoubleClick domain and tracks the number of times users see an advert, measures the success of the campaign and calculates its revenue. This cookie can only be read from the domain they are set on and will not track any data while browsing through other sites. For details of this cookie, go to Google's Privacy & Terms site
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
CookieDurationDescription
DSID1 hourThis cookie is set by DoubleClick to note the user's specific user identity. It contains a hashed/encrypted unique ID.
ebaysessionThe domain of this cookie is owned by Ebay. This cookie is used for targeting and advertising purpose.
IDE1 year 24 daysGoogle DoubleClick IDE cookies are used to store information about how the user uses the website to present them with relevant ads and according to the user profile.
mc1 year 1 monthQuantserve sets the mc cookie to anonymously track user behaviour on the website.
test_cookie15 minutesThe test_cookie is set by doubleclick.net and is used to determine if the user's browser supports cookies.
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE5 months 27 daysA cookie set by YouTube to measure bandwidth that determines whether the user gets the new or old player interface.
YSCsessionYSC cookie is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos on Youtube pages.
yt-remote-connected-devicesneverYouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.
yt-remote-device-idneverYouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.
yt.innertube::nextIdneverThis cookie, set by YouTube, registers a unique ID to store data on what videos from YouTube the user has seen.
yt.innertube::requestsneverThis cookie, set by YouTube, registers a unique ID to store data on what videos from YouTube the user has seen.
__gpi1 year 24 daysGoogle Ads Service uses this cookie to collect information about from multiple websites for retargeting ads. For details of this cookie, go to Google's Privacy & Terms site
__qcaneverThe __qca cookie is associated with Quantcast. This anonymous data helps us to better understand users' needs and customize the website accordingly.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
CookieDurationDescription
DEVICE_INFO5 months 27 daysNo description
dp12 yearsNo description available.
nonsession2 yearsNo description available.
rtid14 years 10 months 2 days 1 hourDescription unavailable.
ssessionNo description
slimstat_tracking_code1 monthNo description available.
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