IMPORTANTGood omnidirectional antennas
will get you hundreds of meters on
1.25mw. When you have hundreds of meters at 1.25mw, and have increased to 100mw and still need more, then consider the RFM23BP. See post on 433mhz antennas tested.
https://forum.librepilot.org/index.php?topic=4199There are 8 non-zero power levels controlled by 3 bits in the OpLink configuration. They are given names like 1.25mw and 100mw, but those are really just names and those two really mean "lowest power" and "highest power", so if you change rfm22b to rfm23bp and set it to 100mw you actually get 1000mw.
Several things to be aware of:
- 1W OpLink needs a 5V-6.00V power supply. You must power the RFM23BP with 6V to get a full 1000mW but the rest of the OpLink needs to be powered by the OpLink 3.3V regulator. That means you can't just connect the RFM23BP power (5V-6.00V) connection where the RFM22B power (3.3V) was connected.
- Due to the design of the RF section of the RFM23BP, the power level does not modulate very well. That is why lower power levels on RFM23BP are not defined in the datasheet. You can reduce the power setting, but don't expect it to follow any nice linear scheme. I also don't know if the RF splatters when you do this. I would suggest RF filters and an RF power meter if you you intend to run reduced power levels. Really... don't be an RF hog and splatter on legal users.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/RF-Power-Meter-27-2400-5800-mhz-arduino-ad8319-5-8Ghz-2-4Ghz-antenna-tool-FPV/253921388053https://www.readymaderc.com/products/details/low-pass-filter-for-433mhz-sma-antennas- The RFM23BP pinout is the same as RFM22B even though it looks like one of the signals is inverted
- The RFM23BP is physically longer than the RFM22B, so you will probably be soldering one side and running wires for the other side.
- For just control, you can have a modded OpLink on the ground and a stock OpLink in the air, but for bi-directional communication, you need both ground and air OpLinks (or Revo or Sparky2) modified.
- Someone was making 1W OpLinks a year or more ago. Kind of expensive, but worth it if you aren't expert at de-soldering, don't have the equipment, or don't consider the tedious upgrade to be a fun part of the hobby.