NOAA Weather Radio Design (followups)
Just wanted to correct some items in a 2014 thread on this topic.
The NOAA weather radio information is NBFM (narrow band FM) on 7 frequencies centered around 162.4 Mhz. The NOAA weather satellite information (pictures) is on a completely different frequency around 137 Mhz.
The NOAA weather radio has a computer voice reading the forecast, along with digital information on specific alerts.
The weather radio signal uses FM modulation, which means is can be processed with an FM decoder chip used for older amateur radio equipment.
In 1998, the SAME (specific area message encoding) technology became available, it's better to use the baseband output from an FM decode to demodulate that.
In 2015, if you want the most flexibility, I'd recommend a software-defined radio approach.
Essentially you hook up an A/D converter with an appropriate RF front-end to your computer, and let it do the decoding of the radio signals / filtering work.
https://www.rtl-sdr.com/rtl-sdr-tutorial-receiving-noaa-weather-satellite-images/ (for older-style transmissions) or
https://www.rtl-sdr.com/rtl-sdr-tut...atellite-images-in-real-time-with-an-rtl-sdr/ (for the Meteor N2 images - newer modulation)
For the satellite signals, you will need a good outdoor antenna.
For the NOAA Weather Radio signals (found in the US and Canada), you may need a better antenna than the short "whip" antenna a typical weather radio comes with.
The NOAA web site has plans for a 162 Mhz antenna:
**broken link removed**