Julian Oliver's Rugged Meshtastic Node Is a Portable Toolkit for Rapid Disaster Response

"I wanted a nice yellow case as it's cooler in the sun, and cooler in general," the maker adds, "but they were out of stock."

Artist and critical engineer Julian Oliver has spent a weekend prototyping a portable Meshtastic node for disaster response situations — acting as both a mesh network for text communications and a Wi-Fi access point for disseminating useful information.

"Glad to share a fun weekend project, a powerful Meshtastic node in a waterproof & rugged case," Oliver writes of the project, "for use in comms blackout situations/emergencies. It allows for texting across the mesh with a smartphone. It also has an offline Wi-Fi network serving both the Collapsible wiki and simple usage instructions."

Oliver's device is designed to serve as a node in a Meshtastic network — a community-driven project that turns low-cost hardware into clients and repeaters on a LoRa-based long-range low-power mesh radio network. Unlike most, though, it's been built with disaster response in mind: it's housed in a rugged case, which provides both protection from the elements and easy portability, with a solar panel added on the outside to keep a 12Ah 12.8V deep-cycle lithium battery topped up — good for around a week of operation, Oliver estimates.

Inside the housing is a Raspberry Pi Zero W single-board computer and a LILYGO T-Beam LoRa development board with integrated u-blox Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receiver. "I went with a trusty VERT900 antenna," Oliver adds, "which I interfaced via SMA by repurposing the case’s pressure valve hole. It performs great in the ~915MHz space and is rugged. I haven’t range-tested yet, but for line-of-sight 50km [around 31 miles] should be easy."

While the device is functional as-is, Oliver is planning a range of upgrades — including using the spare space in the case to pack a laminated instruction card, torch, first-aid kit, and even a preconfigured and pre-charged Android smartphone with the Meshtastic software available to serve to other device. "I wanted a nice yellow case as it's cooler in the sun, and cooler in general," Oliver adds, "but they were out of stock."

More information is available in Oliver's Mastodon thread.

Gareth Halfacree
Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.
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