This Handheld Wi-Fi Signal Strength Meter Packs a Servo to Drive a Physical Dial Gauge

Inspired by the "spirit boxes" of film, this analog gauge lets you know when you've strayed from the path of strong connectivity.

ghalfacree
about 15 hours ago HW101 / 3D Printing

Pseudonymous maker "CrazyScience" has built a Wi-Fi signal strength guide with a difference: it moves a physical dial on a gauge to let you know when you're straying from an access point's sweet spot.

"I have always been using many [smartphone] applications to check my Wi-Fi speed, the process is time consuming and it's not that accurate(in terms of real time)," CrazyScience explains of the need for a dedicated tool. "So I wanted [a way] to visualize the Wi-Fi that [works] in real time! I'm not sure if the spirit boxes work (like you see in movies). But my Wi-Fi meter will definitely work!"

This handheld Wi-Fi signal strength meter uses a physical dial, plus an RGB LED, for at-a-glance feedback. (📷: CrazyScience)

The meter is built around a Lolin Wemos D1 Mini, a compact and low-cost microcontroller board built around Espressif's ESP8266 microcontroller — which includes an integrated single-band 2.4GHz Wi-Fi radio. To this, CrazyScience connected a WS2812B addressable RGB LED and a micro hobby servo.

It's the servo that gives the signal strength meter its physical meter: a bent piece of 3D printing filament is attached to the servo and calibrated to point at a hand-drawn gauge depending on received signal strength. As you move further away from the Wi-Fi access point, or otherwise experience a drop in signal strength, the pointer rotates — and rotates back again as you correct your position for maximum Wi-Fi quality.

While the gadget can be used entirely on its own, it also provides a self-hosted web page which duplicates the gauge's display — meaning it can also replace smartphone-based signal strength apps, too.

The project is documented in full, including source code, on Instructables.

ghalfacree

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

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