What is RTL-SDR and What Can You Receive? Complete Guide
You see the world of radio frequencies around you — but you have no way in. Aircraft, satellites, weather stations, IoT sensors, maritime communications — it's all flying through the air, waiting for someone to start listening. RTL-SDR gives you that door for the price of a single gadget.
Table of Contents
- What is SDR and why it changes the game
- What you can receive — real-world applications
- RTL-SDR V3 vs V4 — which to choose
- Antennas — because without them you catch nothing
- Software — where to start
- RTL-SDR vs HackRF — when an upgrade makes sense
- Start here
What is SDR and why it changes the game
SDR (Software Defined Radio) is a radio receiver where signal processing happens in software, not hardware. A traditional radio has fixed circuits and receives one thing. SDR converts raw signal into digital data and hands it to your computer — and you decide what to do with it.
One device. Hundreds of applications. Change the program = change the function. That's why SDR has become standard among pentesters, radio amateurs, and people who simply want to know what's happening in the airwaves around them.
RTL-SDR is a specific USB dongle based on the RTL2832U chip — affordable, with massive community support and compatible with virtually every SDR software on the market.
What you can receive — real-world applications
This isn't a toy that sits in a drawer after a week. Here's what people actually do with RTL-SDR every day:
🛩️ Aviation — aircraft on your map
ADS-B on 1090 MHz. Programs like dump1090 or tar1090 show aircraft positions in real time — exactly like Flightradar24, but from your own antenna, with no dependency on someone else's servers. ACARS (131.550 MHz) carries text messages between aircraft and airlines. Yes — you can read them.
🚢 Maritime traffic — who's sailing nearby
AIS on 161.975 / 162.025 MHz. Positions, headings, ship names in your region. You don't need to live by the sea — major rivers and lakes have AIS traffic too.
🛰️ Weather satellites — images straight from orbit
NOAA satellites (137 MHz) and METEOR-M2 transmit Earth images in real time. With the right antenna and SatDump, you can receive a weather image directly from space. This is one of the most rewarding applications — you're making your own satellite image, not downloading someone else's.
🌡️ Sensors around you — 433 MHz
Home weather stations, temperature sensors, gate remotes, wireless doorbells — everything broadcasts on 433 MHz. The program rtl_433 decodes hundreds of protocols automatically. Plug in the dongle, fire up the program, and suddenly you're seeing your neighbour's temperature readings.
📻 FM radio, DAB+, shortwave
Standard FM reception and digital DAB+. RTL-SDR V4 supports HF (shortwave) natively — from 500 kHz up. You can listen to communications from the other side of the world after sunset, when shortwave bounces off the ionosphere.
🔐 RF security analysis
Frequency identification, modulation analysis, verifying whether IoT devices transmit unencrypted data. RTL-SDR is your eyes in the RF world — you see, analyse, understand. For full RF pentesting with transmission, you need HackRF with PortaPack H4M, but RTL-SDR is ideal for reconnaissance and learning.
RTL-SDR V3 vs V4 — which to choose
Two main versions on the market. The difference is not cosmetic:
| Feature | RTL-SDR V3 | RTL-SDR V4 |
|---|---|---|
| Tuner chip | R820T2 | R828D |
| Range | 24 MHz – 1.7 GHz (HF via direct sampling) | 500 kHz – 1.7 GHz (native HF) |
| HF reception | Direct sampling — lower quality | Native — significantly better |
| FM notch filter | None | Built-in — blocks strong FM stations that interfere with other bands |
| Enclosure | Aluminium | Aluminium (better shielding) |
If you're buying now — get the RTL-SDR V4. Native HF and the FM notch filter are real improvements you'll appreciate from day one.
Antennas — because without them you catch nothing
RTL-SDR without an antenna is like eyes with a blindfold. The antenna determines what and how far you receive.
To start: multi-band antenna kit
The RTL-SDR v3/v4 antenna kit is the best starting point. Telescopic antennas with magnetic base — cover the most commonly used bands. Plug in, set the length for your band, start receiving.
For aviation: 1090 MHz antenna
A simple quarter-wave antenna — you can make one from a piece of wire (69 mm). The higher you place it, the further you'll track aircraft. 200-300 km range from a rooftop is normal.
For NOAA satellites: V-dipole or QFH antenna
Satellites fly overhead — you need an antenna pointed upward. Simplest: two wire arms at 120° (V-dipole) placed outside. QFH antenna gives better results but requires building.
For HF: long wire
Shortwave requires large antennas. A dozen metres of wire hung between trees is the cheapest and most effective solution to start.
Software — where to start
RTL-SDR has no screen of its own — your computer does the work. Good news: everything you need is free.
| Program | Platform | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| SDR++ | Win/Linux/Mac | General receiver — listening, spectrum analysis. Best to start |
| SDR# (SDRSharp) | Windows | Most popular on Windows, simple interface |
| GQRX | Linux/Mac | SDR# equivalent for Linux |
| dump1090 | Win/Linux | ADS-B decoding — aircraft on map |
| rtl_433 | Win/Linux | 433 MHz sensor decoding — automatic |
| SatDump | Win/Linux | Weather satellite image reception |
To start: install SDR++, plug in the dongle, tune to local FM. Works? Time to explore.
RTL-SDR vs HackRF — when an upgrade makes sense
RTL-SDR listens. HackRF listens and talks. That's the fundamental difference:
- RTL-SDR = receive only (RX). Listening, analysis, decoding. check current price
- HackRF Pro = receive + transmit (RX + TX). Successor to HackRF One (discontinued) with better filters and wider dynamic range. Full RF analysis, replay, security testing. check price
- HackRF + PortaPack H4M = HackRF with its own screen and battery. Works without a computer — portable pentesting tool. check price
Start with RTL-SDR. Learn to read spectrum, recognise signals, understand modulations. When you feel that just listening isn't enough and you want to test RF security — then HackRF Pro. Don't buy HackRF "just in case" — RTL-SDR for learning is better because it's simpler and lets you focus on fundamentals.
Start here
- Get the RTL-SDR V4 + antenna kit — that's your starter kit
- Install SDR++ — plug in, tune FM, verify it's alive
- Receive your first aircraft — dump1090 + antenna on 1090 MHz. When you see the first blip on the map — you'll understand what this is about
- Scan 433 MHz — rtl_433 will show you sensors around you that you didn't know existed
- Catch a satellite — NOAA on 137 MHz. Your own image from orbit. This is the moment you know SDR isn't a toy