There’s an attention-grabbing growth in newbie ballooning: utilizing so-called superpressure balloons, which float excessive within the environment indefinitely somewhat than merely going up and up after which popping like a traditional climate balloon. Superpressure balloons can final for months and journey lengthy distances, doubtlessly circumnavigating the globe, all of the whereas reporting their place.
You may think that an enterprise like this is able to be immensely tough and price 1000’s of {dollars}. In truth, you’ll be able to construct and launch such a balloon for about the price of a elaborate dinner out. You simply must suppose small! That’s why newbie balloonists name them pico balloons.
The payload of a pico balloon is so gentle (between 12 to 30 grams) that you should use a big Mylar occasion balloon full of helium to carry it. They’re additionally cheap; that’s vital since you received’t get your payload again. And since such diminutive payloads don’t pose a hazard to plane, they aren’t topic to the various guidelines and restrictions on free-floating balloons that carry extra mass.
The important advances that made pico ballooning potential have been determining the way to monitor a balloon irrespective of the place on this planet it is likely to be and the way to energy such tiny payloads. Quite a lot of people labored on these challenges and got here up with good options that aren’t laborious or costly to breed.
What’s WSPR?
Amazingly, the worldwide monitoring of the balloon’s telemetry is finished with out satellites. As a substitute, pico balloonists make the most of an amateur-radio community referred to as WSPR (Weak Sign Propagation Reporter), a protocol developed by a somewhat well-known ham-radio fanatic—Joseph Hooton Taylor Jr., one of many two scientists awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize in Physics for locating binary pulsars.
A Raspberry Pi Pico microcontroller [top left] is soldered on to a daughterboard consisting of a high-frequency transmitter and a GPS module [bottom left], that are all powered by solar panels [right].James Provost
WSPR was designed to watch signal-propagation situations for various radio bands—helpful data in case you’re a ham making an attempt to make distant contacts. WSPR also can report low-power balloon-telemetry indicators. WSPR could be very low bandwidth—lower than 10 bits per minute—nevertheless it does the job. A worldwide community of radio amateurs receives these WSPR indicators and stories them publicly over the internet, which supplies picoballoonists a method to monitor their flights. You want no less than a general-class ham-radio license to launch a pico balloon, as one is required to transmit on the bands used for long-distance telemetry.
The pico balloon payload I selected to construct relies on the aptly named US $4 Raspberry Pi Pico board, with a solder-on daughterboard that accommodates a GPS receiver and transmitter. The parents who developed this daughterboard and related software program (to create what they name the Jetpack WSPR Tracker) have completed a implausible job of constructing their work simple to breed.
You would, in precept, energy the Jetpack tracker with batteries, however in follow it might be unattainable to maintain them heat within the stratosphere, the place common temperatures could be as little as –51 °C. As a substitute, the tracker runs off two light-weight photo voltaic modules. At evening, it gracefully powers down. When the solar rises excessive sufficient within the morning, the tracker powers up and begins transmitting once more.
My first pico balloon made it solely midway throughout the Atlantic earlier than going silent.
I had 5 Jetpack boards custom-manufactured in China for simply $39. The price practically doubled after including delivery and tariff expenses. Nonetheless that’s actually low cost, even if you add the price of the Raspberry Pi ($4), the party balloon ($10 for 2), the helium ($10 at my native grocery store), and the 2 solar modules ($7 every).
The largest sticking level I had with the Jetpack design was the liberties it takes with spurious emissions from its transmitter. Federal Communications Fee (FCC) rules name for spurious emissions to be no less than 43 decibels under the facility of the transmitted sign. However my transmitter had sturdy undesirable emissions at odd harmonics of the elemental frequency. (That’s as a result of the transmitter is a Si5351A temperature-controlled oscillator, which outputs a sq. wave, not a sinusoid.) Taking measurements, I may see that the third harmonic at 42 megahertz was solely 25 dB quieter than the 14-MHz basic of my WSPR sign’s frequency.
As of press time, the WSPR community had tracked my balloon from the Jap United States to the Mediterranean coast. James Provost
In sensible phrases, this shouldn’t create any noticeable interference, provided that this transmitter places out milliwatts at most and floats miles away from the closest receiver. Nonetheless, I needed to be absolutely compliant with FCC rules, so I added traps to the antenna—easy circuit components that hams use to permit a single antenna to work on a number of bands by altering how the antenna resonates at completely different frequencies. Every entice was made from a small inductor (4 5-millimeter-diameter loops of No. 32 magnet wire) in parallel with a 220-picofarad capacitor. I tuned them with the assistance of a NanoVNA sign analyzer by stretching the loops aside barely. I connected the traps on to the tracker board, in order that they quashed the spurious 42-MHz emissions on the supply. That labored effectively and added solely 0.3 grams of weight.
With my payload full, I partially stuffed my balloon with helium. You need the balloon to carry just a bit extra gasoline than it takes to carry the payload off the bottom. This may give the helium room to increase because the balloon climbs to its last altitude.
My first pico balloon, launched from a park close to my residence in North Carolina, made it solely midway throughout the Atlantic earlier than going silent. My second went up and was by no means heard from once more. The third was certainly the appeal. It crossed the Iberian Peninsula and on the time of this writing is someplace over the Mediterranean at an altitude of practically 12 kilometers. Optimistically, it might go on to orbit the planet.
I’m slightly puzzled concerning the balloons’ telemetry messages obtained on the WSPR community, as they’ve been few and much between. My finest guess is that energy from the horizontal photo voltaic panels I’m utilizing is marginal, with the winter solar being so low within the sky. That’s one thing I ought to have thought of earlier than launching the primary balloon simply 24 hours after the winter solstice!
This text seems within the February 2026 print situation as “Lengthy-Length Newbie Ballooning.”
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