Saturday, July 16

Baby Monitor Rebuild is also ESP8266 Audio Streaming How-To

[Sven337]’s rebuild of a cheap and terrible baby monitor isn’t super visual, but it has so much more going on than it first seems. It’s also a how-to for streaming audio via UDP over WiFi with a pair of ESP8266 units, and includes a frank sharing of things that went wrong in the process and how they were addressed. [Sven337] even experimented with a couple of different methods for real-time compression of the transmitted audio data, for no other reason than the sake of doing things as well as they can reasonably be done without adding parts or spending extra money.

receiverThe original baby monitor had audio and video but was utterly useless for a number of reasons (French).  The range and quality were terrible, and the audio was full of static and interference that was just as loud as anything the microphone actually picked up from the room. The user is left with two choices: either have white noise constantly coming through the receiver, or be unable to hear your child because you turned the volume down to get rid of the constant static. Our favorite part is the VOX “feature”: if the baby is quiet, it turns off the receiver’s screen; it has no effect whatsoever on the audio! As icing on the cake, the analog 2.4GHz transmitter interferes with the household WiFi when it transmits – which is all the time, because it’s always-on.

Small wonder [Sven337] decided to go the DIY route. Instead of getting dumped in the trash, the unit got rebuilt almost from the ground-up.

inside_full_2Re-using the enclosures meant that the DIY rebuild was something that looked as good as it worked. After all, [Sven337] didn’t want a duct-taped hack job in the nursery. But don’t let the ugly mess inside the enclosure fool you – there is a lot of detail work in this build. The inside may be a mess of wires and breakout boards, but it’s often a challenge to work within the space constraints of fitting a project into some other device’s enclosure.

The ESP8266 works but is not a completely natural fit for an audio baby monitor, as it lacks a quality ADC and DAC. But on the other hand it is cheap, it is easy to use, and it has plenty of processing power. These attributes are the reason the ESP8266 has made its way into so many projects, including household gadgets like this WiFi webcam.


Filed under: digital audio hacks, how-to

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