Discovery Drive

A motorized antenna rotator engineered for the Discovery Dish

Available for pre-order

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Apr 09, 2026

Project update 5 of 6

Measuring Antenna Gain Radiation Patterns

by KrakenRF Inc

Once again we want to thank all backers. The campaign is coming along well, and we expect to be in a position to begin ordering parts once the campaign ends and the campaign funds hit.

In this update, we’ll examine an alternative use case: measuring antenna gain radiation patterns.

One interesting use of a capable Az/El rotator is to measure the radiation pattern of various antennas. This is normally done in an anechoic chamber, but if you have a large enough open space, it can be done cheaply with a rotator and signal source.

To test this as a proof of concept, we used Claude code to very quickly create a tool that could help us create an antenna pattern plot. The software tool simply rotates the antenna on the Discovery Drive one step at a time, measures the SNR using an RTL-SDR, and plots the reading on a graph. To be clear, this simple setup is not providing any sort of calibrated readings, but it will at least give you an idea of what the radiation pattern and performance of an antenna looks like.

In our test, we mounted a TV Yagi on the Discovery Drive and used our software to plot the radiation pattern at 433 MHz. As expected from a Yagi, we see higher gain at the front and lower gain at the rear.

Due to a lack of a suitable open area, this test was performed in a small backyard and, hence, the radiation pattern is a little lopsided due to multipath. In this test, we also used a simple omnidirectional antenna for the signal source, which exacerbated the multipath. A way to improve this test would be to use a directional antenna on the transmit side, too.

We will release this open-source tool for others to play with, but please be aware that it was only created for proof of concept. However, if there is interest, we can continue to refine it.

Below is a photo of the physical setup. A HackRF with Portapack and whip antenna are mounted on a tripod a few meters away, while the Discovery Drive carries a Yagi antenna. As the Discovery Drive rotates the Yagi through 0 to 360° in azimuth and -30 to 90° in elevation, it measures the received power at each step.


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Discovery Drive is part of Qorvo RF Accelerator

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