MoonRF: Phased Array Communication via Raspberry Pi 5 MIPI Interfaces
MoonRF is an open-source hardware project designed for Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) communication and spatial RF visualization using a 240-antenna array. By leveraging the Raspberry Pi 5's MIPI interface, i

The Pitch
MoonRF is an open-source hardware project designed for Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) communication and spatial RF visualization using a 240-antenna array. By leveraging the Raspberry Pi 5's MIPI interface, it attempts to bypass the bandwidth limitations inherent in standard USB-based Software Defined Radios (SDR). A full array is priced at $2,499, while the entry-level QuadRF kit starts at approximately $399 (MoonRF Updates).
Under the Hood
The technical architecture rests on a Lattice ECP5 FPGA and custom MASH sigma-delta ADCs. This setup allows the system to stream 5.6 Gbps of RF data by treating the receiver as a camera (MIPI CSI) and the transmitter as a display (MIPI DSI) to the Raspberry Pi 5 (MoonRF Technical Spec). This approach successfully avoids the traditional SDR bottlenecks that plague lower-cost hardware (Hacker News Comment).
Software availability is currently the primary bottleneck for external evaluation. The developer has slated the GPLv2 release for late April 2026, but the GitHub repository remains private for early contributors (MoonRF Updates). We don't know yet if the late-April deadline will be met, especially given the developer's recent notes on supply chain issues and personal leave (MoonRF Updates).
The "Agentic Transceiver" feature, which claims to use AI to automatically write and debug real-time C code for DSP applications, is facing significant skepticism. Experienced developers have noted that despite the reasoning capabilities of GPT-5 and Claude 4, these models still lack the precision for low-level, real-time signal processing (Hacker News Comment). The marketing here is significantly ahead of the current engineering reality.
Export logistics represent a major risk for international buyers. The high-gain nature of the 240-antenna array likely places it under ITAR or similar export controls. While the project notes "country restrictions apply," a specific list of banned countries has not been made public (Federal Export Regulations Context). Sales to ITAR-proscribed nations like China or Russia are almost certainly barred.
Marcus's Take
MoonRF is a sophisticated piece of RF engineering that should be treated as a high-end experimental kit, not a plug-and-play solution. The MIPI interface hack is genuinely clever for high-bandwidth data, but the "Agentic Transceiver" AI claims are nothing more than marketing fluff to attract venture interest. Buying this expecting an AI to handle your DSP is like asking a golden retriever to manage your packet routing—earnest, but fundamentally incapable. Buy the QuadRF kit if you want to explore the hardware, but avoid the full array until the GPLv2 code is actually public and verified.
Ship clean code,
Marcus.

Marcus Webb - Senior Backend Analyst at UsedBy.ai
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