>> You'll need to work out whether the RTL-SDR supports USB 3.0 or not.
> I bought a genuine dongle from TechnoFix UK. Have looked on their
> site but there is no information on whether USB 2 or USB 3. I then
> did a Google search, trying to find out if a USB 2 or 3, no joy.
It can be difficult to find out. You can look at the USB connector and
compare it to photos on Google. If it's USB 3.0 it will have an extra
set of pins at the back of the connector. If it's missing those extra
pins, it's 100% definitely USB 2.0 only. If it *does* have the pins,
it could be USB 3.0 but it may also be USB 2.0 and it doesn't use the
extra pins so more checks are needed.
I think in your case you will probably find looking at the connector it
is only USB 2.0 though, so that will answer the question for certain.
If it does have the extra USB 3.0 pins then more investigation will be
required.
It's been a while since I used Windows but Device Manager used to have
an option to show by connection type instead of by device type. If
that still there then it will show you whether the dongle is listed
underneath a USB2 or USB3 controller which will answer the question for
certain as well.
> I only need an active USB cable, don't need a 1m length of coaxial
> cable? The MegaLoop MLA-30+ magnetic loop antenna has a long length
> of cable with an SMA connector on the end,see attached, the dongle
> also has the dongle attached to it, see attached. I'm afraid I'm
> getting very confused as to how I connect up the antenna in the loft
> via some type of cable to the laptop in a room below?
I wouldn't worry about the cable at the moment. It's not going to
break anything if you don't have the extra cable, you may just get some
additional noise on certain frequencies. It's something you can deal
with later if you're finding you are having problems receiving a good
signal. More important to get the dongle working first, you can deal
with signal quality issues later, if you even have those issues as you
may find the noise is on bands you aren't trying to listen to anyway.
> Regarding USB 3 active cable, when I was trying to find if the dongle
> was USB2/3 I read a bit about compatibility between an active USB 2
> cable and USB 3 port on the laptop, seems to be a whole can of worms,
> my laptop has USB 3 ports.
USB in general is very difficult to get working reliably at longer
cable lengths. I've used active copper extender cables before and even
at only five metres long they will work fine with some devices but not
others. The worst was a USB 3.0 flash drive that appeared to work fine
but it would write corrupted files - too me a while to figure that one
out.
Personally I avoid USB extension cables wherever I can because I've had
so many issues with them.
Cheers,
Adam.