Hello Adam
I am no expert but I have built my own Receivers as well as a SoftRF FLARM unit to fly with. I have experimented with the Raspberry Pi SDR based receiver and also T-Beam receivers (both a receiver and a remote relay station) based on Moshe’s ground station software. I’ve been testing my ground stations where I fly out in the West of Ireland - WCORK is the Raspberry Pi based receiver and WCORK2B which is the remote relay station. They don’t see much activity since they are currently both on the west side of a 450m hill facing the Atlantic, but since my partner and I regularly fly paragliders in this area it makes us electronically visible when we are flying - the same airspace is used by a flying school light aircraft, Coastguard and HEMS helicopters and a maintenance helicopter for the local lighthouses, so anything to improve e-conspicuity helps!
I’m offering my advice because since I’m not an expert I understand how confusing all the options and setup can be. You will find that there is a great community to offer assistance, and once you have a receiver set up it should be reliable and need little updating and maintenance, the various software is pretty reliable.
The simplest and probably cheapest setup is to get a T-Beam with the OLED mini display, add a better quality GNSS antenna, a better main antenna for the appropriate frequency (868 in my case) and an 18650 battery and put it into a box of some sort for protection. With a USB solar panel it can be run ‘off grid’ or plugged into a power supply using USB.
The Raspberry Pi uses software which (I believe - it was some time ago I set it up…) from Stefan, and it has run reliable ever since. (WCORK). The Raspberry Pi has to live indoors and needs a better power supply as well as a WiFi connection so it is actually less practical than the T-Beam based receivers, but it was my first project.
The T-Beam receivers use Moshe’s receiver software. For the remote station I use an antenna from AliExpress, an improved GNSS antenna and a solar panel from a security camera all mounted on a length of galvanised water pipe with an outdoor electrical box made of grey plastic to protect the electronics - that seems to work just fine.The Base Station lives in a shed with access to WiFi and a mains connection for power supply.
I fly with a T-Echo (now fitted with the improved battery back which also seems to improve GNSS reception) which i recently updated to Moshe’s MB 173 which seems to work well.
As I said, I’m definitely not an expert, but by following the instructions and getting advice from the community when I have been stuck I’ve found it easy enough to build working receivers and an in-flight FLARM beacon.
Hope that helps to give you an idea of how to get started.
Tony