Budget MeshCore Repeater: Under $60
Budget MeshCore Repeater: Under $60
Not every deployment calls for a weatherproof solar installation. For indoor sites - offices, community centers, apartment building hallways, or any location with reliable mains power - a minimal MeshCore repeater built around the RAK WisBlock platform delivers excellent performance at a fraction of the cost of a full outdoor build.
Bill of Materials
Prices below are approximate and as of early 2026; they vary by retailer, variant, and import tariffs, so treat the total as an estimate rather than a fixed figure. Check the linked vendors for current pricing.
| Component | Purpose | Approx. Cost (early 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| RAK4631 WisBlock Core | nRF52840 + SX1262 LoRa SoC | ~$18-24 (store.rakwireless.com) |
| RAK19007 WisBlock Base Board (2nd Gen, USB-C) | USB-C power, slot carrier | ~$9.99 MSRP (~$15 via US distributor) |
| 915 MHz 5 dBi Fiberglass Antenna | Omni coverage | ~$15-25 depending on vendor |
| u.FL (IPEX)-to-N Pigtail (15 cm) | Antenna connection | ~$5 |
| Total | ~$50-70 |
Assembly Walkthrough
Start by seating the RAK4631 into Slot A of the RAK19007 base board. The module locks with a satisfying click; verify it is fully seated and the gold contacts are flush. The RAK4631 LoRa antenna port is a u.FL/IPEX (MHF) press-fit connector, not a threaded SMA jack - so use a u.FL(IPEX)-to-N pigtail. Snap the u.FL end straight down onto the port with gentle finger pressure until it clicks; do NOT twist or screw it, and never use pliers. Thread the N-type end through your chosen mounting point (a simple shelf bracket works well indoors) and attach the 5 dBi fiberglass antenna. Position the antenna vertically for best omni radiation.
Connect a standard USB-C cable to any 5 V / 1 A USB adapter or powered hub. The RAK19007 includes onboard power regulation; no additional circuitry is required for indoor mains-powered operation.
Firmware Flashing (REPEATER Variant)
- Flash the RAK4631 using the MeshCore Web Flasher at flasher.meshcore.co.uk, which serves prebuilt firmware releases (the underlying binaries are published on the official MeshCore GitHub releases).
- Select the
REPEATERbuild variant - not CLIENT or ROOM_SERVER. - Put the RAK4631 into bootloader mode by double-tapping the reset button; the board appears as a USB mass-storage drive (the volume name varies by bootloader, e.g. RAK4631 or a BOOT-style name).
- Drag the
.uf2firmware file onto the drive. The board reboots automatically. - Confirm operation by connecting via the MeshCore companion app and verifying the device advertises as a repeater.
Configuration Notes
For a purely indoor repeater with AC power, no power-management tuning is required. Leave TX power at the firmware default (about 22 dBm - the SX1262 hardware maximum, well under the 30 dBm / 1 W conducted limit of 47 CFR 15.247). Your effective radiated power is TX power plus antenna gain minus cable loss; with the 5 dBi antenna here (under the 6 dBi threshold, so no power reduction is required) that is roughly 27 dBm EIRP. If you later fit a higher-gain antenna (above 6 dBi), 15.247(b)(4) requires you to reduce conducted power dB-for-dB above 6 dBi to stay compliant. Set a meaningful node name that identifies the location (e.g., BLDG-A-3F-RPT) so network operators can read topology at a glance.
Expected Performance
These are rough, order-of-magnitude estimates that vary dramatically with building materials, height, spreading factor, and antenna - not guarantees, so field-test in your specific building. With a 5 dBi antenna at mid-floor height, this build typically reaches roughly 300-600 m in urban environments with mixed building penetration. Clear line-of-sight across open office floors can extend to around 1-2 km. The raw LoRa PHY data rate is identical regardless of firmware role (it is set by SF/BW/CR); the REPEATER role changes forwarding and airtime behavior, not the per-packet bitrate.
Best Use Cases
- Indoor floor-by-floor mesh coverage in multi-story buildings
- Gap-fill repeaters at sites that already have AC power
- Rapid deployment for events or temporary activations
- Lab/test environments for firmware development
For outdoor, weatherproof, or off-grid deployments, see the Pro MeshCore Solar Repeater page in this chapter.