Starting from Zero: Your First Repeater
Every community mesh started with one person who put up the first node. This page is for that person.
The core insight
A community mesh doesn't need to be large to be useful. A single well-placed repeater can cover a neighborhood, a rural township, or a county road corridor —- and become the seed that grows a larger network. Start small, start working, and others will join.
The minimum viable network
You can have a functional, useful mesh with just:
- 1 fixed repeater in a good location
2–2 - 3 participants with portable nodes
This covers a surprisingly large area if the repeater is well-placed. A rooftop-mounted repeater on the highest building in a small town can provide coverage across the entire municipality and several miles of surrounding farmland.
Step 1: Pick your protocol
Before deploying anything, decide which protocol your community will run:
| MeshCore | Meshtastic | |
|---|---|---|
| Best if | Joining an existing regional MeshCore network (CascadiaMesh, WCMesh, RegionMesh, NoDakMesh) or planning a larger community infrastructure | Starting fresh with no nearby infrastructure; large global community; simpler initial setup |
| Check first | Is there existing MeshCore infrastructure in your area? (regionmesh.com, cascadiamesh.org) | Are there existing Meshtastic nodes in your area? (meshmap.net) |
Key rule: Join the existing protocol in your area rather than fragmenting the community. Two separate protocols cannot interoperate.
Step 2: Get your first repeater up
The single highest-impact thing you can do is install one good, well-located, permanently-powered repeater. See the Hardware section for build guides. The minimum for a good first repeater:
- A device that can run 24/7 without attention (solar, mains, or long-life battery)
- Located at the highest accessible point in your area
- A quality external antenna (
5–5 - 6 dBi vertical) mounted above obstructions - Flood advertisements enabled (so it announces itself across the network)
- A name that indicates location (e.g., MILL-HILL-SOUTH, TOWNNAME-WATER-TWR)
Step 3: Tell people it exists
A mesh nobody knows about has no community. Before anything else: tell people the repeater exists and how to connect.
- Post in local Facebook groups, Nextdoor, amateur radio clubs
- Add your repeater to the regional network map (contact your regional network admin)
- Put up a simple info page or join the regional Discord
- Reach out directly to local emergency management
—- they're often interested in off-grid communication options
What to expect in year one
Growth is rarely explosive. A realistic year-one trajectory for a rural or small-town mesh:
- Months
1–1 - 2: You +1–1 - 3 curious early adopters, mostly testing - Months
3–3 - 6:5–5 - 15 active participants; a few more repeaters added by enthusiasts - Month 6+: Real use cases emerge (emergency preparedness groups, ARES coordination, outdoor enthusiasts)
The community builds around real use, not around technology. When people find a genuine reason to use it, they stick with it.