The Web-888 is a network-based software-defined radio designed for stationary HF and VHF reception. Unlike portable USB dongles, the Web-888 operates as a standalone system connected to your network via Gigabit Ethernet. It combines a professional 16-bit ADC (LTC2208), Zynq7010 FPGA with dual ARM cores, and KiwiSDR-based software running on Alpine Linux. The result is a 13-channel simultaneous receiver capable of monitoring multiple frequencies with real-time waterfall displays accessible from any web browser—making it ideal for serious radio monitoring, emergency communications, and HF/VHF research.
| Specification |
Web-888 |
Notes |
| Frequency Range (HF) |
1 kHz – 61.44 MHz |
DC coupled for extremely low frequencies |
| Frequency Range (VHF) |
118 MHz – 145 MHz |
Aviation and ham radio bands |
| Real-Time Bandwidth |
61.44 MHz |
Entire HF spectrum viewable simultaneously |
| ADC Architecture |
16-bit DDC (Digital Down-Converter) |
LTC2208 chip, 130 MSPS sampling |
| SFDR (Spurious-Free Dynamic Range) |
~100 dB |
Exceptional signal purity; minimizes spurious products |
| ADC Sample Rate |
Tunable (up to 130 MSPS) |
Flexible for different bandwidth requirements |
| FPGA |
Xilinx Zynq7010 with dual ARM A9 cores |
Processes 13 simultaneous channels on the device |
| Simultaneous RX Channels |
13 channels with waterfall for each |
Unprecedented multi-channel capability for SDRs |
| Antenna Inputs |
Dual SMA connectors (HF and VHF) |
Separate antennas for each band optimal |
| Network Connectivity |
Gigabit Ethernet (1000 Mbps) |
High-speed, low-latency data streaming |
| Reference Clock |
24.576 MHz TCXO (0.5 ppm) |
Precision oscillator; can also accept external reference |
| Expandable GPIO |
8 digital I/O pins |
Antenna switching, relay control, external automation |
| GPS Module |
Built-in all-constellation GPS |
Supports GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou for timing sync |
| Power Consumption |
5V/2A (10W typical) |
USB-C power; low operational power requirements |
| Operating System |
Alpine Linux 3.20 (Linux 6.6 kernel) |
Lightweight OS optimized for embedded SDR |
| Physical Dimensions |
100mm × 71mm × 25.2mm (excluding SMA connectors) |
Compact single-board form factor |
| Cooling |
Active cooling fan (40mm) |
Maintains stable operation during continuous use |
| Storage |
TF card (microSD) slot |
For system files and user data logging |
- 13-Channel Simultaneous Reception: Unique capability among affordable SDRs; monitor 13 different frequencies or bands simultaneously with full waterfall for each.
- 16-bit ADC vs. 8-bit Dongles: 256× better vertical resolution than RTL-SDR; reveals weak signals hidden by 8-bit quantization noise.
- 61.44 MHz Real-Time Bandwidth: Entire HF spectrum visible at once; no frequency switching or scanning required.
- Network-Based Architecture: Access from any device on your network or internet via web browser; no PC required at the receiver location.
- Professional-Grade Design: Inherited RF and ADC design from RX-888 (professional-grade); proven robust performance.
- Open-Source Software: KiwiSDR-based codebase with active community; highly customizable and extensible.
- Built-In Decoders: WSPR, FT8 skimmers, and other digital mode decoders built into the interface.
- Web-Based Interface: OpenWebRX interface accessible from any web browser; no software installation required on client machines.
- KiwiSDR Protocol Support: Compatible with KiwiSDR websocket protocol; third-party applications can stream audio and spectrum data.
- Multi-User Streaming: Support for multiple simultaneous users viewing spectrum and listening to different frequencies.
- Built-In Decoders:
- WSPR (Weak Signal Propagation Reporter)
- FT8 skimmer (digital mode monitoring)
- CW, AM, USB, LSB, FM demodulation
- Extensible plugin architecture for custom decoders
- Waterfall Recording: Continuous capture of spectrum data for later analysis.
- Antenna Switching: GPIO-controlled antenna selection via web interface.
- Real-Time Performance Monitoring: System metrics, GPU usage, network bandwidth visible in admin interface.
- HF Broadcast (1-15 MHz): Receives distant international broadcasts with excellent clarity; weak signal detection rivals professional receivers.
- Amateur Radio Monitoring (3.5-28 MHz): Full SSB, CW, and digital mode reception capability; simultaneous monitoring of multiple ham bands.
- WSPR Reception: Exceptional performance at detecting weak propagation beacons; useful for ionospheric monitoring.
- FT8 Skimming: Automatic FT8 signal detection and spotting to PSKREPORTER; popular for digital mode activity tracking.
- VHF Monitoring (118-145 MHz): Aviation and ham radio VHF band reception with full waterfall display.
- Multi-Channel Stability: All 13 channels maintain independent frequency stability; no crosstalk between channels.
- Shared Mode: Up to 13 simultaneous clients; each can zoom up to level 9 on waterfall displays.
- Exclusive Mode: Only 2 simultaneous clients; can zoom up to level 13 for detailed analysis.
- Single-User Mode: Full device resources allocated to single operator.
- 1× Web-888 SDR receiver board (fully assembled)
- 1× USB-C power cable
- Optional: Pre-configured SD card with optimized firmware (varies by vendor)
- Optional: Antenna kit (check vendor offerings)
- HF Antenna: Long-wire, dipole, or loop antenna for optimal HF reception
- VHF Antenna: Dedicated antenna for 118-145 MHz band monitoring
- Gigabit Network Switch: Dedicated switch for stable, low-latency connection
- External GPS Antenna: Better timing synchronization than built-in module
- Reference Clock: Precision external clock for laboratory-grade stability
- SMA Splitter/Combiner: If using wideband antenna for both HF and VHF
| Device |
ADC Bits |
Channels |
Bandwidth |
Network |
Best For |
| Web-888 |
16-bit |
13 simultaneous |
61.44 MHz |
Gigabit Ethernet |
Professional HF monitoring |
| KiwiSDR |
14-bit |
4 simultaneous |
30 MHz |
Gigabit Ethernet |
Community web SDR |
| RTL-SDR V4 |
8-bit |
1 |
2.4 MHz |
USB (local only) |
Budget portable |
| RX-888 |
16-bit |
1 |
61.44 MHz |
USB 3.0 (PC required) |
Wideband lab recording |
| KiwiSDR 3 (future) |
16-bit (est.) |
~8 channels (est.) |
62 MHz (est.) |
Gigabit Ethernet |
Next-gen network SDR |
- Emergency Communication Center: Monitor multiple amateur radio frequencies simultaneously for emergency response coordination.
- Ionospheric Research: Continuous WSPR reception and analysis for propagation studies and space weather monitoring.
- Community Web SDR: Public-facing network SDR accessible globally for radio monitoring without receiver ownership.
- Aviation Monitoring: Dedicated VHF receiver for air traffic control frequency monitoring with spectrum display.
- Radio Astronomy: Utilize full 61.44 MHz bandwidth for solar radio observations and discrete source detection.
- Signal Intelligence: Professional-grade HF band monitoring with persistent spectrum logging for threat detection.
- Educational Teaching Lab: 13-channel capability allows multiple students to monitor different frequencies simultaneously from one device.
- Unmatched Channel Count: 13 simultaneous channels with waterfall—only Web-888 offers this capability at this price point.
- Professional-Grade ADC: 16-bit resolution delivers signal quality competitive with benchtop equipment.
- Full HF Coverage: 1 kHz to 61.44 MHz captures entire HF spectrum in real-time; no compromises on frequency coverage.
- Network Architecture: Access from anywhere; no tethered PC required; multiple users simultaneously.
- Built-In Decoders: WSPR and FT8 skimmers integrated; no external software dependencies.
- Compact Design: Single-board form factor with active cooling fits anywhere; minimal physical footprint.
- Open-Source Software: KiwiSDR codebase ensures ongoing development and community support.
- Precision Timing: Built-in GPS and 0.5 ppm TCXO enable accurate synchronization for coordinated measurements.
- Extensible GPIO: 8 digital I/O pins enable antenna switching, relay control, and external automation.
- Network Dependency: Requires stable Gigabit Ethernet connection; no standalone operation without network.
- Installation Complexity: Initial setup requires Linux familiarity; not plug-and-play like USB dongles.
- Limited Commercial Support: Community-based support; some hardware variants have inconsistent documentation.
- VHF-Only Above 145 MHz: Cannot receive UHF or microwave bands (unlike HackRF or USRP).
- No Transmit: Receive-only; cannot generate RF signals or perform full-duplex testing.
- Power Supply Required: Unlike portable USB dongles, needs stable 5V power supply at receiver location.
- SD Card Updates: Firmware updates require SD card access; not as streamlined as USB-based alternatives.
- HF Radio Enthusiasts: Full spectrum monitoring for DXing, WSPR, FT8, and digital modes.
- Radio Professionals: Emergency services, communications centers, radio observatories.
- Radio Astronomy: Researchers using SDRs for solar observations and spectroscopy.
- Community Web SDR Operators: Public-facing receivers for global radio access.
- Signal Intelligence Analysts: Professional-grade HF monitoring and threat detection.
- Educational Institutions: Radio engineering programs needing multi-user simultaneous reception.
- Portable/mobile SDR use (requires stationary network installation)
- UHF/microwave applications (limited to HF + VHF aviation band)
- Users needing transmit capability (receive-only)
- Beginners uncomfortable with Linux and network administration
The Web-888 represents a significant leap forward for network-based SDR systems. It delivers professional-grade 16-bit ADC performance, unprecedented 13-channel simultaneous reception, and the full HF spectrum visible in real-time. For stationary HF and VHF monitoring, emergency communications, propagation research, and radio astronomy applications, the Web-888 has no equal in its performance class. The network-based architecture enables unprecedented accessibility—multiple operators worldwide can access the same receiver simultaneously via web browser.
The Web-888 is not a replacement for portable USB dongles (RTL-SDR) or full-bandwidth research platforms (USRP). It's a specialized tool for serious HF and VHF monitoring that fills a genuine gap between budget receivers and expensive professional systems. If your primary use is HF band monitoring, WSPR/FT8 reception, or emergency communications, the Web-888's combination of performance, channel count, and network accessibility is genuinely unmatched.
- RF Performance: 10/10
- Channel Capability: 10/10
- Ease of Setup: 6/10 (requires Linux experience)
- Software Maturity: 9/10
- Value Proposition: 9/10
- Overall Rating: 8.8/10
Experience professional-grade HF reception with 13-channel simultaneous monitoring. The Web-888 sets the standard for network-based software-defined radio—perfect for serious operators, researchers, and emergency communications.
Get your Web-888 today!