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Comparison between the RTL‑SDR Blog V3 and RTL‑SDR Blog V4,

Here’s a detailed comparison between the RTL‑SDR Blog V3 and RTL‑SDR Blog V4, along with practical implications (especially for your antenna-wire setup). If you like, I can summarise a “which one to pick” at the end.


Key Differences & Improvements in V4

Here’s what changes in V4 relative to V3, based on the official datasheets and reviews:

FeatureV3V4Notes / Impacts
Tuner / front-endR820T / R820T2 / older front-end design (uses direct sampling for HF) (rtl-sdr.com)Uses R828D tuner, with a triplexed input (HF, VHF, UHF) plus notch filters for common interference bands (rtl-sdr.com)The triplexing helps isolate bands, reducing inter-modulation and overloading from strong out-of-band signals.
HF (below ~30 MHz) reception methodDirect sampling mode (you connect the antenna to the ADC directly, bypassing tuner). But direct sampling has limitations: aliasing, no gain control, easily overloaded by strong signals. (rtl-sdr.com)Built-in upconverter (28.8 MHz LO) to bring HF into the tuner input, rather than pure direct sampling. (rtl-sdr.com)This is a big improvement: fewer spurs/aliases, better dynamic range on HF, and ability to control gain.
Filtering / front-end isolationLess separation between bands, more risk of overloading from broadcast stationsBetter filtering with triplexers + built-in notch filters (e.g. for AM, FM, DAB) (rtl-sdr.com)Particularly useful in urban / noisy RF environments, or with long-wire antennas that pick up strong signals
Current draw / heat / power designHigher current draw, more heat (older power supply/layout)Slightly lower current, reduced heat, improved power supply (less noise) (udxf.nl)Lower heat is helpful when the dongle is enclosed or mounted near other electronics
Bias tee4.5 V (software-controlled)4.5 V (software-controlled) up to 180 mA (rtl-sdr.com)Similar, so for powering active antennas or LNAs, both are acceptable (if your antenna setup needs it)
Frequency & bandwidthCovers ~500 kHz up to ~1.7 GHz. Stable bandwidth ~2.4 MHz (peak up to ~3.2 MHz) (rtl-sdr.com)Range expanded: 500 kHz to 1.766 GHz. Stable bandwidth ~2.56 MHz (up to 3.2 MHz with drops) (rtl-sdr.com)Slight improvements in bandwidth stability.
Driver / software supportWell supported historicallyRequires updated drivers / DLLs to support V4; many SDR apps have already been updated (SDR#, SDR-Console V3, SDR++ etc.) (rtl-sdr.com)You’ll need to ensure your software stack is up to date; otherwise the V4 may not function properly (mis-frequency, no signal, etc.)
Cost / supply / chip pricingUses R820 series which is more expensive nowV4 uses R828D, which the designers say is cheaper / more available currently (swling.com)Could make V4 more economical / practical to produce / stock
Potential drawbacks of V4Some users have reported that in specific bands or use cases, V4 might perform worse (depending on conditions) (Reddit)But overall for most use cases, V4 is expected to be an upgrade

Practical Impact for a Wire-Antenna Setup (Two Cables Held Aloft, Drop to Computer)

Given your plan — two wires joined in the middle (forming a dipole or long-wire style), elevated by poles, drop to your receiver — here’s how the differences matter:

  1. Dynamic range / overload
    • Long-wire antennas tend to pick up strong signals (AM broadcast, FM, local strong TX) along with weaker HF signals. The better front-end filtering and isolation of V4 help reduce overload / intermodulation and spurious signals.
    • In contrast, V3’s direct sampling mode on HF is more susceptible to overload, aliasing, and you may see “ghost” signals mirrored around the Nyquist frequency. (RadioReference.com Forums)
  2. HF sensitivity and gain control
    • With V4’s upconverter, you get gain control into HF bands, which helps in adjusting for weak signals.
    • In V3 direct sampling mode, gain control is limited (or absent) and performance suffers under strong local signals. (rtl-sdr.com)
  3. Spurious / aliasing control
    • The V4 approach avoids Nyquist folding / aliasing in the HF region that plagues direct sampling. That means “fake” copies of signals are less of an issue.
    • In V3, strong signals outside the band can alias into the band you’re observing. You’ll often need extra filtering (low-pass, high-pass) to reduce this. (RadioReference.com Forums)
  4. Noise floor, heating, component quality
    • V4’s improved power design and lower heat generation can reduce internal noise (especially when the dongle is enclosed somewhat).
    • Lower thermal drift helps when you have long runs of cable and possibly operate outdoors.
  5. Software / calibration
    • You’ll need to make sure your SDR software / drivers recognize the V4 correctly and are updated. Otherwise, you might see weird behaviour or nothing at all. (rtl-sdr.com)
    • V3 is older and well supported, so the software side is “safer” in the sense that a lot of scripts, projects reference V3.

Which One to Choose (for Your Use Case)

Given your wire-antenna style setup and likely interest in HF/VHF/UHF:

  • V4 is generally the better choice: it addresses many weaknesses of V3 in HF performance, filtering, dynamic range, and noise, which are exactly the challenges you’ll face with a long-wire or elevated-antenna system.
  • However, V4 demands that your software / drivers are compatible and up to date.
  • If you already have a V3 and it “works well enough” in your environment (low interference, strong signals), it may serve you adequately without upgrading.

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