Backyard Hero is the system you fire a backyard show with: a laptop or phone in hand, a dongle plugged in, custom receivers sitting next to your racks. It's an open replacement for the $400-and-up proprietary boxes most hobbyists end up settling for.
Receivers run on a custom 2.4 GHz radio with line-of-sight range past a thousand yards and sub-10 ms cross-receiver sync. Once a show starts, every receiver fires from its own clock; RF noise during the run can't move your timing. The dongle also carries a 433 MHz radio, so legacy Bilusocn-style gear keeps working alongside it.
The show builder is a web app that runs on your laptop or a Raspberry Pi. It handles the slow work: cataloging from a 10,000+ shell database, snapping cues to music, fusing math, satellite-image field layouts, and the print-friendly paperwork for the field. Phones and tablets can connect to the same UI over Wi-Fi, so the person wiring at the racks can pull up the loadout without crowding the laptop. The dongle fires the show and reports back live.
Everything (schematics, gerbers, firmware, the host app) is in the public repo under a DBAD license. Build your own, fork it, fab it, print the enclosure, send a PR if you find something worth fixing. Currently, hardware is being shipped to contributors for free as the system is built!
- Range
- 1,000 yd line of sight
- Cues
- Tested w/ over 2000 cues
- Timing
- Sub-10ms timing across receivers
- Runtime
- ~24 hr per charge
- Charge
- USB-C PD, 12 V
- Radios
- 2.4 GHz (Native Recievers) and 433 MHz (Bilusocn/Generic)
- Host
- macOS · Linux · Windows · Raspberry Pi
- Cost to Build
- ~$114 in materials (w/ laptop+dongle setup)