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Raspberry Shake HAT brings earthquake monitoring to the Raspberry Pi SBC

Jul 08, 2023

Raspberry Shake is a family of Raspberry Pi HATs and full seismograph and infrasound monitors designed to enable earthquake monitoring on the popular single board computer

Raspberry Pi Shake and Boom (for acoustic monitoring) HATs have been around for a few years, but I only learned about it now through an article on The MagPi Magazine where Branden Christensen, Business Steward, and Mike Hotchkiss, Marketing Director, were interviewed, so I decided to have a closer look.

Four main models of the Raspberry Shake are available:

The sensors include one or more geophone sensors, MEMS accelerometers, and optionally an infrasound sensor. The geophone consists of a coil of wire wrapped around a mass and suspended above a fixed magnet with a spring. The sensor’s voltage changes as the mass moves in response to ground motion.

Each model has then variant as a DIY kit, a fully assembly unit for indoor use, or a weatherproof unit for systems designed to operate outdoors. Shake OS, based on Raspberry Pi OS, must be installed on the Raspberry Pi to support the sensors and process the data in real-time which can be accessed through web tools such as Station View or standard seismological software like the ShakeNet mobile app.

The MagPi has a tutorial to get started with an RS1D DIY kit. It’s not the first Raspberry Pi-based hardware we cover that can detect earthquake activity, as we previously wrote about the Exo Sense Pi multi-sensor device with an optional Omron D7S vibration sensor and Sfera labs Iono RP D16, but the Raspberry Shake hardware seems to be in a different category (i.e. much better suited to the task…).

If you’d like to give it a try you can purchase the Raspberry Shake from $229.99 for a DIY kit with the RS1D and up to $1,499 for an RS3D system with an IP67 enclosure designed for outdoors. There are some discounts for the education market. You’ll find more details and purchase links on the project’s website.

Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.

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