Meshtastic Site Finder is a lightweight web application for identifying, mapping, and evaluating potential locations for Meshtastic nodes—especially fixed, solar-powered, or infrastructure-mounted deployments.
The goal is to help communities build more resilient, better-placed Meshtastic networks by making it easier to visualize geography, elevation, and existing structures that are well-suited for long-range LoRa mesh coverage.
Meshtastic Site Finder is designed to answer questions like:
- Where should I put a fixed Meshtastic node to maximize coverage?
- Which tall structures could host a solar-powered relay?
- How can a community coordinate node placement instead of guessing?
It focuses on site discovery and planning, not device configuration or live network telemetry.
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🗺️ Interactive Map
- Pan and zoom to explore candidate locations
- Designed for desktop and tablet use
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🏗️ Structure-Oriented Discovery
- Emphasis on tall, prominent, or infrastructure-adjacent locations
- Suitable for solar, rooftop, or mast-mounted nodes
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📍 Community-Friendly Planning
- Helps groups coordinate placement decisions
- Useful for clubs, emergency communications groups, and local mesh builders
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⚡ Lightweight & Static
- Runs entirely in the browser
- Can be hosted cheaply (or free) on static hosting
To set expectations clearly:
- ❌ Not a live Meshtastic network monitor
- ❌ Not a replacement for Meshtastic firmware, apps, or radios
- ❌ Not a guarantee that a location is deployable or permitted
- ❌ Not authoritative infrastructure data
- Elevation values are not normalized to sea level.
- The tool does not account for mean sea level (MSL), geoid models, or tidal reference systems.
- Elevation or height-related data should be treated as relative and approximate only.
- Comparisons across regions—especially coastal, floodplain, or low-lying areas—may be misleading if sea level context is required.
Always validate elevation, line-of-sight, and terrain assumptions using authoritative topographic or surveying data before making deployment decisions.
- Community Meshtastic networks
- Emergency communications planning
- Maker and hacker groups
- Amateur radio / LoRa experimentation
- Resilience and preparedness projects
- Educational demonstrations