In December 2024 I decided to add the Hermes Lite 2 Software Defined Radio to my ham radio station. The Hermes Lite 2 is a low-cost, network-connected, direct down/up conversion software defined amateur radio HF transceiver based on the Analog Devices AD9866 broadband modem chip, the Altera Cyclone IV Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) and the Hermes SDR project. It is entirely open source and open hardware, including the tools used for design and fabrication files. The RF output power is 5 Watts. The radio covers 130 kHz to 30 mHz. There is a wide choice of SDR software clients available for Windows, macOS, Linux, Raspberry Pi, or iPad, each with varying feature sets. Kits are available from Makerfabs.
My familiarity and fondness of the Anan 7000 SDR attracted me to the Hermes Lite 2 as a fun thing for experimentation as well as a backup SDR. This board is a derivitave of the Hermes board found in the Anan 10 SDR originally available in 2012.
Above is a picture of the Hermes Lite 2 board from Makerfabs.
Above is a photo of the original Hermes board as found in the ANAN-10 SDR. The original Hermes board used the Altera Cyclone III Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA). The recent versions of the Hermes Lite 2 board use the Altera Cyclone IV FPGA which is a better device and offers greater performance. This is the same FPGA used in the Anan 7000 SDR.
The Hermes Lite 2 needs an external filter board. It provides filters for the transmitter output to reduce its output harmonics and spurs and a receiver high-pass filter that can be used to remove strong broadcasts signals below 2 MHz. This board is also available on Makerfabs.
Next we have the I/O Board. This board connects to the Hermes Lite 2 and is mounted above the N2ADR filter board. It provides switches to control attached relays, antennas and power amplifiers. It also has a convenient jack to connect a sampler to run Adaptive Predistortion correction (Pure Signal).
The PC running the SDR software sends the transmit frequency to the I/O board. The Arduino Pico microcontroller on the board then uses the board's switches to control an amplifier, switch antenns or transverters. There are a variety of IO resources available and there will be different microcontroller software for each application. The IO board is meant to be a general purpose solution to control hardware attached to the HL2.
The user would have to load available sketches (programs) into the Pico controller or write their own to take advantage of the board's features.
The header of the I/O board has more pins than those soldered on the Hermes Lite 2 board so you have to solder the extra header pins to the HL2 board yourself.
Finally we have the enclosure. This is an aluminum split shell with custom end plates. It is available from Makerfabs.
Here is a picture of my Hermes Lite 2 installed in the enclosure. On the left is the HL2 main board. To the right is the I/O Board. Under the I/O board is the filter board which is not visible in the photo. The J1 Header connects the three boards together. The I/O Board has a dual row female header that mates with the single row male pins on the HL2 board and the single row male pins on the N2ADR Filter board. The header on the I/O board bridges the header pins of the other two boards together.
There is another add-on board shown above to create a version called Hermes Lite 2 Plus. The Hermes Lite 2 as it comes from Makerfabs is lacking a few features which make both CW and Voice modes complete. For CW, there is no keyer, no local sidetone, and significant latency. For SSB, AM and FM, there is no local microphone or headphone jacks. This board adds a headphone jack to the front panel, with sidetone in CW mode, a microphone jack with PTT to the front panel, an IAMBIC keyer to the "KEY" jack, a straight or external keyer usage is preserved, and there is even an electronic bug mode. It also adds a dedicated Hardrock-50 Power Amplifier control interface with band switching and PTT which follows the transceiver, a dedicated ICOM AH4 antenna tuner control interface, and a local speaker output, with sidetone in CW mode. The board greatly reduces latency in both CW and SSB modes.
In order to use the Hermes Lite 2 Plus board and its features you have to load a specific version of the Gateware into the FPGA on the main board.
Keep in mind that as the Hermes Lite 2 comes from Makerfabs there is no analog audio in or out. Speaker and mic audio would be established over Virtual Audio Cable or cmASIO. That means your computer would need speakers, a mic, and VAC software or ASIO driver for your sound device.
More information about this board can be found here: hermeslite2plus.com
The Hermes Lite 2 would be worthless without software to control it and take advantage of its features. There is a version of the popuar Thetis program written for the Hermes Lite 2 that gives the same look and feel as the version used with the Anan series of radios. This is a screen shot of what my Hermes Lite 2 looks like on the computer screen. I don't have the Hermes Lite 2 Plus board so I can not connect a speaker, headphones or mic directly to my HL2. The only connections I have to the HL2 are power, antenna and etherent. All data, control and audio pass between the PC and the HL2 over the network cable.
There are plenty of assembly instructions and Youtube videos available online. Here are some links to get you started:
- Makerfabs
- Hermeslite.com
- Google Groups for Hermes Lite
- Hermes Lite Wiki
- Hermes Lite 2 Plus
- Thetis Releases for Hermes Lite 2
Makerfabs operates out of China. They have a good reputation as a reliable vendor who delivers a good product. I opted to use the more expensive DHL shipping option just for peace of mind and the ability to track the shippment. My Hermes Lite 2 arrived ahead of their time estimate. It was well packed and double boxed. I used Paypal for payment.