Files
ADS-Bit/CONFIG.md
root 0c9de30d41 Initial commit: Pixel-ADSB flight tracker
Retro SNES-style side-view ADS-B aircraft tracker with pixel art sprites,
animated celestial bodies, weather visualization, and directional views.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-20 11:10:25 -08:00

5.8 KiB

Pixel View Configuration Guide

This guide explains how to configure Pixel View for your ADS-B receiver setup.

Configuration File

Edit config.json to customize your installation:

{
  "receivers": "AUTO",
  "receiver_port": 30003,
  "location": {
    "name": "My Location",
    "lat": 0.0,
    "lon": 0.0
  },
  "web_port": 2001
}

Important: You must set your location.lat and location.lon to your actual receiver coordinates for weather data and aircraft positioning to work correctly.

Configuration Options

Option Type Description
receivers string or array "AUTO" to scan network, or IP address(es) of ADS-B receiver(s)
receiver_port number Port for SBS/BaseStation data (default: 30003)
location.name string Display name shown on screen (e.g., "Seattle, WA")
location.lat number Latitude of your receiver location
location.lon number Longitude of your receiver location
web_port number Port for the web interface (default: 2001)

Receiver Configuration Examples

Auto-scan network (default):

"receivers": "AUTO"

Single receiver:

"receivers": "192.168.1.100"

Multiple receivers:

"receivers": ["192.168.1.100", "192.168.1.101"]

Background Images

Pixel View uses directional background images to show the horizon view from your receiver location. You should customize these to match your actual surroundings.

Image Files

File Direction Description
north.png North (0°) View looking north from your location
east.png East (90°) View looking east from your location
south.png South (180°) View looking south from your location
west.png West (270°) View looking west from your location

Image Requirements

  • Resolution: 1536 x 1024 pixels (recommended)
  • Format: PNG with transparency support
  • Aspect ratio: 3:2 (width:height)
  • Style: Pixel art style for best visual consistency

Image Composition

Each background image should include:

  1. Sky area (top ~60%): Should be transparent or very light to blend with the dynamic sky gradient
  2. Horizon line: Where the sky meets the ground/landscape
  3. Ground/landscape (bottom ~40%): Your local terrain features
┌─────────────────────────────┐
│                             │
│     Transparent/Sky         │  ← Dynamic sky renders here
│     (alpha = 0 or light)    │
│                             │
├─────────────────────────────┤  ← Horizon line
│                             │
│     Ground/Landscape        │  ← Your local scenery
│     (mountains, buildings,  │
│      trees, desert, etc.)   │
│                             │
└─────────────────────────────┘

Creating Custom Backgrounds

Option 1: Pixel Art (Recommended)

  • Use a pixel art editor (Aseprite, Piskel, GIMP)
  • Create at 384x256 or 768x512, then scale up 4x or 2x
  • Keep colors limited for retro aesthetic
  • Use the existing backgrounds as templates

Option 2: Photo-based

  • Take photos looking N/E/S/W from your receiver location
  • Apply a pixel art filter or posterize effect
  • Reduce to limited color palette
  • Resize to 1536x1024

Option 3: Simplified Silhouettes

  • Create simple horizon silhouettes of local landmarks
  • Mountains, buildings, trees as flat shapes
  • Works well with limited artistic skills

Tips for Good Backgrounds

  1. Consistency: Use the same color palette across all 4 directions
  2. Horizon height: Keep the horizon at roughly the same vertical position
  3. Landmarks: Include recognizable local features (mountains, towers, etc.)
  4. Weather: The sky portion should be transparent so the dynamic weather shows through
  5. Testing: View each direction in the app to ensure smooth rotation

Example Color Palettes

Desert/Southwest:

Ground tones:  #d4a868, #b8884c, #a87840
Rock/mountain: #8c7c68, #6c5c4c
Vegetation:    #54a844, #3c7c30

Forest/Pacific Northwest:

Ground tones:  #3c5c3c, #4c6c4c, #2c4c2c
Trees:         #2c5c2c, #1c4c1c, #3c6c3c
Mountains:     #5c6c7c, #7c8c9c, #fcfcfc (snow)

Urban/City:

Buildings:     #4c5c6c, #5c6c7c, #6c7c8c
Windows:       #fcd444, #fcfc9c
Ground:        #3c3c3c, #4c4c4c

Coastal:

Sand:          #e4d4a8, #d4c498
Water:         #5c94fc, #4c84ec
Cliffs:        #8c7c68, #9c8c78

Sky should always be transparent (#00000000) to allow the dynamic sky gradient to show through.


Other Sprite Assets

These are optional to customize:

File Size Description
sun.png 64x64 Sun sprite
moon_6_phases.png 192x128 Moon phases (3x2 grid)
happycloud.png 96x64 Clear weather cloud
raincloud.png 96x64 Rain/storm cloud

Aircraft Sprites

File Description
smallProp.png Small propeller aircraft (Cessna)
regionalJet.png Regional jets (CRJ, ERJ)
narrowBody.png Narrow body jets (737, A320)
wideBody.png Wide body jets (777, 787)
heavy.png Heavy/jumbo jets (747, A380)
helicopter.png Helicopters

All aircraft sprites should face right (east) - the code flips them automatically for westbound flights.


Quick Start Checklist

  1. Edit config.json with your receiver IP (or leave as AUTO)
  2. Set your location name, latitude, and longitude
  3. Replace north.png, east.png, south.png, west.png with your local views
  4. Start the server: python3 server.py
  5. Open browser to http://your-server-ip:2001