Beacon Research Part 1: Comparative Evaluation of Technological Signal Modalities for Experiential Treasure Beacon Systems

 

Comparative Evaluation of Technological Signal Modalities for Experiential Treasure Beacon Systems

A Multi-Criteria Analysis of Active and Interactive Detection Architectures

LowRents
February 2026


Abstract

Treasure hunts that incorporate signal-based confirmation mechanisms aim not only to mark a location, but to provide a dynamic experiential component for the searcher. The “experience” — scanning, triangulating, interpreting signal strength, narrowing proximity — becomes central to engagement.

This study evaluates technological beacon systems capable of producing an interactive detection experience. Passive non-powered systems and shadow-based mechanisms are excluded to maintain focus on active technological emitters.

Fourteen signal modalities were evaluated across eight criteria using a standardized scoring framework. Results indicate that while mid-to-long-range RF systems with strong directional capability provide the most technically immersive and precise hunt experience, overall feasibility—when prioritizing solutions requiring no special tools beyond a standard smartphone—favors short-to-mid-range consumer-detectable technologies such as Bluetooth Low Energy.


1. Introduction

Technological treasure beacons differ from static markers in that they:

  • Emit measurable signals
  • Allow proximity narrowing
  • Provide real-time feedback
  • Enable iterative refinement of search strategy

The objective of this study is to compare technological beacon systems and determine which are most likely to produce a successful experiential hunt.


2. Signal Modalities Evaluated (Definitions)

2.1 Radio Frequency (RF) Systems

BLE Beacon (Bluetooth Low Energy)

A low-power 2.4 GHz transmitter broadcasting a unique identifier detectable by smartphones. Signal strength (RSSI) provides approximate proximity information.

Wi-Fi SSID Beacon

A device broadcasting a custom Wi-Fi network name detectable through standard smartphone Wi-Fi scanning.

LoRa Beacon

A sub-GHz long-range spread-spectrum transmitter capable of broad-area signal coverage with low power consumption.

Amateur Radio / APRS Beacon

A licensed radio transmitter emitting identifiable packets on amateur radio bands. Enables radio-direction finding.

SDR Carrier Beacon

A radio transmitter emitting a detectable carrier signal within an ISM band, optimized for detection using a Software Defined Radio (SDR).

FRS/GMRS Tone Beacon

A transmitter emitting a tone on walkie-talkie frequencies, detectable via consumer radios.


2.2 Optical Systems

Visible LED Strobe

A powered visible light source emitting flashes or coded patterns.

Infrared Beacon

An infrared LED emitter detectable using night-vision devices or compatible sensors.

Laser Marker

A focused visible beam providing directional guidance when line of sight is maintained.


2.3 Acoustic Systems

Audible Chirp Beacon

A periodic audible tone emitter detectable by ear.

Ultrasound Beacon

A high-frequency acoustic emitter detectable via specialized microphones.


2.4 Field-Based Systems

Magnet Signature

A localized magnetic field anomaly detectable by magnetometer-equipped devices.

Inductive Near-Field Beacon

A localized electromagnetic field emitter detectable with a tuned coil receiver.


2.5 Thermal Emission System

Thermal Beacon

A device generating a heat signature detectable via thermal imaging.


3. Evaluation Framework

Each modality was scored across eight criteria:

  1. Range (1–1000 ft gradient)
  2. Directional Precision
  3. Power Longevity
  4. Stealth
  5. Legal Simplicity
  6. False-Positive Resistance
  7. Terrain Robustness
  8. Finder Accessibility

4. Grading Rubric

Range (Feet Gradient)

Score

Effective Distance

1

0–10 ft

2

10–50 ft

3

50–200 ft

4

200–500 ft

5

500–1000 ft


Directional Precision

1 = None
3 = Moderate gradient
5 = Strong homing capability


Power Longevity

1 = Days–weeks
3 = ~1 year
5 = Highly efficient long-duration


Stealth

1 = Conspicuous
3 = Moderate visibility
5 = Low incidental detection


Legal Simplicity

1 = High regulatory burden
3 = Conditional compliance
5 = Minimal regulatory concern


False-Positive Resistance

1 = High ambiguity
3 = Occasional interference
5 = Highly unique signal


Terrain Robustness

1 = Highly terrain sensitive
3 = Moderate degradation
5 = Stable across environments


Finder Accessibility

1 = Professional-grade equipment
3 = Commodity handheld tool
5 = Smartphone-only


5. Comparative Matrix

Method

Rng

Dir

Power

Stealth

Legal

False

Terrain

Access

BLE

3

2

4

4

5

2

2

5

Wi-Fi

3

2

2

3

4

3

2

5

LoRa

5

4

5

4

4

5

4

2

APRS

5

5

4

3

2

5

4

1

SDR

4

5

4

4

3

5

4

2

FRS

3

3

3

2

2

3

3

3

LED

2

4

2

1

5

5

2

5

Infrared

2

4

3

4

5

5

2

3

Laser

4

5

1

1

1

5

2

3

Audible

3

4

2

1

4

4

2

5

Ultrasound

2

3

2

4

4

4

2

2

Magnet

1

4

5

5

5

4

4

3

Inductive

1

5

4

5

4

5

4

1

Thermal

4

5

1

4

4

5

3

1


6. Evaluation of Top Performing Selections

Top performers based on experiential scoring:

  • SDR Carrier Beacon
  • LoRa Beacon
  • Amateur Radio / APRS
  • Inductive Near-Field Beacon

6.1 SDR Carrier Beacon

Strong directional homing (5), high false-positive resistance (5), moderate range (4).
Provides a true signal-hunting experience.

6.2 LoRa Beacon

Maximum range (5), strong robustness (4), excellent signal uniqueness (5).
Excellent for large-area acquisition.

6.3 Amateur Radio / APRS

Maximum range and directional capability (5,5).
Provides structured radio foxhunting engagement.

6.4 Inductive Near-Field Beacon

Maximum close-range precision (5).
Exceptional final-stage narrowing mechanism.


7. Final Evaluation Layer: Prioritizing “No Special Tools Required”

While the preceding evaluation ranks systems by experiential strength, this final layer introduces a practical constraint:

Prioritization of solutions that require no special tools or equipment beyond a standard smartphone.

This constraint significantly reshapes final recommendations.

7.1 High-Experience but High-Equipment Systems

  • SDR Carrier (requires SDR + antenna)
  • APRS (requires licensed radio equipment)
  • Inductive Near-Field (custom receiver)
  • Thermal (thermal imaging camera)

These systems provide superior directional precision but reduce accessibility and participation breadth.

7.2 High-Experience and No-Special-Tools Systems

The only systems that combine meaningful experiential interaction with smartphone-only detection are:

  • BLE Beacon
  • Wi-Fi SSID Beacon
  • Audible Chirp (no tools at all)

Among these, BLE emerges as the strongest balance of:

  • Moderate range (50–200 ft)
  • Real-time signal gradient (RSSI)
  • Low equipment barrier (smartphone-only)
  • Legal simplicity
  • Ease of deployment

8. Conclusion

When evaluated purely on experiential richness, layered RF architectures (LoRa + SDR + Inductive) provide the most immersive hunt dynamics.

However, when the paramount constraint becomes:

No special tools or equipment required

the optimal solution shifts decisively toward smartphone-detectable technologies.

Under this constraint, the most likely to succeed are:

  1. BLE Beacon (Primary Recommendation)
  2. Wi-Fi SSID Beacon (Secondary Option)
  3. Audible Chirp (Simplest Implementation)

BLE in particular offers:

  • Measurable proximity gradient
  • Immediate participant feedback
  • Zero specialized equipment requirement
  • Broad public accessibility

Therefore, for a technologically immersive yet widely accessible hunt experience, BLE-based systems represent the most balanced and operationally viable solution.

 Part 2: https://lowrentsresearch.blogspot.com/2026/03/evaluating-bluetooth-low-energy-beacon.html

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