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Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] 3 New Products from Ettus Research
From: |
Eric Cottrell |
Subject: |
Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] 3 New Products from Ettus Research |
Date: |
Tue, 15 Feb 2011 11:41:25 -0500 (EST) |
Hello,
The TVRX2 sounds very interesting. How are the two receivers mapped to the
output? Does each receiver map to a different frequency range on the output?
The two receivers would be great for decoding and following trunked radio
systems with a dedicated control channel.
73 Eric
----- Start Original Message -----
Sent: Mon, 14 Feb 2011 14:38:36 -0800
From: Matt Ettus <address@hidden>
To: gnuradio <address@hidden>
Subject: [Discuss-gnuradio] 3 New Products from Ettus Research
>
> ======================================================================
>
> We are pleased to announce three new products for use with the
> USRP family of Software Defined Radios.
>
>
> 1) GPSDO Kit
> 2) TVRX2 Daughterboard
> 3) SBX Daughterboard
>
>
> ======================================================================
>
> 1) GPSDO Kit
>
> The GPSDO is a GPS-disciplined oscillator, which uses a GPS receiver
> to steer the frequency of the master oscillator with very high
> accuracy. This can be used to synchronize devices over large
> distances without direct connections between them.
>
> This frequency becomes the primary reference of your
> USRP N200 or USRP N210. It also provides a 1 pulse-per-second
> (1PPS) signal which is used to steer your USRP to within 50 ns of
> UTC time. The GPS serial output is connected as well, so the exact
> time can be used by your application.
>
> The full functionality of the GPSDO is handled by the UHD, so
> applications can take advantage of these new capabilities immediately.
>
> The master oscillator, an OCXO, is accurate to 25 ppb when there
> is no GPS signal, so this can be used as a precise reference even
> if a GPS antenna is not available.
>
> The GPSDO kit includes all the necessary cabling to connect it to
> your USRP N200 or N210. It does not include a GPS antenna, but
> should work with any commonly available active GPS antenna. The
> price is $750, and it is shipping now.
>
> ======================================================================
>
> 2) TVRX2 Daughterboard
>
> The TVRX2 daughterboard replaces the original TVRX. It is a dual
> receiver covering 50 MHz to 860 MHz. There are 2 entirely separate
> receivers which can be used simultaneously, either on the same or
> different frequencies, each with a bandwidth of up to 9 MHz (thus
> allowing use with DVB-T). The TVRX2 is also MIMO capable, since
> its clock is synchronized with the master system clock. It is
> fully supported by the UHD, but not the older drivers, and will
> work with all of our motherboards.
>
> To summarize, the differences between the TVRX2 and original TVRX:
>
> - TVRX2 has dual receivers
> - TVRX2 is MIMO capable
> - TVRX2 covers a wider bandwidth (9 MHz vs 6 MHz)
> - TVRX2 is smaller and has plain SMA connectors
>
> The TVRX2 costs $200 and will ship at the beginning of April.
>
> ======================================================================
>
> 3) SBX Daughterboard
>
> The SBX daughterboard is a wideband transceiver similar to the WBX.
> It covers the 400 MHz to 4.4 GHz frequency range. It has 32dB of
> transmit power control and output power of 50 to 100 mW (17-20dBm).
> It is capable of full duplex operation and is fully supported by the
> UHD, so it will work with all of our motherboards, from the original
> USRP1 to the latest USRP N210 and E100.
>
> The SBX costs $475 and will ship in April.
>
> ======================================================================
>
> Thanks for your time,
> Matt Ettus
> President, Ettus Research LLC
>
> _______________________________________________
> Discuss-gnuradio mailing list
> address@hidden
> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
>
----- End Original Message -----