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author | Derek Kozel <derek.kozel@ettus.com> | 2018-09-05 17:28:20 +0100 |
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committer | Brent Stapleton <bstapleton@g.hmc.edu> | 2018-10-09 18:11:45 -0700 |
commit | c3c479fa8ee73dd76fe57bf6e3a62ab431ca33d5 (patch) | |
tree | d7f5902983c985349c2977c72806aad38ddb531e | |
parent | e5782693cad41b851b37f5f2535221a2f81c6872 (diff) | |
download | uhd-c3c479fa8ee73dd76fe57bf6e3a62ab431ca33d5.tar.gz uhd-c3c479fa8ee73dd76fe57bf6e3a62ab431ca33d5.tar.bz2 uhd-c3c479fa8ee73dd76fe57bf6e3a62ab431ca33d5.zip |
docs: Added TwinRX page
-rw-r--r-- | host/docs/dboards.dox | 17 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | host/docs/devices.dox | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | host/docs/res/TwinRX_Block_Diagram.png | bin | 0 -> 252952 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | host/docs/res/TwinRX_photo.png | bin | 0 -> 1919638 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | host/docs/twinrx.dox | 73 |
5 files changed, 91 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/host/docs/dboards.dox b/host/docs/dboards.dox index 5993501c9..0ab5927a6 100644 --- a/host/docs/dboards.dox +++ b/host/docs/dboards.dox @@ -370,6 +370,23 @@ Notes: reduce the daughterboard clock rate to 20 MHz to achieve phase synchronization and best RF performance (see \ref config_devaddr). +\subsection dboards_twinrx TwinRX + +Features: +- 2 super-heterodyne frontends (2 receive, 0 transmit) + - Digital IF of +/- 50 MHz +- Supports sharing one channel's LO to the other or the use of an external LO + - Allows multiple channels and daughterboards to be frequency and phase synchronized + +Frequency Range: 10 MHz to 6 GHz + +Receive Antennas: **RX1** and **RX2** + +Receive Gain: 0-93dB + +More information: +\li \subpage page_twinrx + \subsection dboards_tvrx TVRX The TVRX board has 1 real-mode frontend. It is operated at a low IF. diff --git a/host/docs/devices.dox b/host/docs/devices.dox index 3b4f57b76..f17c15b7d 100644 --- a/host/docs/devices.dox +++ b/host/docs/devices.dox @@ -45,6 +45,7 @@ unless stated otherwise, they will still work with this version of UHD. ## Daughterboards \li \subpage page_dboards +\li \subpage page_twinrx ## OctoClock diff --git a/host/docs/res/TwinRX_Block_Diagram.png b/host/docs/res/TwinRX_Block_Diagram.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..365a524e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/host/docs/res/TwinRX_Block_Diagram.png diff --git a/host/docs/res/TwinRX_photo.png b/host/docs/res/TwinRX_photo.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..f4043b1f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/host/docs/res/TwinRX_photo.png diff --git a/host/docs/twinrx.dox b/host/docs/twinrx.dox new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c85b78b4c --- /dev/null +++ b/host/docs/twinrx.dox @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ +/*! \page page_twinrx TwinRX Daughterboard + +\tableofcontents + +\section twinrx_dboards TwinRX Properties + + +The TwinRX is a two-channel superheterodyne receiver designed for high performance spectrum monitoring and direction +finding applications. The receiver is tunable from 10 MHz - 6 GHz and has 80 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth per +channel, providing the versatility necessary to analyze a variety of signals in multiple bands of interest. Each +channel has an independent RF signal chain with preamplifiers, preselectors, and two mixer stages for superior +selectivity. Users can tune the two channels independently to simultaneously monitor uplink and downlink +communication with a combined bandwidth of 160 MHz. The ability to share the LO between channels across multiple +daughterboards enables the phase-aligned operation required to implement scalable multi-channel phased-arrays. +The receiver is capable of fast frequency hopping to detect frequency agile emitters. + +\image html TwinRX_Block_Diagram.png "TwinRX Block Diagram" + +\subsection twinrx_frequency_bands Frequency Bands + +The receive filter banks uses switches to select between the available filters. These paths are also dependent on the +antenna switch settings. Incorrectly setting the switches generally results in attenuated input / output power. Receive +filters are band pass (series high & low pass filters). + +Source code related to controlling the filter band and antenna switches resides in twinrx_experts.cpp. Specifically, +refer to the `twinrx::twinrx_freq_path_expert` class. Generally, these methods set the switches depending on the state +of the receive streams. + +The following sections provide switch setting tables for antenna and filter selection for frontend's receive paths. For +further details refer to the schematics. + +| Band | Range | +|--------|---------------| +| LB1 | 10 - 500 MHz | +| LB2 | 500 - 800 MHz | +| LB3 | 800 - 1.2 GHz | +| LB4 | 1.2 - 1.8 GHz | +| HB1 | 1.8 - 3.0 GHz | +| HB2 | 3.0 - 4.1 GHz | +| HB3 | 4.1 - 5.1 GHz | +| HB4 | 5.1 - 6.0 GHz | + +\subsection twinrx_lo_sharing Local Oscillator Sharing + +The TwinRX has the ability to export the two Local Oscillator (LO) signals from one channel to the companion channel +on the same daughterboard and/or to one or more other TwinRXs in order to form a phase-synchronous multi-channel +receiver. + +| Connector | Description | Min | Nominal | Damage | +|-------------|--------------|----------|-----------|--------------| +| J1 | LO2 Export | 0 dBm | 3 dBm | NA (Output) | +| J2 | LO2 Input | 0 dBm | 2 dBm | 20 dBm | +| J3 | LO1 Export | -12 dBm | 5 dBm | NA (Output) | +| J4 | LO1 Input | -10 dBm | -5 dBm | 10 dBm | + +\subsection twinrx_antenna_routing Antenna Routing + +The TwinRX has two external antenna connectors (RX1 and RX2) which can be switched internally to either +receiver channel. By default RX1 is connected to the first channel and RX2 to the second. + +When routing the antennas in any configuration other than the default there are some behavioral changes to be aware of. +As can be seen in the block diagram above the signal path from each antenna can be switched into a resistive divider +and then to either or both of the receive channels. If the divider is in use the incoming signal will be slightly +attenuated when compared to the direct passthrough. If both receive channels are configured to use the same antenna +the first two amplifiers and are a variable attenuator are shared. The effect of this is that the first channel's gain +settings for those amplifiers will override the second channel's. If both channels are tuned to the same frequency band +and at similar gain settings the effect will be minimal, but if the frequency or gain difference is large the resulting +gain on the second channel could be significantly lower or higher than expected. Additionally the signal path length +will increase in comparison to the direct antenna mapping so the phase of the received signal will be different +depending on the antenna mapping. + +*/ +// vim:ft=doxygen: |