Wiki

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revisionBoth sides next revision
resources:eval:user-guides:ad-fmcomms2-ebz:introduction [29 Jun 2015 20:20] – old revision restored (11 Apr 2015 16:01) Robin Getzresources:eval:user-guides:ad-fmcomms2-ebz:introduction [17 Jul 2015 12:18] – resolve link issue for AD9364 Mihai Ionut Suciu
Line 3: Line 3:
 {{  :resources:eval:user-guides:ad-fmcomms2-ebz:ad9361_plus_zed.png?direct&300|}} {{  :resources:eval:user-guides:ad-fmcomms2-ebz:ad9361_plus_zed.png?direct&300|}}
  
-The AD-FMCOMMS[2345]-EBZ and ARRADIO cards are a high-speed analog modules designed to showcase the [[adi>AD9361]] or [[adi>9364]], a high performance, highly integrated RF agile transceiver intended for use in RF applications, such as 3G and 4G base station applications and software defined radios. Its programmability and wideband capability make it ideal for a broad range of transceiver applications. The device combines an RF front end with a flexible mixed-signal baseband section and integrated frequency synthesizers, simplifying design-in by providing a configurable digital interface to a processor or FPGA. The AD9361 and AD9364 chip operates in the 70MHz to 6GHz range, covering most licensed and unlicensed bands. The boards, due to discrete external components may have less performance on some of the RF input/output connectors (for example - the FMCOMMS2 and specific connectors on the FMCOMMS5 are specifically tuned to 2.4GHz). The AD9361 and AD9364 both supports channel bandwidths from less than 200kHz to 56MHz by both changing sample rate, and by changing digital filters, and decimation inside the device itself.+The AD-FMCOMMS[2345]-EBZ and ARRADIO cards are a high-speed analog modules designed to showcase the [[adi>AD9361]] or [[adi>AD9364]], a high performance, highly integrated RF agile transceiver intended for use in RF applications, such as 3G and 4G base station applications and software defined radios. Its programmability and wideband capability make it ideal for a broad range of transceiver applications. The device combines an RF front end with a flexible mixed-signal baseband section and integrated frequency synthesizers, simplifying design-in by providing a configurable digital interface to a processor or FPGA. The AD9361 and AD9364 chip operates in the 70MHz to 6GHz range, covering most licensed and unlicensed bands. The boards, due to discrete external components may have less performance on some of the RF input/output connectors (for example - the FMCOMMS2 and specific connectors on the FMCOMMS5 are specifically tuned to 2.4GHz). The AD9361 and AD9364 both supports channel bandwidths from less than 200kHz to 56MHz by both changing sample rate, and by changing digital filters, and decimation inside the device itself.
  
 The difference between the AD9361 (2 Rx, 2 Tx) and AD9364 (1 Rx, 1 Tx) is the number of channels. Software, HDL, pinout, etc - is all exactly the same. The difference between the AD9361 (2 Rx, 2 Tx) and AD9364 (1 Rx, 1 Tx) is the number of channels. Software, HDL, pinout, etc - is all exactly the same.
resources/eval/user-guides/ad-fmcomms2-ebz/introduction.txt · Last modified: 28 Jan 2021 23:42 by Robin Getz