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RSR GNSS Transcoder™ User Manual
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© 2017 Jackson Labs Technologies, Inc.
Powering the RSR GNSS Transcoder™ from a 5V supply on pin 11 of connector J4 results in the
least overall power consumption as the USB port has losses associated with the USB power
protection series diode, and the DC 7V to 36V has losses associated with the internal 36V to 5.4V
switching regulator. Pin 11 of J4 should receive a regulated and clean 5V power input for
applications that require the lowest possible overall power consumption, while the USB power port
and the DC 7V to 36V input ports remain un-connected.
3.4 Connecting to a Users’ GPS Receiver
The RSR GNSS Transcoder™ simply replaces existing GPS antenna cabling for most
industry-standard target GPS receivers, and will provide a GPS RF signal on the SMA output
connector compatible to a well-positioned GPS antenna while at the same time appearing to the GPS
receiver to be a simple industry-standard active GPS antenna with typical DC-current draw on the
antenna input connection. This allows operation with GPS receivers that require an external antenna
load to function properly, such as the Rockwell Collins DAGR GPS. Please note that the RSR GNSS
Transcoder™ is only compatible with GPS receivers that output between 0V to 5.5V DC nominal on
their antenna connector. The RSR GNSS Transcoder™ uses an integrated 180 Ohms DC resistor to
ground to simulate a suitable antenna load-current for GPS receivers. Receivers that require a current
consumption by the external antenna of typically 10mA to 50mA at 3.3V to 5V should work well. An
example of this is the Rockwell Collins DAGR handheld GPS receiver - it will not work properly if
the antenna current is either too low or too high, but it will work properly with the RF output of the
RSR GNSS Transcoder™ directly connected to the SMA GPS antenna input connector of the DAGR
via an SMA to SMA coax cable.
PLEASE NOTE: Some legacy systems such as the Microsemi XLI Reference use 12V DC for
the GPS antenna DC output power. This voltage would exceed the allowable range and will
damage the RSR GNSS Transcoder™ due to overvoltage. The maximum long-term antenna
voltage that the RSR GNSS Transcoder™ can handle without damage at its RF output
connector is 6V. For any voltages higher than 6V a DC-blocking adaptor must be used between
the RSR GNSS Transcoder™ and the users’ target GPS receiver antenna port.
The L1 GPS RF output of the RSR GNSS Transcoder™ can be adjusted between -100dBm down to
below -125dBm via SCPI serial commands, which typically results in C/No ratios of between 33dB
to 45db. Higher output levels allow compensation for longer antenna cable runs by compensating for
antenna cable RF losses.
Содержание RSR GNSS Transcoder
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