Thank you Andrew. I am a radar engineer for more than 15 years myself. We have designs more interesting than the AWR series of TI, which is quite interesting for some applications but no so much on others. The costs are a little bit higher than those $30, specially if you have to develop your PCB antenna.
<https://a4rad.com/assets/images/featured/corporate-01.jpg> <https://a4rad.com/assets/images/about/about-1.jpg> My idea is to create a simpler, better device able to work with the beaglebone (or the beaglewire), allowing users to create their own radar applications in a very fast way (including the UI). On Friday, May 29, 2020 at 1:22:40 AM UTC+2, Andrew P. Lentvorski wrote: > > You can certainly persist, but I'm going to point out the existence of > chips like the AWR1843--"Single-chip 76-GHz to 81-GHz automotive radar > sensor integrating DSP, MCU and radar accelerator": > https://www.ti.com/product/AWR1843 > > This is about $30, and does all the RF-y things while sending your ADC > data straight to a DSP and Cortex R4F with extra Radar-y things to > accelerate analysis. This allows you to focus on analyzing the results > instead of the guts of "implementing a radar". > > Anyways, good luck. Sounds like an interesting project. > -- For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "BeagleBoard" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/beagleboard/ec989263-c422-47e6-9689-26c670ec86cc%40googlegroups.com.
