Hi Johnathan,

Thank you so much for the advise that you gave me ! ! !
Could you also look at the following description and give me your comment.?
- Thanks

Ya! I am looking to detect human motion at a distance of minimum 1 meter and
maximum 10 meter.
I have one USRP and two XCVR2450 Trancievers(operating freq. 2.45GHz), which
I will be using one of them as transmitter and the
other as reciever. So, I have two possible ways of implemetation.

 1) As pulse doppler radar = here to get a minimum distance of 1 meter, the
usrp should transmit  a pulse of width *5 nanosec*, then should stop and the
reciever should start to recieve, then to measure  a velocity as high as
3m/sec, I can use PRF of 100.  Here the problem is as you said the USRP can
not generate such a short pulse of 5 nanosec, plus it can not switch between
transmitter and reciever so fast.

2) As CW radar = here my idea is to transmit a CW from one shell script and
recieve the reflected data at the same time in another shell script. Here
the problem is the isolation between the transmit and recieve paths. The
data I recieve will not be just a reflected data but also signal from the
transmitter.

This means both of the implementation ways have problem.
So, what do you suggest?
And which one do you recommend me from your previous experience on the USRP?

  Also Mr. Lee Pathon, the Author of  "GNU based Software Defined Radar ",
I know you worked on such stuff , could you give me some comment based on
your work? - Thanks

Bruhtesfa





On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 4:45 PM, Johnathan Corgan <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Mon, 2008-11-10 at 16:39 +0100, Bruhtesfa Ebrahim wrote:
>
> > Is there any tutorial (documentation) that explains in detail
> > gr_radar_mono and other gnu radio packages?
> > I look on GNU radio 3.0svn documentation but it has no details. is
> > there any other that has more details?
>
> There is a README inside the directory that explains the command-line
> parameters.
>
> But I'll warn you ahead of time that, based on a prior email where you
> said you were looking at targets 10 meters away, that this software
> won't work for you.
>
> Without going in to detail, the minimum range is about 200m, based on
> transmitting a long enough chirp and the time it takes to switch from TX
> to RX.
>
> Just FYI, however, this software was able to image targets 1.5 km away,
> using an RFX2400, a 3W PA, and a horn antenna.
>
> -Johnathan
>
>
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