Thanks Martin!

It is good comment!
I will now look for my options!

Bruhtesfa




On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 9:50 PM, Martin DvH <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

>
> On Mon, 2008-11-10 at 20:14 +0100, Bruhtesfa Ebrahim wrote:
> > 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?
> Just my 2 cents.
> I would suggest using sound in stead of radio waves.
> The lower speed of soundwaves (around 300 m/sec) means the timings go
> down with a factor 1000000 and you could do very precise short-range
> radar (actually sonar).
>
> You could still use the USRP. Just use amplifiers and ultrasonic
> transducers in stead of antenna's.
>
> Good luck,
> Martin
>
> > 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
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Discuss-gnuradio mailing list
> > Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org
> > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
>
>
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