Our lab is using USRP N310's with an external frequency synth ($500), a TI dev board splitting chip ($200?) and an external 10 MHz selenium clock ($2k). The set up is very very good but extremely expensive as well.
After paying for RF cables and a host server, we are roughly getting 1 channel per $4k. For MIMO and beam-forming, it might be cost effective for you to buy more N210's in order to use the hardware you already have. A wireless research lab on campus uses lots of B-series USRP's because they are a (relatively) cheep way to set up lots of AP's and clients. That lab has a good 20-30 B-series devices and used them for a wide variety of experiments. Not sure if they are suitable for your desired experiments. Alternatively, this non-Ettus device may be worth looking into: https://umtrx.org/products/umtrx-v2-3-1/ I would like to warn you that RF cables (SMA. BNC, N-connector) are surprisingly expensive (and effected by the American tariffs). You should budget accordingly. On Thu, Jun 13, 2019 at 12:36 PM eva some <tud53...@temple.edu> wrote: > Hi dear community members! > > I want to run experiments using MIMO and/or beamforming techniques with > open source. However, I am getting stuck with hardware. Traditionally, I > used USRPs N210 for experiments. I have only two. > > Is there any cheap hardware that can support MIMO & beamforming > applications on the market? > > Thanks. > > -- > *Evariste Some* > EE > _______________________________________________ > Discuss-gnuradio mailing list > Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio >
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