Mamoru Yamamoto wrote:
> Matt,
>
> Thank you for your reply. My USRP board is Serial No. 750 or something.
> This I bought in June 2006, and would match the following, I suppose.
>
> ===
> To modify these boards for coherent applications if you have USRP rev 4
> boards:
> Move R64 to R84, Move
Matt,
Thank you for your reply. My USRP board is Serial No. 750 or something.
This I bought in June 2006, and would match the following, I suppose.
===
To modify these boards for coherent applications if you have USRP rev 4 boards:
Move R64 to R84, Move R142 to R153
...
usrp/host/apps/burn-db
>
>> (3) Signal coherence .. (a)
>> I need to keep signal coherence between 150MHz and 400MHz.
>> I should run the FLEX400 board at the same timing to the
>> USRP main board. I found the following information URL
>> http://comsec.com/wiki?USRPClockingNotes
>> Is this instruction still valid? I a
On Wed, Jan 10, 2007 at 03:20:33PM -0800, Sharmila Kannangara wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I would like to use the USRP to generate some GSM BTS
> transmit signals in the Cellular and PCS bands.
>
> Has anyone tried to do this? I see a lot of postings
> for receiving GSM signals but nothing about
> trans
Illix - I've never heard of this problem ... did you compile your own
GCC or are you using what's provided by XCode? Which version are you
using? This code hasn't been touched in 4 months, so hopefully it's
"just" GCC or your environment variables. You can always go into the
file ( .../u
Hello,
I would like to use the USRP to generate some GSM BTS
transmit signals in the Cellular and PCS bands.
Has anyone tried to do this? I see a lot of postings
for receiving GSM signals but nothing about
transmitting them. Are there any issues with using
the USRP for this type of application?
Hi all,
Apologies if this issue has already been resolved - I couldn't find a
mention of it on the wiki or in the list archives. I'm compiling
gnuradio-core on Mac OS 10.4. I've downloaded all the dependencies
successfully, but when I issue the "make" command the build faults on
the file "circu
2007/1/10, Philip Balister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
The EFIKA is USB Full speed machine and I still haven't worked out how
to get the FPGA and the FX2 to talk properly for that case. The
transfer numbers are "funny",
The EFIKA should be interesting to GNU radio folks since the processor
has a FPU a
Hi Steve,
just checked your wiki. As was noted earlier on the list, Vanu Inc.
(http://www.vanu.com/) has GSM working in software only. So that
should be possible with GNU Radio, too. Check the list archive.
I would suggest to start the project in software only, PCs will
just become faster and GS