I am running it at 2.5GHz.

On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 12:39 PM, Nick Foster <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Mon, 2011-05-16 at 12:32 -0500, John Andrews wrote:
> > I am using the 1st generation USRP with RFX2400 daughterboards each
> > connected to the TX/RX interface.
> >
> > In the sine source block I am using a frequency of 100kHz. As the
> > interpolation of USRP sink is 128 I am using a sampling frequency of
> > 1Msps.
>
> And what center frequency are you running at?
>
> --n
>
> >
> > On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 12:27 PM, Nick Foster <[email protected]> wrote:
> >         On Mon, 2011-05-16 at 12:23 -0500, John Andrews wrote:
> >         > I am using GRC. I used a signal source block generating a
> >         complex sine
> >         > at 100kHz. The USRP interpolation is 128 and the sampling
> >         rate of the
> >         > sine generator is 1MHz. The USRP connected to another
> >         computer has
> >         > USRP source configured at 64 decimation and is connected to
> >         an FFT
> >         > block. I don't see any peak at the expected frequency or
> >         anywhere in
> >         > the plot. Its just a flat plot. I checked the USRP settings
> >         on both
> >         > and they are configured right. I even have transmit gain and
> >         receive
> >         > gain as 10dB on both sides.
> >         >
> >         > What can be wrong here?
> >
> >
> >         What daughterboards are you using? What frequency are you
> >         using on the
> >         source/sink blocks? The BasicRX/TX should be used with >1MHz
> >         signals
> >         (configure the USRP source/sink center freq to 1MHz or above),
> >         since the
> >         transformers won't pass lower frequencies than this.
> >
> >         --n
> >
> >
> >         >
> >         > Thanks
> >         >
> >         > On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 12:09 PM, Marcus D. Leech
> >         <[email protected]>
> >         > wrote:
> >         >         On 16/05/2011 1:03 PM, John Andrews wrote:
> >         >         > Shouldn't I use some kind of modulation scheme to
> >         do this,
> >         >         > like FM or AM, to transmit a tone?
> >         >         No, you can just transmit a narrow, single-frequency
> >         tone, and
> >         >         use the receivers FFT to determine how far off it is
> >         from
> >         >           where you expect it.
> >         >
> >         >         use a signal-source producing a SIN wave at, let's
> >         say, 1KHz,
> >         >         feed that into a UHD/USRPx sink tuned to whatever
> >         your
> >         >         frequency is.
> >         >           The tone will appear at TUNED-FREQUENCY+1KHz.
> >         >
> >         >
> >         >
> >         >
> >         >         >
> >         >         > On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 10:02 AM, Marcus D. Leech
> >         >         > <[email protected]> wrote:
> >         >         >         On 16/05/2011 10:26 AM, Alexander Chemeris
> >         wrote:
> >         >         >                 You may also look into this code:
> >         >         >                 http://thre.at/kalibrate/
> >         >         >                 It estimates offset of an USRP
> >         with regards
> >         >         >                 to a GSM base station, but
> >         >         >                 it can be easily modified to
> >         measure offset
> >         >         >                 from any clean tone, e.g.
> >         >         >                 transmitted by a second USRP.
> >         >         >
> >         >         >         Keep in mind that the offset measured must
> >         >         >         necessarily be the total offset--that is,
> >         both Rx
> >         >         >         and Tx can be "off" in frequency.
> >         >         >
> >         >         >         The practical consequence should be NIL,
> >         because
> >         >         >         frequency correction should normally only
> >         be done on
> >         >         >         the Rx-side, and it should
> >         >         >          simply adapt to whatever it sees,
> >         regardless of the
> >         >         >         Tx and Rx components of the offset.
> >         >         >
> >         >         >
> >         >         >
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> >         >
> >         >
> >         >
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> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
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