In my job we have learned that lesson and fitted on all our DSP systems (you 
could call them direct digitizing SDRs, although we do not radio stuff) a cheap 
I2C temperature sensor. No big thing by means of software, costs and PCB space, 
but already proved being very useful. Could be considered for future products…

 

Ralph.

 

From: USRP-users [mailto:usrp-users-boun...@lists.ettus.com] On Behalf Of 
Marcus D. Leech via USRP-users
Sent: Tuesday, December 2, 2014 4:11 PM
To: khalid.el-darymli
Cc: usrp-us...@lists.ettus.com; Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org
Subject: Re: [USRP-users] How to correct for the drift in an (FMCW) Rx signal?

 

On 12/02/2014 10:06 AM, khalid.el-darymli wrote: 

Hi Marcus,

Is there a temperature sensor on-board the N200 unit? If not, does it support 
installing any such sensor?

Thanks.

No, and no.

But there are a tonne of USB-based temperature sensors out there.  Google is 
your friend, etc.






 

Best regards,
Khalid

 

On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 5:44 PM, Marcus D. Leech <mle...@ripnet.com 
<mailto:mle...@ripnet.com> > wrote:



On 11/28/2014 03:41 PM, khalid.el-darymli wrote: 

 





Back to my original question, what should I do to correct for this?




Thanks in advance.




Best,
Khalid

 

Khalid:

Thanks very much for the very-extensive data.  My main concern, as one of the 
Ettus support team, was that there was something wrong with
  the hardware, but the magnitude of both the apparent phase and magnitude 
drift is entirely consistent with analog-hardware temperature
  effects, unrelated to clock stability, etc.

Coax cables, for example, will change their loss characteristics and *effective 
length* with temperature, so with precise hardware like USRPs, it's
  easy to see these effects.

FMCW radar isn't my area of expertise, so hopefully others can comment on 
RX-processing strategies to deal with this, as it *must* also be a problem
  with non-SDR FMCW radar implementations.









 

On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 12:08 PM, <mle...@ripnet.com <mailto:mle...@ripnet.com> 
> wrote:



What is the magnitude of the frequency drift?

What is the magnitude of the gain drift?

What are you measuring backscatter *from*?

 

 

 

On 2014-11-28 10:14, khalid.el-darymli via USRP-users wrote:

Hi,

Given a set of synced (i.e., using external GPS REF/PPS), time-commanded and 
calibrated (i.e., through compensating for the phase/mag offset between digital 
Tx chirp prior to transmission and ADC'ed Rx signals) N200 devices with 
LFTX/LFRX daughterboards, that work with coherent LFMCW chirps, I am still 
seeing a tiny drift (both in the magnitude and frequency) of the calibrated  
back-scatter Rx chirp received at time t1 when compared to an Rx chirp received 
at an earlier time t0. 

The more the N200 device runs (e.g., 5 hours), the greater the drift is. 
Obviously, this drift is pertinent to both the DAC and ADCs and the GPS 
referenced clocks of the N200 devices.


My questions are:

1- Why I still see such drift although my devices are synced with an external 
GPS? and how do I correct for it?


2- Can the PLL Carrier Tracking block in GRC be used to track and correct for 
such a drift? If so, how do I set the max/min freq inputs for this block?

3- Can AGC2 or AGC3 block be useful in this regard? If so, are there any 
examples to explain how the input parameters of these blocks can be set up?



Thanks.

Best regards,

Khalid

 

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-- 
Marcus Leech
Principal Investigator
Shirleys Bay Radio Astronomy Consortium
http://www.sbrac.org

 

 

 






-- 
Marcus Leech
Principal Investigator
Shirleys Bay Radio Astronomy Consortium
http://www.sbrac.org
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