Hi Ash,

Yes, you need to use an attenuator if you are connecting the B200's
directly together with a cable. I would recommend at least 30dB of
attenuation, but that depends on your settings. It is recommended that you
do not input more that -15 dBm into the receiver of the B200, as this can
damage the device.

With that said, what settings are you using? I see you have 8dB gain for
transmit (you may need to increase this), what about receive on the other
B200? Which port are you using to receive on the B200 (TX/RX or RX2)?

-Trip

On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 10:46 AM, Ashish Pasha Sheikh <apshe...@mtu.edu>
wrote:

> Hello everyone,
>
> i am new to the world of SDR. I currently have two USRP B200 radios. I
> would like to connect the Tx port of one SDR to Rx port of second SDR using
> a cable to visualize the transmitted bits.
>
> I am generating random bits with Ts=1/10000 and 50 samples per frame.
> Using a rectangular pulse shaping with 20 pulse length ....it would output
> me a samples with data rate of 200KHz. I am transmitting the baseband
> signal with gain of 8 and interpoaltion factor 512 over a 432e6 frequency.
>
>
> now i want to visualize the signal by receiving it on another B200 radio .
> I receive complete noise irrespective of whether i am transmitting (or)
> not. So can i connect the two B200 radios using a cable so as to see the
> clean recevieed spectrum..
>
> In this case I believe i should use a attenuator in between the cables.Can
> you please point more on this ? can i drectly connect without an
> attenuator??
>
>
> Ash
> undergrad student,
>
>
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