PJ
Page Jack
Thu, Sep 8, 2011 8:24 AM
Hi list,
I want to use 4 bit sample to enlarge my signal bandwidth, however my
program can not
work with 4 bit sample, and I trace into fpga code also can not find
anything related to
4 bit sample however there is 8 bit sample and 16 bit sample code. So I need
to be confirmed
is 4 bit supported in current fpga code?
Regards!
Hi list,
I want to use 4 bit sample to enlarge my signal bandwidth, however my
program can not
work with 4 bit sample, and I trace into fpga code also can not find
anything related to
4 bit sample however there is 8 bit sample and 16 bit sample code. So I need
to be confirmed
is 4 bit supported in current fpga code?
Regards!
JB
Josh Blum
Thu, Sep 8, 2011 2:53 PM
On 09/08/2011 01:24 AM, Page Jack wrote:
Hi list,
I want to use 4 bit sample to enlarge my signal bandwidth, however my
program can not
work with 4 bit sample, and I trace into fpga code also can not find
anything related to
4 bit sample however there is 8 bit sample and 16 bit sample code. So I need
to be confirmed
is 4 bit supported in current fpga code?
No, only 32-bit samples (16 bits I, 16 bits Q)
-josh
On 09/08/2011 01:24 AM, Page Jack wrote:
> Hi list,
> I want to use 4 bit sample to enlarge my signal bandwidth, however my
> program can not
> work with 4 bit sample, and I trace into fpga code also can not find
> anything related to
> 4 bit sample however there is 8 bit sample and 16 bit sample code. So I need
> to be confirmed
> is 4 bit supported in current fpga code?
>
No, only 32-bit samples (16 bits I, 16 bits Q)
-josh
TH
Thomas Hobiger
Thu, Sep 8, 2011 10:46 PM
Hi Josh,
Are there any plans to support and implement 4 bit in future?
Regards,
Thomas
On 09/08/2011 11:53 PM, Josh Blum wrote:
On 09/08/2011 01:24 AM, Page Jack wrote:
Hi list,
I want to use 4 bit sample to enlarge my signal bandwidth, however my
program can not
work with 4 bit sample, and I trace into fpga code also can not find
anything related to
4 bit sample however there is 8 bit sample and 16 bit sample code. So I need
to be confirmed
is 4 bit supported in current fpga code?
Hi Josh,
Are there any plans to support and implement 4 bit in future?
Regards,
Thomas
On 09/08/2011 11:53 PM, Josh Blum wrote:
>
> On 09/08/2011 01:24 AM, Page Jack wrote:
>
>> Hi list,
>> I want to use 4 bit sample to enlarge my signal bandwidth, however my
>> program can not
>> work with 4 bit sample, and I trace into fpga code also can not find
>> anything related to
>> 4 bit sample however there is 8 bit sample and 16 bit sample code. So I need
>> to be confirmed
>> is 4 bit supported in current fpga code?
>>
>>
> No, only 32-bit samples (16 bits I, 16 bits Q)
>
> -josh
>
> _______________________________________________
> USRP-users mailing list
> USRP-users@lists.ettus.com
> http://lists.ettus.com/mailman/listinfo/usrp-users_lists.ettus.com
>
>
JB
Josh Blum
Thu, Sep 8, 2011 11:31 PM
On 09/08/2011 03:46 PM, Thomas Hobiger wrote:
Hi Josh,
Are there any plans to support and implement 4 bit in future?
Well, there is a plan to do 16 bit samples (8-I, 8-Q). I suppose it
wouldnt be such a leap to work in 8 bit samples at the same time.
What did everybody mean by 4 bits per sample? 1 byte per complex sample
(4-I, 4-Q)? I can't imagine doing sub-byte samples.
-Josh
On 09/08/2011 03:46 PM, Thomas Hobiger wrote:
> Hi Josh,
>
> Are there any plans to support and implement 4 bit in future?
Well, there is a plan to do 16 bit samples (8-I, 8-Q). I suppose it
wouldnt be such a leap to work in 8 bit samples at the same time.
What did everybody mean by 4 bits per sample? 1 byte per complex sample
(4-I, 4-Q)? I can't imagine doing sub-byte samples.
-Josh
TH
Thomas Hobiger
Thu, Sep 8, 2011 11:47 PM
Hi,
I was thought about 4 bit (4-I, 4-Q) just because it shuld allow the
full 50 Msps in dual USRP (MIMO) single Ethernet configuration.
Well, there is a plan to do 16 bit samples (8-I, 8-Q). I suppose it
wouldnt be such a leap to work in 8 bit samples at the same time.
That would also be great. For my applications dynamic range is less
critical than bandwidth.
Thomas
--
Dr. Thomas Hobiger
Space-Time Standards Laboratory
Applied Electromagnetic Research Institute
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
4-2-1 Nukui-Kitamachi, Koganei
184-8795 Tokyo
Japan
email: hobiger@nict.go.jp
phone: ++81-042-327-7561
fax: ++81-042-327-6664
homepage (priv.): http://www.hobiger.org
Hi,
I was thought about 4 bit (4-I, 4-Q) just because it shuld allow the
full 50 Msps in dual USRP (MIMO) single Ethernet configuration.
> Well, there is a plan to do 16 bit samples (8-I, 8-Q). I suppose it
> wouldnt be such a leap to work in 8 bit samples at the same time.
>
That would also be great. For my applications dynamic range is less
critical than bandwidth.
Thomas
--
******************************************************************
Dr. Thomas Hobiger
Space-Time Standards Laboratory
Applied Electromagnetic Research Institute
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
------------------------------------------------------------------
4-2-1 Nukui-Kitamachi, Koganei
184-8795 Tokyo
Japan
------------------------------------------------------------------
email: hobiger@nict.go.jp
phone: ++81-042-327-7561
fax: ++81-042-327-6664
------------------------------------------------------------------
homepage (priv.): http://www.hobiger.org
******************************************************************
PJ
Page Jack
Fri, Sep 9, 2011 1:32 AM
Yeah I mean (4-I, 4-Q), there is already support (8-I, 8-Q) in current
version.
On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 7:31 AM, Josh Blum josh@ettus.com wrote:
On 09/08/2011 03:46 PM, Thomas Hobiger wrote:
Hi Josh,
Are there any plans to support and implement 4 bit in future?
Yeah I mean (4-I, 4-Q), there is already support (8-I, 8-Q) in current
version.
On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 7:31 AM, Josh Blum <josh@ettus.com> wrote:
>
>
> On 09/08/2011 03:46 PM, Thomas Hobiger wrote:
> > Hi Josh,
> >
> > Are there any plans to support and implement 4 bit in future?
>
> Well, there is a plan to do 16 bit samples (8-I, 8-Q). I suppose it
> wouldnt be such a leap to work in 8 bit samples at the same time.
>
> What did everybody mean by 4 bits per sample? 1 byte per complex sample
> (4-I, 4-Q)? I can't imagine doing sub-byte samples.
>
> -Josh
>
> _______________________________________________
> USRP-users mailing list
> USRP-users@lists.ettus.com
> http://lists.ettus.com/mailman/listinfo/usrp-users_lists.ettus.com
>