On 01/09/2023 16:39, Marcus Müller wrote:
> Ah, nice! yeah, then this would work – but! any oscillator has drift,
> so two local oscillators will not stay on the same phase for long; if
> your first couple measurements are correct, but suddenly your
> directions become very wrong, that's what I'd investigate.
>
> Cheers,
> Marcus
Looks like the BB60C supports an external 10MHz reference clock, which
would be utterly mandatory for anything requiring
mutual phase-coherence, whether that's *sufficient* depends very very
much on the internal architecture of the BB60C.
>
> On 01.09.23 19:16, Michael Berman wrote:
>> The gr-aoa module has a calibration phase where you connect a source
>> with a splitter and roughly equally lengthened cables to the two
>> sources and it cross-correlates the two inputs to determine an
>> initial phase difference. Then, while the script is still running,
>> you disconnect the calibration source and connect the antenna's,
>> again with roughly equally lengthened cables to run the MUSIC algorithm.
>>
>>
>> Thank you very much,
>>
>> Michael Berman
>>
>> On Fri, Sep 1, 2023 at 11:00 AM Marcus Müller
>> <marcus.mueller@ettus.com <mailto:marcus.mueller@ettus.com>> wrote:
>>
>> If you don't know the relative phase of your two receiver chains,
>> how are you going to
>> know the direction of a signal?
>>
>> On 01.09.23 17:37, Michael Berman wrote:
>>> Marcus,
>>>
>>> Thanks for the reply! I apologize, the GR package is gr-aoa,
>>> not gr-music, and can
>>> be found here (https://github.com/MarcinWachowiak/gr-aoa
>>> <https://github.com/MarcinWachowiak/gr-aoa>). The NOAA broadcast
>>> is a NBFM signal. I am using 2 Signal Hound receivers
>>> (https://signalhound.com/products/bb60c/
>>> <https://signalhound.com/products/bb60c/>) with 2 antennas
>>> spaced on a beam. Do I
>>> need to synchronize the 2 receivers with an external clock, or
>>> should they be fine
>>> free running independently?
>>>
>>>
>>> Thank you very much,
>>>
>>> Michael Berman
>>>
>>> On Fri, Sep 1, 2023 at 9:25 AM Marcus Müller <mmueller@gnuradio.org
>>> <mailto:mmueller@gnuradio.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Not familiar with the details of NOAA signalling, but isn't
>>> the carrier of an FM
>>> signal
>>> *the FM signal*?
>>>
>>> For a DoA estimate, you'd correlate the different receive
>>> chains with each other
>>> to get a
>>> phase; so, as long as the signals do have some bandwidth
>>> that makes the problem
>>> less
>>> ambiguous, it'd work with any signal. I'm sadly not familiar
>>> with gr-music (and
>>> can't find
>>> it on cgran.org <http://cgran.org>), but MUSIC works as long
>>> as the signals at
>>> the different receive antennas
>>> are correlated and noise is not. You do not have to
>>> preprocess your FM signal!
>>>
>>> Best,
>>> Marcus
>>>
>>> On 01.09.23 17:09, Michael Berman wrote:
>>> > Does anybody know if there is a way to recover a carrier
>>> of an FM signal to
>>> use for an
>>> > Angle of Arrival calculation? I am using GNURadio and
>>> gr-music and I am
>>> trying to use the
>>> > NOAA Weather Radio signals.
>>> >
>>> > Thank you very much,
>>> >
>>> > Michael Berman
>>>
>
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