Hi Colby,

Even if the two boards have slightly different frequencies, this should not 
impact decoding of the receive signal as the received signal jumps between the 
I and Q channels (depending of course on the packet lengths and assuming that 
you have a packet decoder on I and Q separately).

More seriously using separate  uncorrelated LO signals for transmit and receive 
significantly degrades receiver sensivity. The transmit signal is typically 
30dBm+ and the same antenna or nearby antenna is used to get the receive signal 
- the received signal has this huge transmit signal along with a -60dBm 
backscattered signal from the tag that is 50 to 200kHz away from carrier. If 
the same LO is used for transmit and receive, then at the dowconversion mixer, 
there is a high degree of correlation between signals at the LO port and the RF 
port (esp. the transmitter leakage), and much of the transmitter noise shows up 
as a DC offset. If separate LO's then the noise at the two ports are large 
uncorrelated contributing to the baseband noise. You can expect 5db to 20db 
difference in SNR between using same LO's vs separate LO's

Best regards,
-Vijay

--- On Tue, 4/19/11, Colby Boyer <colby.bo...@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Colby Boyer <colby.bo...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] Odd use of LO phase lock feature on USRP for 
RFID application
To: i...@agile-sdr-solutions.com
Cc: "Matt Ettus" <m...@ettus.com>, "GNU Radio Discussion" 
<discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org>
Date: Tuesday, April 19, 2011, 5:00 PM

The two boards should have different clocks, so there should be some frequency 
offset. Even in typical SISO systems, you use a PLL block to deal with this 
since you can't access the other LO because its physically somewhere else. 



While receiving, the transmitter is still running at full power to run the RFID 
tag. The transmitters carrier is down converted by the receiver board. Unless I 
have a misunderstanding, and the two daughter boards share the same clock there 
should be some frequency offset.



?

Thanks,
Colby

On Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 12:44 PM,  <i...@agile-sdr-solutions.com> wrote:


On Tue, 19 Apr 2011 11:41:46 -0700, Matt Ettus <m...@ettus.com> wrote:

> On 04/19/2011 11:38 AM, Colby Boyer wrote:

>> Hi All,

>>

>> In RFID applications, a reader receives (backscatter from RFID tag) and

>> transmits (constant tone) at the same frequency. With commercial

>> readers, a single LO will be shared by the RX and TX chain. However, in

>> the USRP case, two separate daughter boards are used so different LOs

>> are in use for the RX and TX chain. So you should end up with some

>> frequency offset in RX chain due to mismatched clocks.

>>

>> Is it possible to lock the LOs of a TX daughter board and a RX daughter

>> board, as you would for a traditional MIMO 2 TX or 2 RX setup? There

>> appears to numerous discussions and examples of the latter. I'm thinking

>> it would be possible. But I'm more of a systems guy and less of a RF

>> hardware guy, so any comments would be appreciated.

>>

>> Thanks,

>> Colby

>

>

> As long as you set them to the same frequency, they're already locked.

> No need to do anything different.

>

> Matt

>

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True, for a SISO system with TDD(not FDD) theres no problem for your

kind of application.

Regards

Agile Solutions




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