Some of the little magnetic attached antennas on eBay will operate on 3-5V.
More problematic is using the older antennas which require 5V with the newer
chips such as the LEA-5,6,7 series which run on 3.3V. There is an internal
Bias T, but I haven't tried to bring in 5V through the Vant pin as
On 3/13/2013 6:40 PM, lstosk...@cox.net wrote:
Some of the little magnetic attached antennas on eBay will operate on
3-5V. More problematic is using the older antennas which require 5V
with the newer chips such as the LEA-5,6,7 series which run on 3.3V.
Some distribution amps will all you to i
On 3/13/2013 5:19 PM, Mike S wrote:
On 3/13/2013 6:40 PM, lstosk...@cox.net wrote:
Some of the little magnetic attached antennas on eBay will operate on
3-5V. More problematic is using the older antennas which require 5V
with the newer chips such as the LEA-5,6,7 series which run on 3.3V.
So
On 3/13/2013 7:36 PM, Ed Palmer wrote:
You can also put a 5-volt GPS on port 1 to match your 5-volt antenna and
GPSs with other voltages, e.g. 3.3 or even 12 volts, on the other
ports. This way, you don't lose the use of one port.
That's the last thing I'd want to do, literally, since that mea
The LEA-5T accepts the 5V for the antenna supply: from the datasheet you
can see an absolute maximum of 6V for the antenna supply.
On Thu, Mar 14, 2013 at 11:40 AM, Mike S wrote:
> On 3/13/2013 7:36 PM, Ed Palmer wrote:
>
>> You can also put a 5-volt GPS on port 1 to match your 5-volt antenna an