Red Pitaya is a project intended to be alternative for many expensive laboratory measurement and control instruments. It is known as open-source, though the hardware design is proprietary.
Developer | Spin-off company of Instrumentation Technologies |
---|---|
Type | Single-board computer |
Operating system | Linux |
CPU | Dual-core ARM Cortex A9+ and FPGA |
Memory | DDR3 RAM 512 MB (4 Gb) |
Storage | microSD up to 32Gb |
Power | max 10 W |
Website | www |
Description
editIt has two 125 MS/s RF input and two 125 MS/s RF outputs, with 50 MHz analogue bandwidth and 14-bit analog-to-digital (ADC) and digital-to-analog converters. The software includes oscilloscope, spectrum analyzer, signal generator, LCR meter (the LCR add on costs an additional 400 euros), and 50 MHz 2x2 MIMO PID controller. It can be re-programmed to become other devices, as all the IO ports are connected to a common field-programmable gate array (FPGA). There are also auxiliary ADC (250 kS/s) and digital IO.[1][2]
It has three USB 2.0 ports, Wi-Fi, Ethernet connector. Internally, it uses Linux as operating system. The mass storage device for the operating system is a micro-SD card.
Due to the wide bandwidth of the ADC and DAC, the Red Pitaya can be used as a software-defined radio receiver and transmitter and in other radio frequency applications.[3] HAMLAB, a fully featured SDR HF transceiver with an output power of 10 W based on the Red Pitaya board is released in the amateur radio market in October 2016.[4]
Although the software (including HDL source code) for this project is made freely available, the device is not a fully Open Source Hardware project, because the device's electrical schematics are not made openly available.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Ibrahim, Dogan (2016). Explore, experiment, program Red Pitaya for test & measurement. London, UK: Elektor International Media BV. ISBN 978-1-907920-53-0.
- ^ Richards, Mike (July 2016). "Pi Updates and Red Pitaya". Radio User. 11 (7). Bournemouth, UK: PW Publishing Ltd: 17. ISSN 1748-8117.
- ^ Richards, Mike (August 2016). "Red Pitaya as a VNA (vector network analyser)". Radio User. 11 (8). Bournemouth, UK: PW Publishing Ltd: 18–21. ISSN 1748-8117.
- ^ HAMLAB web page