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Navman JUPITER LA000605D User Manual

Page 13

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LA000605D © 2007 Navman New Zealand. All rights reserved. Proprietary information and specifications subject to change without notice.

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Characteristic

Active antenna

Passive antenna

polarisation

right-hand circular polarised

right-hand circular polarised

receive frequency L1

1.57542 GHz

+/- 1.023 MHz

1.57542 GHz

> +/- 1.023 MHz

power supply

3 V (typ), 5 V max.

DC current

< 10mA at 3 VDC

antenna gain

+2 to 5 dBi with 1 dB loss (max)

in connections

total gain (includes

antenna gain, LNA

gain and cable loss)

≤ 26 dBi (Jupiter 20)

≤18 dBi (Jupiter 32)

axial ratio

< 3 dB

< 3 dB

output VSWR

< 2.5

Table 2-5: Recommended antenna characteristics

Note: GPS active and passive antenna selection must include practical TTFF tests

in weak and strong outdoor environments – noting peak and average signal strength

measurements. This must be done in comparison with the antenna supplied in the

Development kit. Performance results and signal strength measurements must be

comparable to the reference antenna supplied. Passive antenna signal strength

measurements will be on average lower than an active antenna. This depends on size of

patch antenna/ground plane, distance from RF input, gain of the element and noise in the

application circuit. However, the TTFF should be comparable in open sky conditions. An

active antenna is recommended if peak performance is required in very weak or obscured

conditions.

2.4.4 Jupiter module used as a GPS sensor
The adapter board reference design shows how a Jupiter 32 GPS receiver module can

be used with an external active antenna via a coax connector (See Figure 2-5). The same

design can be used with a passive patch antenna on the same PCB. The module is placed

so the connection between the antenna and the antenna input pad is as short as possible.

Also note, the PCB should have a complete ground plane on the patch side of the board

which serves as the ground plane required by the antenna (See Figure 2-6).
The serial data from the module must be connected to a local host processor, and care

should be taken so noise from these devices cannot enter the signal path or GPS antenna. It

is recommended that all digital devices are placed on the opposite side of the board from the

antenna.

2.4.5 DC supply protection for an active antenna

Antenna DC supply current limit

When the Jupiter 32 receiver is used with an external active antenna, the DC supply in the

coax cable is vulnerable to over-current if a fault occurs in the antenna. For example, this can

happen if its cable gets crushed in a car door.
Warning: The Jupiter 32 module antenna power feed does not have internal current limiting.

Damage can occur if unlimited current is permitted to flow through the module antenna power

feed components.
The circuit shown in Figure 2-8 (next page) will provide over-current protection.

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