Metering Technology RFLAN RFLAN Module User Manual Operational Overview

Metering Technology Corporation RFLAN Module Operational Overview

Contents

User Manual

Tested and Report Prepared By:        FCC ID: PDVRFLAN ITC Engineering Services 9959Calaveras Road, Box 543 Sunol, CA 94586-0543 Tel:  925-862-2944                           Fax:  925-862-9013 Email:  docs@itcemc.com                Web:  www.itcemc.com                    RF-LAN Module      User’s Guide v1.01          September 23, 2002
RF-LAN User’s Guide v1.01                        -- Confidential –                                       FCC ID: PDVRFLAN      2002 Metering Technology Corporation. All Rights Reserved                                                                               Page 2   FCC WARNING STATEMENTS   Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC.  Rules: These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential/office installation. The equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy, and if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:  •  Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. •  Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. •  Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. •  Consult the dealer or an experienced Radio/TV technician for help.  CAUTION: Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment.   FCC LABEL STATEMENT  This device complies with FCC Rules Part 15. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1)  This device may not cause harmful interference and (2) This device must accept any interference  that maybe received, including interference that may cause undesired operation.    INSTRUCTIONS TO THE INSTALLER & USER  Minimum Safe Distance:   0.14943 meters (5.9 inches)     Antenna Substitution:  Do not substitute any antenna for for the one supplied by the manufacturer.  You may be exposing person(s) to harmful radiation. Contact supplier or the manufacturer for further instructions.
 Table of Contents    Operational Overview ...............................................................................................................................4 Electrical Specifications............................................................................................................................4 Hardware Description ...............................................................................................................................5 Software Description.................................................................................................................................6 Commands To RF LAN Card: ..............................................................................................................7 Connector Details......................................................................................................................................7 J1 Connector .........................................................................................................................................7 J2 Connector .........................................................................................................................................8 J3 Connector .........................................................................................................................................8 FCC ID: PDVRFLAN
RF-LAN User’s Guide v1.01                        -- Confidential –                                       FCC ID: PDVRFLAN      2002 Metering Technology Corporation. All Rights Reserved                                                                               Page 4 Operational Overview The purpose of the RF-LAN Module is to provide communication over the air to another similar unit or an RF-LAN Hub.  The RF-LAN Module can be installed in different types of host electronic measurement, control, and data acquisition equipment, such as electric meters.   The following describes the general operation of the RF-LAN Module:  •  The Module operates in ISM band (902 – 928 MHz) using the Frequency Hopping method.  •  The Module can be installed in devices that provide a 5VDC power supply. •  Communication with the host device is accomplished through a 9600 baud serial interface. •  The Module adjusts output RF power according to reception of an acknowledgment signal. •  The Module can communicate with a similar Module located in other devices, such as a Gateway, and with low power RF transceivers located nearby inside devices like Water or Gas Meters.  Electrical Specifications  Operating Voltage:       5VDC +/- 5%  Consumed Current :      < 1A, peak  Effective Radiated Output RF Power with Tuned Antenna:  10, 15, 20, 25, 30 dBm,  programmable  Frequency Range:       902 – 928 MHz  Number of Channels:      50, minimum  Data Rate:        1200, 2400, 4800, 9600,  programmable  Receiver Sensitivity:      -105dBm, maximum  Adjacent Channel Rejection:     45dBc, min  Out of Band Signal Rejection:          60dBc, min  Frequency Synthesizer Steps:     500Hz, max  RF Input/Output Impedance:     50 Ohm  Receiver Saturation:      126 dBuV/m, min
RF-LAN User’s Guide v1.01                        -- Confidential –                                       FCC ID: PDVRFLAN      2002 Metering Technology Corporation. All Rights Reserved                                                                               Page 5 Hardware Description The main building blocks of the RF-LAN Module are the microcontroller, the RF transceiver, and the 1-Watt RF power amplifier, as shown in the following Figure 1: Block Diagram of RF-LAN Module.   MSP430F149 MicrocontrollerConnectorJ1toMeterRF Transceiver CHIPCON CC1000Tx Path1W PAT/R SwitchRx PathLNA , SAW FILTERand Glue LogicLine Filterand 3.3VLDOData ControlUsing RSSI3.3VFilter3.3VFilterENBRF Tx in ProgressRFLAN Reset StatusRFLAN Tx InputRFLAN Rx OutputRFLAN Reset InputRFLAN Mode InputVCC5VVCC3.3VAnalog VccDigital VccVCC 3.3VCC1000TX-OUTCC1000-ALECC1000-PCLKCC1000-PDATA32 KHz11.059 MHzBlock Diagram Of Mesa Verde Project4.0 MHzPower ONReset ICP3.0Rx1P3.2P3.1CC1000-DIOTx1P2.0P2.1Rx0Tx0P1.7/RST-NMIXOUT/TCLKXINXT2INXT2OUTJTAG PORTJ2VCC Figure 1: Block Diagram of RF-LAN Module   J1 is the I/O connector to interface to the host device.  J2 is the MSP430 programming header.  The MSP430 controller is the heart of the circuit, which interfaces with the host device via the J1 port, and to the RF section through the CC1000 chip. The firmware program resides in the internal flash of MSP430. MSP430 has two crystals, Y1 is 32.768 KHz and Y2 is 4.0MHz. Y1 is basically used to work with a JTAG emulator for debug purposes, Y2 is used for normal operation. When the RF LAN Module is connected to a host device, the host device controls the way the RF LAN Module will work through the serial port, J1.5 (Reset), and J1.6 (Command/Data).
RF-LAN User’s Guide v1.01                        -- Confidential –                                       FCC ID: PDVRFLAN      2002 Metering Technology Corporation. All Rights Reserved                                                                               Page 6 MSP430 controls all of the functions on the RF-LAN Module, it talks to the host device via Serial port 0. The mode of RF-LAN is set by the signal level at J1.6. When the signal level is high it is in command mode, when the signal level is low it is in data mode. MSP430 appropriately handles the data by polling the J1.6.   MSP430 talks to the CC1000 via port bits and sends/receives RF data using serial port 1.  MSP430 initializes CC1000 by toggling port bits (simulated synchronous serial bus), P3.2 (PCLK), P3.1 (PDATA IO), and P3.0 (PALE), as provided by the CC1000 data sheets.   The CC1000 is a single chip RF transceiver, used for wireless application in the ISM band 300-1000MHz frequency ranges. The analog and digital supply to CC1000 is well filtered by using a PI filter to suppress noise. An 11.059 MHz crystal is connected to CC1000 as a reference for the data rate and for other internal functions.  On the receive path, the RF input signal from the antenna goes through a saw filter, an LNA, and a 50-ohm impedance matching network, before feeding the RF input of CC1000. Great care is taken to design the traces on these paths to match for 50-ohm traces in order to reduce loss.  On the transmit path, the RF2131 IC is connected to the RF output of CC1000 to provide a 1-Watt RF power output. The MSP430 controller does the on-off control of the PA.   The RF transmit and receive paths are connected to the antenna via a T/R switch. MSP430 controls which signal to pass by controlling the T/R switch, using port bits.  When CC1000 is programmed in receive mode, the data to the MSP430 is allowed only when RSSI (Receiver Signal Strength Indicate) is better than –105 DBm, using RSSI signal and glue logic.  MAX825SEUK (U5) provides the power on reset to the RF-LAN Module.    Software Description  At power-on, MSP430 initializes all port pins and initializes the CC1000. MSP430 sets the mode of operations by looking at J1 connector mode input (J1.6). The host device initializes all the RF-LAN registers at power-on in command mode.  When J1.6 is in data mode, MSP430 initializes the CC1000 in Rx mode. When a valid data packet is received, MSP430 checks for the valid CRC. If valid, it checks to see if it is addressed to this RF-LAN Module. If addressed correctly, the data packet is sent to the host device.  In data mode, data received on the serial port is buffered and packetized with the header, initialized with the CC1000 in the transmit mode, setting the T/R switch to the transmit path, and sends the data to the CC1000 to transmit the data over the air.  Once the data is sent, the CC1000 is switched to the receive mode, waiting for the acknowledge packet for the data just sent. The frequency-hopping algorithm is implemented to send/receive data on various frequency channels. The frequency-hopping tables are residing in the flash of MSP430.
RF-LAN User’s Guide v1.01                        -- Confidential –                                       FCC ID: PDVRFLAN      2002 Metering Technology Corporation. All Rights Reserved                                                                               Page 7 Commands To RF-LAN Module The following are the commands between the host device and the RF-LAN Module.   Command Name  Description Reset  Resets the RF-LAN Module firmware Clear Reset Status  Sets the Reset Status pin of the RF-LAN Module to a non-default state Sleep  Puts the RF-LAN Module into low power mode Wakeup  Removes the RF-LAN Module from low power mode Abort Tx  Aborts any transmission in progress Read Register  Returns value of requested RF-LAN Module Register(s)           xxxx = # of bytes to read (xxxx = 0 is invalid)           Register # follows the command byte Write Register  Writes value(s) into requested RF-LAN Module Register(s)           xxxx = # of bytes to write (xxxx = 0 invalid)           Register # follows the command byte SOH  Reserved  – Indicates start of message  Connector Details  J1 Connector The J1 connector is designed so it can be used either as a 12 Pin 1x12 0.1” header or a 12 Position edge connector with a pitch of 0.1”. The signal definition is as follows.  Pin # Pin Name  Pin Description  MTC Signal Direction Voltage Level 1  MTC – Tx In Progress  RF Tx in Progress o/p from RF-LAN (+5V = Tx in Progress, 0 = Tx Idle) Input 0V DC 2  MTC – RF Reset Status Indicates the reset status of the LAN o/p from RF-LAN Module.  RF module (+5V = reset has occurred) Input +5V DC 3  MTC – Tx  MTC Transmit Signal to RF-LAN Module Output +5V DC 4  MTC – Rx  MTC Receive Signal from RF-LAN Module Input +5V DC 5  MTC – Reset  MTC reset signal to RF-LAN Module (signal is active low) Output +5V DC 6  MTC –  Cmd Mode  RF-LAN Module Data/Command Mode Pin. (+5V = Cmd Mode, 0V = Data Mode) Output 0V DC 7  MTC – RESERVED  DO NOT CONNECT  N/A  N/A 8  MTC – RESERVED  DO NOT CONNECT  N/A  N/A 9-10  +5V DC  MTC Power Output  Power  N/A 11-12 GND  Ground  Ground  N/A
RF-LAN User’s Guide v1.01                        -- Confidential –                                       FCC ID: PDVRFLAN      2002 Metering Technology Corporation. All Rights Reserved                                                                               Page 8 J2 Connector The J2 connector is a 10 position 2x5 0.1” header, used for programming of the MSP430F149 microcontroller. The signal definition is as follows. (Please refer to Texas Instruments documentation for a detailed description of the JTAG interface.)   Pin #  Pin Name 1 TDI/TDO 3 TDI 4  +3.3 V Supply 5 TMS 6 TCLK 7 TCK 9 GND 2,8,10,12,13,14 NC    J3 Connector The J3 connector is a SMT SMA connector, for connecting to the antenna.   Pin #    Pin Name 1, 3  GND 2 RF Signal

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