Novatel 01017829 GPS Receiver with Bluetooth User Manual Technical Writer
Novatel Inc GPS Receiver with Bluetooth Technical Writer
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Contents
- 1. User Manual part 1
- 2. User Manual part 2
User Manual part 1
OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual OM-20000093 Rev 5B Proprietary Notice OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Publication Number: Revision Level: Revision Date: OM-20000093 5B 2007/03/23 Proprietary Notice Information in this document is subject to change without notice and does not represent a commitment on the part of NovAtel Inc. The software described in this document is furnished under a licence agreement or non-disclosure agreement. The software may be used or copied only in accordance with the terms of the agreement. It is against the law to copy the software on any medium except as specifically allowed in the license or non-disclosure agreement. No part of this manual may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, for any purpose without the express written permission of a duly authorized representative of NovAtel Inc. The information contained within this manual is believed to be true and correct at the time of publication. NovAtel, ProPak, RT-2 and RT-20 are registered trademarks of NovAtel Inc. PAC, AdVance RTK, FlexPak-V1, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V2, DL-V3 and SMART-V1 are trademarks of NovAtel Inc. All other brand names are trademarks of their respective holders. Manufactured and protected under U.S. Patent: PAC Correlator #6,243,409 B1 #5,414,729 Narrow Correlator #5,101,416 #5,390,207 #5,495,499 #5,809,064 GLONASS #6,608,998 B1 GALILEO #6,184,822 B1 Dual Frequency GPS #5,736,961 Position for Velocity Kalman Filter #6,664,923 B1 Anti-Jamming Technology #5,734,674 RTK Positioning #6,728,637 B2 #6,664,923 B1 © Copyright 2006-2007 NovAtel Inc. All rights reserved. Unpublished rights reserved under International copyright laws. Printed in Canada on recycled paper. Recyclable. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Table of Contents Table of Contents Table of Contents Notice Software License Warranty Customer Service Foreword 1 Introduction 10 15 17 18 19 20 1.1 Overview of the OEMV Family.............................................................................. 20 1.1.1 Common Features....................................................................................... 20 1.2 OEMV Cards......................................................................................................... 21 1.2.1 OEMV-1 Card .............................................................................................. 21 1.2.2 OEMV-1G Card ........................................................................................... 22 1.2.3 OEMV-2 Card .............................................................................................. 22 1.2.4 OEMV-3 Card .............................................................................................. 23 1.3 OEMV-Based Enclosures ..................................................................................... 25 1.3.1 ProPak-V3 and DL-V3 ................................................................................. 26 1.3.2 FlexPak........................................................................................................ 28 1.3.3 SMART-V1 .................................................................................................. 29 2 Receiver System Overview 30 2.1 OEMV Card........................................................................................................... 31 2.1.1 Radio Frequency (RF) Section .................................................................... 31 2.1.2 Digital Electronics Section ........................................................................... 31 2.2 Enclosure and Wiring Harness ............................................................................. 31 2.3 GNSS Antenna ..................................................................................................... 31 2.3.1 Optional LNA Power Supply ........................................................................ 32 2.4 Principal Power Supply ......................................................................................... 32 2.5 Data Communications Equipment ........................................................................ 32 3 Installation and Set Up 33 3.1 Additional Equipment Required ............................................................................ 33 3.1.1 Selecting a GNSS Antenna ......................................................................... 33 3.1.2 Choosing a Coaxial Cable ........................................................................... 34 3.1.3 Power Supply Requirements ....................................................................... 34 3.2 Installation Overview............................................................................................. 36 3.2.1 Installing an OEMV Card in a Wiring Harness and Enclosure..................... 36 3.2.2 Mounting Bracket (DL-V3 and ProPak-V3 Only) ......................................... 39 3.2.3 Mounting the GNSS Antenna ...................................................................... 39 3.2.4 Connecting the Antenna to the Receiver..................................................... 40 3.2.5 Applying Power to the Receiver .................................................................. 40 3.2.6 Connecting Data Communications Equipment............................................ 41 3.3 Additional Features and Information ..................................................................... 44 3.3.1 Strobes ........................................................................................................ 44 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Table of Contents 3.3.2 Universal Serial Bus (USB)......................................................................... 45 3.3.3 CAN Bus ..................................................................................................... 46 3.3.4 Status Indicators ......................................................................................... 47 3.3.5 DL-V3 Status Indicators .............................................................................. 48 3.3.6 External Oscillator (OEMV-2, OEMV-3, DL-V3 and ProPak-V3 only)......... 51 3.3.7 Antenna LNA Power ................................................................................... 51 3.3.8 DL-V3 Removable Compact Flash Memory Card....................................... 52 4 Operation 56 4.1 Communications with the Receiver ...................................................................... 57 4.1.1 Serial Port Default Settings......................................................................... 57 4.1.2 Communicating Using a Remote Terminal ................................................. 57 4.1.3 Communicating Using a Personal Computer.............................................. 57 4.2 Getting Started ..................................................................................................... 58 4.2.1 Starting the Receiver .................................................................................. 58 4.2.2 Communicating with the Receiver Using CDU ........................................... 58 4.3 Transmitting and Receiving Corrections............................................................... 60 4.3.1 Base Station Configuration ......................................................................... 61 4.3.2 Rover Station Configuration........................................................................ 62 4.3.3 Configuration Notes .................................................................................... 62 4.4 Using the DL-V3 ................................................................................................... 63 4.4.1 Log Data from a Site to a File ..................................................................... 63 4.5 Enabling SBAS Positioning .................................................................................. 65 4.6 Enabling L-Band (OEMV-1, OEMV-1G, OEMV-3, DL-V3 & ProPak-V3) ............. 65 4.7 Pass-Through Logging ......................................................................................... 66 4.8 T Sync Option (OEV-2, OEMV-3 or ProPak-V3 only)........................................... 66 4.9 Transferring Time Between Receivers ................................................................. 70 4.9.1 GPS to Receiver Time Synchronization...................................................... 71 4.9.2 Time Definitions .......................................................................................... 71 4.9.3 Procedures to Transfer Time ...................................................................... 72 5 Positioning Modes of Operation 74 5.1 Single-Point .......................................................................................................... 74 5.1.1 GPS System Errors..................................................................................... 77 5.2 Satellite-Based Augmentation System (SBAS) .................................................... 78 5.2.1 SBAS Receiver ........................................................................................... 80 5.2.2 SBAS Commands and Logs ....................................................................... 81 5.3 Pseudorange Differential ...................................................................................... 81 5.3.1 Pseudorange Algorithms............................................................................. 81 5.3.2 Position Solutions ....................................................................................... 82 5.3.3 Dual Station Differential Positioning............................................................ 83 5.4 L-Band Positioning ............................................................................................... 85 5.4.1 Coverage .................................................................................................... 85 5.4.2 L-Band Service Levels ................................................................................ 88 5.4.3 L-Band Commands and Logs ..................................................................... 90 5.5 Carrier-Phase Differential ..................................................................................... 91 5.5.1 Real-Time Kinematic (RTK) ........................................................................ 92 6 PC Software and Firmware 99 6.1 CDU/Convert/DLVTool Installation ....................................................................... 99 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Table of Contents 6.2 CDU ...................................................................................................................... 99 6.3 Convert ............................................................................................................... 105 6.3.1 Rinex Format ............................................................................................. 105 6.3.2 Convert Command Line Switches ............................................................. 107 6.4 USB Drivers Installation ...................................................................................... 108 6.4.1 Windows Driver Signing ............................................................................ 108 6.4.2 Windows XP Installation ............................................................................ 109 6.4.3 Windows 2000 Installation......................................................................... 111 6.5 Firmware Upgrades ............................................................................................ 112 6.5.1 Upgrading Using the AUTH Command ..................................................... 113 6.5.2 Updating Using the WinLoad Utility ........................................................... 113 7 Built-In Status Tests 118 7.1 Overview ............................................................................................................. 118 7.2 Receiver Status Word ......................................................................................... 118 7.3 Error Strobe Signal ............................................................................................. 119 7.4 RXSTATUSEVENT Log...................................................................................... 119 7.5 RXSTATUS Log.................................................................................................. 119 7.5.1 Overview.................................................................................................... 119 7.5.2 Error Word ................................................................................................. 120 7.5.3 Status Code Arrays ................................................................................... 121 7.5.4 Receiver Status Code................................................................................ 121 7.5.5 Auxiliary Status Codes .............................................................................. 121 7.5.6 Set and Clear Mask for all Status Code Arrays ......................................... 122 7.6 Status LEDs ........................................................................................................ 122 7.6.1 OEMV Cards ............................................................................................. 122 7.6.2 DL-V3 Enclosure ....................................................................................... 123 8 Troubleshooting 124 8.1 Examining the RXSTATUS Log .......................................................................... 126 APPENDICES A Technical Specifications 129 OEMV Family Receiver Performance ...................................................................... 129 OEMV-1 Card .......................................................................................................... 130 OEMV-1G Card ........................................................................................................ 136 OEMV-2 Card .......................................................................................................... 142 OEMV-3 Card .......................................................................................................... 148 DL-V3 ....................................................................................................................... 156 Port Pin-Outs ..................................................................................................... 158 Cables ............................................................................................................... 159 ProPak-V3 ................................................................................................................ 163 Port Pin-Outs ..................................................................................................... 165 Cables ............................................................................................................... 166 FlexPak-V1, FlexPak-V1G and FlexPak-V2 ............................................................ 171 Port Pin-Outs ..................................................................................................... 173 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Table of Contents Cables ............................................................................................................... 175 SMART-V1 .............................................................................................................. 179 Port Pin-Outs .................................................................................................... 181 Optional Cables ................................................................................................ 183 B Electrostatic Discharge Control (ESD) Practices 186 Overview ................................................................................................................. 186 Handling ESD-Sensitive Devices ............................................................................ 186 Prime Static Accumulators ...................................................................................... 187 Handling Printed Circuit Boards .............................................................................. 188 C Ethernet Configuration 189 Physical Set-Up ....................................................................................................... 189 Configuration Overview ........................................................................................... 190 Configuration Via Network Cable ............................................................................ 190 Enable Ethernet on DL-V3 Receiver ................................................................. 191 Windows XP Network Settings ......................................................................... 191 Configuring Ethernet Serial and Network Parameters ...................................... 196 Lantronix Port Redirector Software ................................................................... 202 Alternative Serial and Network Parameters Configuration ...................................... 205 Physical Connections ........................................................................................ 205 PC Software ...................................................................................................... 205 DL-V3 Commands ............................................................................................ 206 Network Configuration in Command Mode ....................................................... 209 D Replacement Parts 212 DL-V3 and ProPak-V3 ............................................................................................. 212 ProPak-V3 ............................................................................................................... 212 FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G and FlexPak-V1 ............................................................ 212 Accessories ............................................................................................................. 212 Manufacturers’ Part Numbers ................................................................................. 213 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Figures 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 Primary and Secondary Lightning Protection ................................................................... 12 OEMV-1 Card ................................................................................................................... 21 OEMV-1G Card ................................................................................................................ 22 OEMV-2 Card ................................................................................................................... 23 OEMV-3 Card ................................................................................................................... 24 DL-V3 (top) and ProPak-V3 (bottom) Enclosures ............................................................ 26 FlexPak Enclosure ........................................................................................................... 28 SMART-V1 Antenna ......................................................................................................... 29 GNSS Receiver System Functional Diagram ................................................................... 30 OEMV-1 and OEMV-1G Connector and Indicator Locations ........................................... 38 OEMV-2 Connector and Indicator Locations .................................................................... 38 OEMV-3 Connector and Indicator Locations .................................................................... 39 64 MB Flash Card ............................................................................................................ 53 Compact Flash Card Door (shown with its latch in the open position) ............................. 54 Typical Operational Configuration .................................................................................... 56 Basic Differential Setup .................................................................................................... 60 OEMV-3 and ProPak-V3 T Sync 5 MHz and 1PPS ......................................................... 67 FlexPak-V2 T Sync 5 MHz and 1PPS .............................................................................. 68 OEMV-3 and ProPak-V3 T Sync 10 MHz and 1PPS ....................................................... 69 FlexPak-V2 T Sync 10 MHz and 1PPS ............................................................................ 70 1PPS Alignment ............................................................................................................... 73 Single-Point Averaging (Typical Results) ......................................................................... 76 Single-Point Averaging (Typical Results with WAAS) ...................................................... 76 SBAS and NovAtel 2006 .................................................................................................. 79 The SBAS Concept .......................................................................................................... 80 Typical Differential Configuration ..................................................................................... 84 CDGPS Frequency Beams .............................................................................................. 86 CDGPS Percentage (%) Coverage Map .......................................................................... 87 L-Band Concept ............................................................................................................... 89 AdVance RTK - Time to Integer Narrowlane vs. Baseline Length ................................... 94 Typical RT-20 Convergence - Static Mode ...................................................................... 96 Typical RT-20 Convergence - Kinematic Mode ............................................................... 96 Convert Screen Examples ............................................................................................. 105 Convert Command Line Arguments ............................................................................... 107 Main Screen of WinLoad ................................................................................................ 115 WinLoad’s Open Dialog ................................................................................................. 115 Open File in WinLoad ..................................................................................................... 116 COM Port Setup ............................................................................................................. 116 Searching for Card ......................................................................................................... 116 Authorization Code Dialog ............................................................................................. 117 Upgrade Process Complete ........................................................................................... 117 Location of Receiver Status Word .................................................................................. 119 Reading the Bits in the Receiver Status Word ............................................................... 120 Location of Receiver Error Word .................................................................................... 120 Reading the Bits in the Receiver Error Word ................................................................. 121 Status LED Flash Sequence Example ........................................................................... 123 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 OEMV-1 Board Dimensions ........................................................................................... 130 Top-view of 20-Pin Connector on the OEMV-1 .............................................................. 135 OEMV-1G Board Dimensions ........................................................................................ 136 Top-view of 20-Pin Connector on the OEMV-1G ........................................................... 141 OEMV-2 Board Dimensions ........................................................................................... 142 Top-view of 24-Pin Connector on the OEMV-2 .............................................................. 147 OEMV-3 Board Dimensions ........................................................................................... 148 Top-view of 40-Pin Connector on the OEMV-3 .............................................................. 153 Top-view of 14-Pin CAN Connector on the OEMV-3 ..................................................... 155 DL-V3 Power Cable ....................................................................................................... 159 DL-V3 Null Modem Cable .............................................................................................. 160 DL-V3 Straight Through Serial Cable ............................................................................ 161 DL-V3 I/O Strobe Port Cable ......................................................................................... 162 ProPak-V3 Power Cable ................................................................................................ 166 ProPak-V3 Null Modem Cable ....................................................................................... 167 ProPak-V3 Straight Through Serial Cable ..................................................................... 168 ProPak-V3 I/O Strobe Port Cable .................................................................................. 169 USB Serial Cable ........................................................................................................... 170 FlexPak Power Cable .................................................................................................... 175 FlexPak 13-Pin Serial Cable .......................................................................................... 176 FlexPak 13-Pin Serial Cable .......................................................................................... 177 FlexPak USB Cable ....................................................................................................... 178 SMART-V1 Optional USB Multi-Cable ........................................................................... 185 SMART-V1 Optional CAN Multi-Cable ........................................................................... 185 CAT5 Ethernet Cable Connection .................................................................................. 190 Lantronix Device Installer: Network Configuration ......................................................... 198 Lantronix Device Installer: Line 1 Configuration ............................................................ 199 Lantronix Device Installer: Tunnel 1 Serial Settings ...................................................... 200 Lantronix Device Installer: Tunnel 1 Accept Mode ......................................................... 201 Lantronix Device Installer: System Screen .................................................................... 202 Lantronix Redirector Configuration Dialog ..................................................................... 203 Lantronix Port Redirector: IP Service Setup .................................................................. 203 Lantronix Port Redirector: Port Settings Screen ............................................................ 204 Lantronix Port Redirector: Com Setup Screen ............................................................... 204 Command Mode Example ............................................................................................. 208 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Tables 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 Enclosure Features Comparison................................................................................ 25 NovAtel GNSS Antenna Models ................................................................................ 34 Voltage Input Range for OEMV.................................................................................. 35 Enclosure Power Requirements................................................................................. 35 Default Serial Port Configurations.............................................................................. 41 SMART-V1 Port Configuration (RS-232 only) ............................................................ 42 SMART-V1 Cable Options (RS-232 only) .................................................................. 43 Available USB Signals on Receivers ......................................................................... 45 Available CAN Signals on Receivers ......................................................................... 47 ProPak-V3 Status Indicators ...................................................................................... 47 FlexPak Status Indicators .......................................................................................... 48 Satellite Tracking LEDs.............................................................................................. 49 Flash Card Memory LEDs.......................................................................................... 49 Positioning Mode LEDs.............................................................................................. 50 Occupation Time LEDs .............................................................................................. 51 Latency-Induced Extrapolation Error.......................................................................... 82 Comparison of RT-2 and RT-20................................................................................. 92 Summary of RTK Messages and Expected Accuracy ............................................... 92 RT-2 Degradation With Respect To Data Delay ........................................................ 94 RT-20 Performance.................................................................................................... 95 NovAtel Logs for Rinex Conversion ......................................................................... 107 Troubleshooting based on Symptoms...................................................................... 124 Resolving a Receiver Error Word............................................................................. 126 Resolving an Error in the Receiver Status Word...................................................... 127 OEMV-1 Strobes ...................................................................................................... 133 OEMV-1 Strobe Electrical Specifications ................................................................. 134 OEMV-1G Strobes ................................................................................................... 139 OEMV-1G Strobe Electrical Specifications .............................................................. 140 OEMV-2 Strobes ...................................................................................................... 145 OEMV-2 Strobe Specifications................................................................................. 146 OEMV-3 Strobes ...................................................................................................... 151 OEMV-3 Strobe Specifications................................................................................. 152 DL-V3 Serial Port Pin-Out Descriptions ................................................................... 158 DL-V3 I/O Port Pin-Out Descriptions........................................................................ 158 ProPak-V3 Serial Port Pin-Out Descriptions ............................................................ 165 ProPak-V3 I/O Port Pin-Out Descriptions ................................................................ 165 FlexPak COM1 Port Pin-Out Descriptions .............................................................. 173 FlexPak COM2 Port Pin-Out Descriptions ............................................................... 174 SMART-V1 USB Model Port Pin-Out Descriptions ................................................. 181 SMART-V1 CAN Model Port Pin-Out Descriptions .................................................. 182 USB Multi-Cable Connector Pin-Outs ...................................................................... 183 CAN Multi-Cable Connector Pin-Outs ...................................................................... 184 USB or CAN Multi-Cables Bare Tagged Wire Colors .............................................. 184 Static-Accumulating Materials.................................................................................. 187 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Notice Notice The following notices apply to the DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V1, and SMART-V1. An OEMV card might not pass emissions testing by itself. For example, the ProPak-V3 passes regulatory emissions as shown in this Notice. For more information on emissions testing, please refer to the regulatory body in your geographic area. For example, in the US that is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and in Europe the Conformité Européenne (CE). FCC NOTICES This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the radiated and conducted emission limits for a Class B digital device, Class A for the SMART-V1 and DL-V3, for both CISPR 22 and Part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This 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 turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: • • • • Re-orient or relocate the receiving antenna Increase the separation between the equipment and the receiver Connect the equipment to 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 IMPORTANT: 10 In order to maintain compliance with the limits of a Class B digital device, it is required to use properly shielded interface cables (such as Belden #9539 or equivalent) when using the serial data ports, and double-shielded cables (such as Belden #9945 or equivalent) when using the I/O strobe port. WARNING!: Changes or modifications to this equipment not expressly approved by NovAtel Inc. could result in violation of Part 15 of the FCC rules and void the user’s authority to operate this equipment. RF Exposure: When using Bluetooth, the DL-V3 device exceeds the FCC requirements for RF exposure when the antenna used for this transmitter has a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Notice CE NOTICE The enclosures carry the CE mark. WARNING: This is a Class A product. In a domestic environment this product may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures. "Hereby, NovAtel Inc. declares that this DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V1 and SMART-V1 is in compliance with the essential requirements and other relevant provisions of Directive 1999/5/EC." SMART-V1 Power Warning DC AC DIG G CO M2 ND (g reen) COM TIMEM Reser RK (blue) ved (y ellow PWR2 (orange) PWR (red) GND GND2 (black) (brown) When connecting power to the SMART-V1 (1), it is recommended that you use a battery source (3). In this case, it is important that you tie together the bare wires (2) tagged as GND2 (brown) and GND (black) to the battery’s negative terminal. Tie the bare wires tagged as PWR (red) and PWR2 (orange) to the battery’s positive terminal. WARNING: If you do not use a battery, you must tie together the bare wires tagged as GND2 (brown), GND (black) and DIGGND (green) to the DC power supply’s negative ground connector. Failure to tie the appropriate grounds, as explained in this section, may result in your SMART-V1 becoming permanently damaged and void your warranty. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 11 Notice Lightning Protection Notice What is the hazard? A lightning strike into the ground causes an increase in the earth's potential causing a high voltage potential between the centre conductor and shield of the coax cable. Voltages directly applied onto the centre conductor "roll off" and arrive after the shield pulse producing a high voltage potential between the centre conductor and shield of the coax cable. Hazard Impact A lightning strike causes the ground potential in the area to rise to dangerous levels resulting in personnel harm or destruction of electronic equipment in an unprotected environment. It also conducts a portion of the strike energy down the inner conductor of the coax cable to the connected equipment. Actions to Mitigate Lightning Hazards 1. Do not install the external antenna lines extra-building during a lightning storm. 2. It is not possible to avoid overvoltages caused by lightning, but a lightning protection device may be used to shunt a large portion of the transient energy to the building ground reducing the over voltage condition as quickly as possible. 3. Primary lightning protection must be provided by the operator/customer according to local building codes as part of the extra-building installation. 4. NovAtel recommends installing a secondary lightning protection device. The coaxial cable entering the building is connected to protective ground through the primary and secondary lightning protection. Figure 1: Primary and Secondary Lightning Protection Reference 12 Description Reference Primary Lightning Protection Device Secondary Lightning Protection Device External Antenna Description OEMV Receiver To Ground OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Notice Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) and Safety Regulatory Testing (DL-V3) • • • • FCC, Part 15 Radiated Emissions, Class A EN 55022 Emissions, Class A EN 55024 Immunity • EN 61000-4-2 Electrostatic Discharge Immunity • EN 61000-4-3 Radiated RF EM Field Immunity Test • EN 61000-4-4 Electrical Fast Transient/Burst Test • EN 61000-4-6 Conducted Immunity • EN 61000-4-8 Magnetic Field Immunity EN 60950 Safety of Information Technology Equipment Regulatory Testing (ProPak-V3) • • • • FCC, Part 15 Radiated Emissions, Class B EN 55022 Radiated Emissions, Class B EN 61000-6-2 Generic Immunity, Industrial Environment • EN 61000-4-2 Electrostatic Discharge Immunity • EN 61000-4-3 Radiated RF EM Field Immunity Test • EN 61000-4-4 Electrical Fast Transient/Burst Test • EN 61000-4-6 Conducted Immunity • EN 61000-4-8 Magnetic Field Immunity EN 60950 Safety of Information Technology Equipment Regulatory Testing (FlexPak-V1/FlexPak-V1G/FlexPak-V2) • • • • FCC, Part 15 Radiated Emissions, Class B EN 55022 Emissions: FlexPak-V1G, Class B or FlexPak-V1/FlexPak-V2, Class A EN 61000-6-2 Generic Immunity, Industrial Environment • EN 61000-4-2 Electrostatic Discharge Immunity • EN 61000-4-3 Radiated RF EM Field Immunity Test • EN 61000-4-4 Electrical Fast Transient/Burst Test • EN 61000-4-5 Surge Immunity • EN 61000-4-6 Conducted Immunity • EN 61000-4-8 Magnetic Field Immunity EN 60950-1 Safety of Information Technology Equipment Regulatory Testing (SMART-V1) • • • • • • FCC, Part 15 Radiated Emissions, Class A EN 55022 Emissions, Class A EN 61000-6-2 Generic Immunity, Industrial Environment EN 60950-1 Safety of Information Technology Equipment American Society of Agricultural Engineers (ASAE) Engineering Practice (EP) Vibration (Random) MIL-STD-801F 514.5 C17 and Vibration (Sine) SAE EP455 Military Standard (MIL STD) 810 F: 7.7 g RMS Random Vibration, Shock, Sand and Dust, and Salt Spray OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 13 Notice WEEE Notice If you purchased your OEMV family product in Europe, please return it to your dealer or supplier at the end of its life. The objectives of the European Community's environment policy are, in particular, to preserve, protect and improve the quality of the environment, protect human health and utilise natural resources prudently and rationally. Sustainable development advocates the reduction of wasteful consumption of natural resources and the prevention of pollution. Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) is a regulated area. Where the generation of waste cannot be avoided, it should be reused or recovered for its material or energy. WEEE products may be recognised by their wheeled bin label ( ). 1 RoHS Notice The DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V1, and SMART-V1 are compliant with the European Union (EU) Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 2002/95/EC. (The OEMV-1, OEMV-1G, OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 cards are also compliant.) 1 1. 14 Please visit the NovAtel website at http://www.novatel.com/support/weee.htm for more information on WEEE and RoHS. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Software License Software License BY INSTALLING, COPYING, OR OTHERWISE USING THE SOFTWARE PRODUCT, YOU AGREE TO BE BOUND BY THE TERMS OF THIS AGREEMENT. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH THESE TERMS OF USE, DO NOT INSTALL, COPY OR USE THIS ELECTRONIC PRODUCT (SOFTWARE, FIRMWARE, SCRIPT FILES, OR OTHER ELECTRONIC PRODUCT WHETHER EMBEDDED IN THE HARDWARE, ON A CD OR AVAILABLE ON THE COMPANY WEB SITE) (hereinafter referred to as "Software"). 1. License: NovAtel Inc. ("NovAtel") grants you a non-exclusive, non-transferable license (not a sale) to, where the Software will be used on NovAtel supplied hardware or in conjunction with other NovAtel supplied software, use the Software with the product(s) as supplied by NovAtel. You agree not to use the Software for any purpose other than the due exercise of the rights and licences hereby agreed to be granted to you. 2. Copyright: NovAtel owns, or has the right to sublicense, all copyright, trade secret, patent and other proprietary rights in the Software and the Software is protected by national copyright laws, international treaty provisions and all other applicable national laws. You must treat the Software like any other copyrighted material except that you may make one copy of the Software solely for backup or archival purposes (one copy may be made for each piece of NovAtel hardware on which it is installed or where used in conjunction with other NovAtel supplied software), the media of said copy shall bear labels showing all trademark and copyright notices that appear on the original copy. You may not copy the product manual or written materials accompanying the Software. No right is conveyed by this Agreement for the use, directly, indirectly, by implication or otherwise by Licensee of the name of NovAtel, or of any trade names or nomenclature used by NovAtel, or any other words or combinations of words proprietary to NovAtel, in connection with this Agreement, without the prior written consent of NovAtel. 3. Patent Infringement: NovAtel shall not be liable to indemnify the Licensee against any loss sustained by it as the result of any claim made or action brought by any third party for infringement of any letters patent, registered design or like instrument of privilege by reason of the use or application of the Software by the Licensee or any other information supplied or to be supplied to the Licensee pursuant to the terms of this Agreement. NovAtel shall not be bound to take legal proceedings against any third party in respect of any infringement of letters patent, registered design or like instrument of privilege which may now or at any future time be owned by it. However, should NovAtel elect to take such legal proceedings, at NovAtel's request, Licensee shall co-operate reasonably with NovAtel in all legal actions concerning this license of the Software under this Agreement taken against any third party by NovAtel to protect its rights in the Software. NovAtel shall bear all reasonable costs and expenses incurred by Licensee in the course of co-operating with NovAtel in such legal action. 4. Restrictions: You may not: (a) copy (other than as provided for in paragraph 2), distribute, transfer, rent, lease, lend, sell or sublicense all or any portion of the Software except in the case of sale of the hardware to a third party; (b) modify or prepare derivative works of the Software; (c) use the Software in connection with computer-based services business or publicly display visual output of the Software; (d) transmit the Software over a network, by telephone or electronically using any means (except when downloading a purchased up[grade from the NovAtel web site); or (e) reverse engineer, decompile or disassemble the Software. You agree to keep confidential and use your best efforts to prevent and protect the contents of the Soft- OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 15 Software License ware from unauthorized disclosure or use. 5. Term and Termination: This Agreement and the rights and licences hereby granted shall continue in force in perpetuity unless terminated by NovAtel or Licensee in accordance herewith. In the event that the Licensee shall at any time during the term of this Agreement: i) be in breach of its obligations hereunder where such breach is irremediable or if capable of remedy is not remedied within 30 days of notice from NovAtel requiring its remedy; then and in any event NovAtel may forthwith by notice in writing terminate this Agreement together with the rights and licences hereby granted by NovAtel. Licensee may terminate this Agreement by providing written notice to NovAtel. Upon termination, for any reasons, the Licensee shall promptly, on NovAtel's request, return to NovAtel or at the election of NovAtel destroy all copies of any documents and extracts comprising or containing the Software. The Licensee shall also erase any copies of the Software residing on Licensee's computer equipment. Termination shall be without prejudice to the accrued rights of either party, including payments due to NovAtel. This provision shall survive termination of this Agreement howsoever arising. 6. Warranty: NovAtel does not warrant the contents of the Software or that it will be error free. The Software is furnished "AS IS" and without warranty as to the performance or results you may obtain by using the Software. The entire risk as to the results and performance of the Software is assumed by you. See product enclosure, if any for any additional warranty. 7. Indemnification: NovAtel shall be under no obligation or liability of any kind (in contract, tort or otherwise and whether directly or indirectly or by way of indemnity contribution or otherwise howsoever) to the Licensee and the Licensee will indemnify and hold NovAtel harmless against all or any loss, damage, actions, costs, claims, demands and other liabilities or any kind whatsoever (direct, consequential, special or otherwise) arising directly or indirectly out of or by reason of the use by the Licensee of the Software whether the same shall arise in consequence of any such infringement, deficiency, inaccuracy, error or other defect therein and whether or not involving negligence on the part of any person. 8. Disclaimer and Limitation of Liability: (a) THE WARRANTIES IN THIS AGREEMENT REPLACE ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. NovAtel DISCLAIMS AND EXCLUDES ALL OTHER WARRANTIES. IN NO EVENT WILL NovAtel's LIABILITY OF ANY KIND INCLUDE ANY SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, INCLUDING LOST PROFITS, EVEN IF NovAtel HAS KNOWLEDGE OF THE POTENTIAL LOSS OR DAMAGE. (b) NovAtel will not be liable for any loss or damage caused by delay in furnishing the Software or any other performance under this Agreement. (c) NovAtel's entire liability and your exclusive remedies for our liability of any kind (including liability for negligence) for the Software covered by this Agreement and all other performance or non-performance by NovAtel under or related to this Agreement are to the remedies specified by this Agreement. 9. Governing Law: This Agreement is governed by the laws of the Province of Alberta, Canada. Each of the parties hereto irrevocably attorns to the jurisdiction of the courts of the Province of Alberta. 10. Customer Support: For Software UPDATES and UPGRADES, and regular customer support, contact the NovAtel GPS Hotline at 1-800-NOVATEL (U.S. or Canada only), or +1-403-295-4900, Fax +1-403-295-4901, e-mail to support@novatel.ca, website: http://www.novatel.com or write to: NovAtel Inc. Customer Service Department 1120 - 68 Avenue NE, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2E 8S5 16 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Warranty Warranty NovAtel Inc. warrants that its products are free from defects in materials and workmanship, subject to the conditions set forth below, for the following periods of time, from the date of sale: OEMV Card Receivers DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1, FlexPak-V1G and SMART-V1 GPSAntenna™ Series Cables and Accessories Computer Discs Software Warranty One (1) Year One (1) Year One (1) Year Ninety (90) Days Ninety (90) Days One (1) Year Date of sale shall mean the date of the invoice to the original customer for the product. NovAtel’s responsibility respecting this warranty is solely to product replacement or product repair at an authorized NovAtel location, or in the case of software, provision of a software revision for implementation by the customer. Determination of replacement or repair will be made by NovAtel personnel or by technical personnel expressly authorized by NovAtel for this purpose. THE FOREGOING WARRANTIES DO NOT EXTEND TO (I) NONCONFORMITIES, DEFECTS OR ERRORS IN THE PRODUCTS DUE TO ACCIDENT, ABUSE, MISUSE OR NEGLIGENT USE OF THE PRODUCTS OR USE IN OTHER THAN A NORMAL AND CUSTOMARY MANNER, ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS NOT CONFORMING TO NOVATEL’S SPECIFICATIONS, OR FAILURE TO FOLLOW PRESCRIBED INSTALLATION, OPERATING AND MAINTENANCE PROCEDURES, (II) DEFECTS, ERRORS OR NONCONFORMITIES IN THE PRODUCTS DUE TO MODIFICATIONS, ALTERATIONS, ADDITIONS OR CHANGES NOT MADE IN ACCORDANCE WITH NOVATEL’S SPECIFICATIONS OR AUTHORIZED BY NOVATEL, (III) NORMAL WEAR AND TEAR, (IV) DAMAGE CAUSED BY FORCE OF NATURE OR ACT OF ANY THIRD PERSON, (V) SHIPPING DAMAGE; OR (VI) SERVICE OR REPAIR OF PRODUCT BY THE DEALER WITHOUT PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT FROM NOVATEL. IN ADDITION, THE FOREGOING WARRANTIES SHALL NOT APPLY TO PRODUCTS DESIGNATED BY NOVATEL AS BETA SITE TEST SAMPLES, EXPERIMENTAL, DEVELOPMENTAL, PREPRODUCTION, SAMPLE, INCOMPLETE OR OUT OF SPECIFICATION PRODUCTS OR TO RETURNED PRODUCTS IF THE ORIGINAL IDENTIFICATION MARKS HAVE BEEN REMOVED OR ALTERED. THE WARRANTIES AND REMEDIES ARE EXCLUSIVE AND ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WRITTEN OR ORAL, INCLUDING THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE EXCLUDED. NOVATEL SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY LOSS, DAMAGE, EXPENSE, OR INJURY ARISING DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY OUT OF THE PURCHASE, INSTALLATION, OPERATION, USE OR LICENSING OR PRODUCTS OR SERVICES. IN NO EVENT SHALL NOVATEL BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND OR NATURE DUE TO ANY CAUSE. There are no user serviceable parts in the NovAtel receiver and no maintenance is required. When the status code indicates that a unit is faulty, replace with another unit and return the faulty unit to NovAtel Inc. Before shipping any material to NovAtel or Dealer, please obtain a Return Material Authorization (RMA) number from the point of purchase. You may also visit our website at http://www.novatel.com and select Support | Repair Requests from the top menu. Once you have obtained an RMA number, you will be advised of proper shipping procedures to return any defective product. When returning any product to NovAtel, please return the defective product in the original packaging to avoid ESD and shipping damage. 17 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Customer Service Customer Service Firmware upgrades are firmware releases, which increase basic functionality of the receiver from one model to a higher level model type. When available, upgrades may be purchased at a price, which is the difference between the two model types on the current NovAtel Inc. Price List plus a nominal service charge. Firmware upgrades are accomplished through NovAtel authorized dealers. Contact your local NovAtel dealer first for more information. To locate a dealer in your area or if the problem is not resolved, contact NovAtel Inc. directly using one of the following methods: Call the NovAtel Hotline at 1-800-NOVATEL (U.S. & Canada), or +1-403-295-4900 (international) Fax: +1-403-295-4901 E-mail: support@novatel.ca Website: http://www.novatel.com Write: NovAtel Inc. Customer Service Department 1120 - 68 Avenue NE Calgary, AB Canada, T2E 8S5 Before contacting NovAtel Customer Service regarding software concerns, please do the following: 1. Issue a FRESET command 2. Log the following data to a file on your PC for 30 minutes RXSTATUSB once RAWEPHEMB onchanged RANGEB ontime 1 BESTPOSB ontime 1 RXCONFIGA once VERSIONB once 3. Send the file containing the log to NovAtel Customer Service, using either the NovAtel ftp site at ftp://ftp.novatel.ca/incoming or the support@novatel.com e-mail address. If there is a hardware problem that has not been resolved, please send a list of the troubleshooting steps you have taken and their result. See also Chapter 8, Troubleshooting on Page 124. 18 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Foreword Foreword Thank you for purchasing a NovAtel receiver card. Whether it is stand-alone or in an enclosure, this manual will help you get the hardware operational and provide further general information. Afterwards, the OEMV Firmware Reference Manual will be your primary OEMV family command and logging reference source. Scope The OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual contains sufficient information on the installation and operation of the OEMV-1, OEMV-1G, OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 cards to allow you to effectively integrate and fully operate them. Enclosures for the OEMV Family cards, the DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V1 and the SMART-V1 Antenna, are also described in this manual. All are RoHS compliant. Please call your distributor, or NovAtel directly, for updated information on model availability. After the addition of accessories, user-supplied data communications equipment and a power supply, the receiver is ready to go. The OEMV family receivers utilize a comprehensive user-interface command structure, which requires communications through its communications (COM) ports. The OEMV Firmware Reference Manual, lists and describes the various receiver commands and logs referenced in this manual. Please remember that since each receiver is shipped from the distributor with a customer-specific list of features, such as L-Band, Satellite-Based Augmentation System (SBAS) or GLONASS availability, some commands or logs may not be applicable to your model. Other supplementary manuals may be included on CD or as quick start guides to accommodate special models and software features with unique functionality. It is recommended that you keep these documents and CDs together for easy reference. It is beyond the scope of this manual to provide details on service or repair. Please contact your local NovAtel dealer for any customer-service related inquiries, see Customer Service on Page 18. What’s New in Rev 6 of this Manual? This manual has been revised to include information on the following: • OEMV-1G and FlexPak-V1G GLONASS products are new to the OEMV Family • OEMV GLONASS models have software capable of full code and real-time kinematic (RTK) positioning with the 3.200 firmware release The most up-to-date version of this manual and any related addendum can be downloaded from the Documentation Updates section of the NovAtel website at www.novatel.com. Prerequisites The OEMV-1, OEMV-1G, OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 are OEM products requiring the addition of an enclosure and peripheral equipment before becoming fully functional Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) receivers. The installation chapters of this document provide information concerning the installation requirements and considerations for the OEMV family cards. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 19 Chapter 1 1.1 Introduction Overview of the OEMV Family The OEMV family offers single, dual and triple-frequency GNSS receivers and the first integrated Lband capability without the need for a separate board. The OEMV-based products are GLONASSenabled and are capable of full code and real-time kinematic (RTK) positioning. This family is a group of high-performance GNSS receivers capable of receiving and tracking different combinations of GPS L1 C/A, L2C, L2 P(Y) and L5 code and carrier, GLONASS L1 and L2 code and carrier, and L-Band (CDGPS and OmniSTAR) on a maximum of 72 channels. SBAS support is standard on all OEMV family receivers. OEMV adaptability offers multi-system, frequency, and size configurations for any application requirement. Refer to the GPS+ Reference Manual for an overview of each of the above signal types, available from our website at http://www.novatel.com/ support/docupdates.htm. Patented Pulse Aperture Correlator (PAC) with multipath mitigation technologies, and a powerful 32bit processor, enable the OEMV family of receivers to offer multipath-resistant processing at high data update rates. Excellent acquisition and re-acquisition times allow the receivers to operate in environments where very high dynamics and frequent interruption of signals can be expected. The OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 are equipped with our new AdVance RTK engine for RT-2. This means a lower ambiguity error rate, faster narrow lane convergence (even at long baseline lengths) and more fixes in a wider range of conditions. In addition, the OEMV family offers system integrators unparalleled flexibility in areas such as configuration and specification of output data and control signals. Multiple software models are available, allowing you to better fit the receiver performance to the application while maintaining the option for a compatible upgrade path. The RoHS-compliant OEMV family includes the OEMV-1, OEMV-1G, OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 cards, the DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G and FlexPak-V1 enclosures, and the SMART-V1 Antenna. The cards, provided as printed circuit boards, are ideal for custom integration. 1.1.1 Common Features All OEMV family receivers have the following standard features: 20 • 14 L1 and 2 SBAS channels • PAC technology, refer to the Multipath section of the GPS+ Reference Manual • Fast reacquisition • Fully field-upgradeable firmware • Low power consumption • 20 Hz raw data and position output rates • Two mark inputs for triggering the output of logs on external events • Auxiliary strobe signals, including a configurable PPS output for time synchronization and mark inputs OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Introduction 1.2 Chapter 1 • An extensive command and log set for maximum customization • Outputs to drive external LEDs OEMV Cards The OEMV family cards consist of a single printed circuit board with integrated radio frequency (RF) and digital sections. They are designed for flexibility of integration and configuration. After installation with a power source, mounting structure, GNSS, and data communications equipment, NovAtel’s OEMV cards are ready for the most demanding surveying, positioning, and navigation applications. 1.2.1 OEMV-1 Card The OEMV-1 is a compact, low-power, single frequency L1 GPS card with integrated L-Band (OmniSTAR/CDGPS). In addition to the functionality given in Section 1.1.1 on Page 20, the OEMV1 offers: • 1 Controller Area Network (CAN) Bus port (without transceiver), 1 USB 1.1 communication port and 2 LV-TTL communication ports • Integrated L-Band (OmniSTAR VBS and CDGPS) • Auxiliary strobe signals for status and synchronization • Software load compatibility with other OEMV family products • Optional Application Program Interface (API) software for loading a custom application Included with the OEMV is a wrist-grounding strap to prevent ESD damage when handling the card and a CD containing NovAtel’s PC utilities and product documentation. For technical specifications on the OEMV-1, please see Section A.2 starting on Page 130. Figure 2: OEMV-1 Card OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 21 Chapter 1 1.2.2 Introduction OEMV-1G Card The OEMV-1G is a compact, low-power, single frequency L1 GPS card with integrated GLONASS L1. In addition to the functionality given in Section 1.1.1 on Page 20 and Section 1.2.1 on Page 21, the OEMV-1G offers: • 12 GLONASS L1 channels • GPS real-time 20 cm (RT20) capability, see RT-20 Performance starting on Page 95 • GPS plus GLONASS RTK positioning Included with the OEMV-1G is a wrist-grounding strap to prevent ESD damage when handling the card and a CD containing NovAtel’s PC utilities and product documentation. For technical specifications on the OEMV-1G, please see Section A.2 starting on Page 130. Figure 3: OEMV-1G Card 1.2.3 OEMV-2 Card The OEMV-2 is a GPS plus GLONASS L1/L2 card that is a drop-in replacement for the OEM4-G2L. In addition to the functionality given in Section 1.1.1 on Page 20, the OEMV-2 offers: • 14 L2 P(Y) or L2C channels • 12 GLONASS L1 channels • 12 GLONASS L2 channels • AdVance RTK real-time 2 cm (RT-2) positioning capability • 2 LV-TTL, 1 RS-232 and 1 USB 1.1 communication ports • CAN Bus (without transceiver) or a second Event line can be software configured • An external oscillator input • Auxiliary strobe signals for status and synchronization • Temperature monitoring and reporting • Software load compatibility with other OEMV family products • Optional Application Program Interface (API) software for loading a custom application Included with the OEMV is a wrist-grounding strap to prevent ESD damage when handling the card and a CD containing NovAtel’s GPS PC utilities and product documentation. For technical specifications on the OEMV-2, please see Section A.4 starting on Page 142. 22 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Introduction Chapter 1 Figure 4: OEMV-2 Card 1.2.4 OEMV-3 Card The OEMV-3 is a GPS L1/L2/L5 plus GLONASS L1/L2 card that is a drop-in replacement for the OEM4-G2. Triple-frequency capabilities will make the following possible: longer baselines in differential positioning mode due to the reduction of atmospheric errors, faster resolution of carrierphase ambiguities when performing RTK positioning and enhanced positioning precision due to the additional measurements. The OEMV-3 is hardware-capable for tracking L5 but requires a future firmware upgrade to enable L5 positioning. This will be available when a usable number of satellites are in orbit. In addition to the functionality given in Section 1.1.1 on Page 20, the OEMV-3 offers: • 14 L2 P(Y) or L2C channels • 12 GLONASS L1 channels • 12 GLONASS L2 channels • 6 L5 channels • Integrated L-Band (OmniSTAR VBS, HP or XP and CDGPS) • AdVance RTK real-time 2 cm (RT-2) positioning capability • 2 CAN Bus (including transceivers), 1 RS-232/RS-422, 1 RS-232, 1 USB 1.1 and 1 LVTTL communication ports • An external oscillator input • Auxiliary strobe signals for status and synchronization • On-board power conversion, eliminating the need for external power conditioning • Voltage and temperature monitoring and reporting • Software load compatibility with other OEMV family products OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 23 Chapter 1 Introduction • Increased memory size and processor speed • Optional Application Program Interface (API) software for loading a custom application Included with the OEMV is a wrist-grounding strap to prevent ESD damage when handling the card and a CD containing NovAtel’s PC utilities and product documentation. For technical specifications on the OEMV-3 please see Section A.5 starting on Page 148. Figure 5: OEMV-3 Card 24 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Introduction 1.3 Chapter 1 OEMV-Based Enclosures The OEMV-3 can be housed in a DL-V3 or ProPak-V3 enclosure to provide a complete receiver solution. The OEMV-2, OEMV-1 and OEMV-1G cards can be housed in a FlexPak. The OEMV-1 card can also be housed in a SMART-V1. When connected to an antenna and a power source, the enclosure and associated OEMV card together form a fully functioning GNSS receiver. The enclosures offer protection against environmental conditions and RF interference. In addition, they provides an easy-to-use interface to the card’s data, power, and status signals. The table below provides a comparison between the features available on the various enclosures. The sections that follow give details on each of them. Table 1: Enclosure Features Comparison Feature DL-V3 ProPak-V3 FlexPak-V2 FlexPak-V1G FlexPak-V1 SMART-V1 OEM Card Supported OEMV-3 OEMV-3 OEMV-2 OEMV-1G OEMV-1 OEMV-1 Serial Ports DB-9P connectors DB-9P connectors Deutsch connectors Deutsch connectors Deutsch connectors Switchcraft connector USB 1.1 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes On select models Ethernet Yes No No No No No Strobe Port DB-9S connector DB-9S connector Deutscha Deutscha Deutscha connector connector connector Switchcraft connector Input Voltage +9 to +28 V +9 to +18 V +6 to +18 V +6 to +18 V DC DC +6 to +18 V +9 to +28 V L-Band Differential Corrections b OmniSTAR (HP, XP or VBS) and CDGPS OmniSTAR (HP, XP or VBS) and CDGPS Not available Not available OmniSTAR VBS and CDGPS OmniSTAR VBS and CDGPS GPS+GLONASS Yes Positioning Yes Yes Yes c Not available Not available AdVance RTK Yes Yes No No No Yes Not available Not available Not available Not available Yes IMU Support with Not SPAN Firmware available Option d a. If Pin# 1 on the Deutsch connector is grounded, the COM2 communications mode is set to RS-422. b. A subscription to the OmniSTAR service, or use of the free CDGPS service, is required. Both services are regional, see Section 5.4 starting on Page 85. c. The OEMV-1G-based products have 12 GLONASS L1 channels d. If applicable, refer also to your SPAN for OEMV User Manual OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 25 Chapter 1 1.3.1 Introduction ProPak-V3 and DL-V3 The features of the OEMV-3 are available within the DL-V3 and ProPak-V3. These enclosures, see Figure 6 below, offer GNSS integrators an effective, self-contained system for indoor applications while also providing a rugged, water, shock, and vibration resistant housing for outdoor applications. The DL-V3 is also capable of data logging (DL) using the removable Compact Flash (CF) card. Figure 6: DL-V3 (top) and ProPak-V3 (bottom) Enclosures DL-V3 The DL-V3 also offers the following features: • Rugged waterproof aluminum enclosure with removable compact flash • Auxiliary status and synchronization signals • GNSS antenna and power ports • Bluetooth interaction between the receiver and a user-supplied Bluetooth-equipped laptop/PDA/PC through COM3. Bluetooth is the default on COM3 but Ethernet capability is configurable. See also Ethernet Configuration starting on Page 189. • External oscillator, USB, and Ethernet dedicated connectors • LED indicators to provide power status, communication status, number of GPS satellites, CF memory, position mode, occupation time, Bluetooth status and Ethernet status The following accessories are included with the DL-V3: 26 • Compact Flash Card for data storage • Cables: OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Introduction Chapter 1 • straight through serial • null modem serial • I/O • 12 V power cable • A CD containing NovAtel’s PC utilities and product documentation For technical specifications on the DL-V3, please see Section A.6 starting on Page 156. PROPAK-V3 The ProPak-V3 also offers the following features: • A rugged waterproof enclosure • Auxiliary status and synchronization signals • GNSS antenna and power ports • Support of peripheral devices, including an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) for combined GPS-inertial navigation, refer to the SPAN for OEMV User Manual • An external oscillator connector • Indicators to provide power and communication status The following accessories are included with the ProPak-V3: • Cables: • straight through serial • null modem serial • USB serial • 12 V power cable • A CD containing NovAtel’s PC utilities and product documentation For technical specifications on the ProPak-V3, please see Section A.7 starting on Page 163. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 27 Chapter 1 1.3.2 Introduction FlexPak NovAtel's FlexPak is a rugged, waterproof housing for the OEMV-2, OEMV-1G or OEMV-1 engine. As a result, the FlexPak can deliver centimeter-level positioning in a compact, lightweight enclosure. The FlexPak-V2 provides dual-frequency positioning with a USB interface and an API option for supporting custom applications. Each FlexPak receiver has two SBAS channels. FlexPak-V1G is a GPS + GLONASS model. There are also FlexPak-V1 GPS + L-Band and FlexPak-V2 GPS + GLONASS models available. The FlexPak offers the following features: • A waterproof, shock and dust resistant enclosure • Low power consumption • Two serial ports (COM1 is RS-232 and COM2 is RS-232/RS-4221) • USB support • PPS output • Configurable event inputs • Indicators for position, communication status and power The following accessories are included with the FlexPak: • 12 V power adapter cable • Data cables • straight through serial • null modem serial • USB serial • 12V power adapter • A CD containing NovAtel’s PC utilities and product documentation For technical specifications on the FlexPak, please see Section A.8 on Page 171. Figure 7: FlexPak Enclosure 1. 28 If Pin# 1 on the Deutsch connector is grounded, the COM2 communications mode is set to RS-422. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Introduction 1.3.3 Chapter 1 SMART-V1 NovAtel’s SMART-V1 is a rugged, self-contained GPS receiver and antenna. It is specially designed for harsh tracking environments in a number of applications. The SMART is available in two side-mount configurations to suit your integration requirements: USB or CAN. The SMART-V1 offers the following features: • A waterproof, shock and dust resistant enclosure • Environmentally sealed unit is designed to meet or exceed MIL-STD 810 • Low power consumption • Two serial ports (RS-232) • USB support on USB models • CAN Bus support on CAN models • Configurable event input • Integrated L-Band capability for OmniSTAR VBS and CDGPS positioning The following accessories are included with the SMART-V1: • Quick Start Guide • CD containing an installation program for NovAtel’s CDU graphical user interface software, other PC utilities and product documentation, including user manuals Cables are also available as optional accessories. For technical specifications on the SMART-V1, including optional cables, please see Section A.9, SMART-V1 starting on Page 179. Figure 8: SMART-V1 Antenna OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 29 Chapter 2 Receiver System Overview In addition to a NovAtel OEMV card, a complete GNSS receiver system typically contains four other major components: • A custom enclosure and wiring harness • A GNSS antenna (and optional LNA power supply) • A power supply • Data communications equipment The overall system is represented in Figure 9. A brief description of the Radio Frequency (RF) and Digital Electronics sections follow the figure. The components above are also described. Details of installation and set up are provided in Chapter 3, Installation and Set Up on Page 33. 16 17 18 10 11 13 12 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 15 14 26 Figure 9: GNSS Receiver System Functional Diagram Reference 30 Description Reference Enclosure OEMV Card RF Section Digital Section Controls RF-IF Sections Signal Processor Clock 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Description Optional LNA Power Power Supply GNSS Antennaand LNA RF, Coaxial Cable and Power Data and Signal Processing COM1 COM2 COM3 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Receiver System Overview 10 11 12 13 2.1 32-Bit CPU System I/O AGC Clock VCTCXO Chapter 2 22 23 24 25 26 Input Timing Signal Output Timing Signal USB Communication CAN Communication 1 CAN Communication 2 OEMV Card NovAtel’s OEMV cards consist of a radio frequency (RF) and a digital electronics section. 2.1.1 Radio Frequency (RF) Section The receiver obtains a filtered and amplified GNSS signal from the antenna via the coaxial cable. The RF section performs the translation of the incoming RF signal to an Intermediate Frequency (IF) signal usable by the digital section. It also supplies power to the active antenna’s LNA through the coaxial cable while maintaining isolation between the DC and RF paths. The RF section can reject a high level of potential interference (for example, MSAT, Inmarsat, cellular phone, and TV subharmonic signals). 2.1.2 Digital Electronics Section The digital section of the receiver receives a down-converted, amplified GNSS signal which it digitizes and processes to obtain a GNSS solution (position, velocity and time). The digital section consists of an analog-to-digital converter, a 32-bit system processor, memory, control and configuration logic, signal processing circuitry, serial peripheral devices, and supporting circuitry. The digital section performs the translations and calculations necessary to convert the IF analog signals into usable position and status information. It also handles all I/O functions, including the auxiliary strobe signals, which are described in detail in Section 3.3.1 on Page 44. For input and output levels please see Appendix A, Table 31, OEMV-3 Strobes on Page 151, Table 29, OEMV-2 Strobes on Page 145 and Table 25, OEMV-1 Strobes on Page 133. 2.2 Enclosure and Wiring Harness An enclosure is necessary to protect the OEMV card from environmental exposure and RF interference. A user-supplied wiring harness is also required to provide an interface to the OEMV card’s antenna and power inputs and data and status signals. 2.3 GNSS Antenna The purpose of the GNSS antenna is to convert the electromagnetic waves transmitted by the GNSS satellites into RF signals. An active GNSS antenna is required for the receiver to function properly. NovAtel’s active antennas are recommended because of their precise phase centres and robust enclosures. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 31 Chapter 2 2.3.1 Receiver System Overview Optional LNA Power Supply Power for the antenna LNA is normally supplied by the receiver but not, for example, by the OEMV2 card. If a different type of antenna is required that is incompatible with this supply, then you could connect an external power source to the receiver. See also Antenna LNA Power on Page 51. 2.4 Principal Power Supply A single external power supply capable of delivering the minimum receiver voltage necessary to operate the receiver. Minimum voltage varies per card, see Table 3, Voltage Input Range for OEMV on Page 35 and Appendix A, Technical Specifications on Page 129 for details. WARNING: 2.5 If the voltage supplied is below the minimum specification, the receiver will suspend operation. If the voltage supplied is above the maximum specification, the receiver may be permanently damaged, voiding your warranty. Data Communications Equipment A PC, laptop or other data communications equipment is necessary to communicate with the receiver and, if desired, to store data generated by the receiver. 32 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up This chapter contains instructions and tips to set up your NovAtel receiver to create a GNSS receiver system similar to that described in Chapter 2, Receiver System Overview on Page 30. 3.1 Additional Equipment Required In order for the receiver to perform optimally, the following additional equipment is required: • An interface for power, communications, and other signals and an enclosure to protect against the environment • A NovAtel GNSS antenna • A quality coaxial cable (and interconnect adapter cable as necessary) • Data communication equipment capable of serial communication • A serial cable (if not included with the receiver) • A power supply • A power cable (if not included with the receiver) CAUTION: 3.1.1 When the OEMV family receiver is installed in a permanent location, such as in a building, it should be protected by a lightning protection device according to local building codes. See also Warranty on Page 17. Selecting a GNSS Antenna An active antenna is required because its low-noise amplifier (LNA) boosts the power of the incoming signal to compensate for the line loss between the antenna and the receiver. NovAtel offers a variety of single and dual-frequency GNSS antenna models, as indicated in Table 2 on Page 34. All include band-pass filtering and an LNA. The GNSS antenna you choose will depend on your particular application. Each of these models offer exceptional phase-center stability as well as a significant measure of immunity against multipath interference. Each one has an environmentallysealed radome. The ANT-532, ANT-533, ANT-534, ANT-536, ANT-537, ANT-538, GPS-702L, GPS701GG and GPS-702GG are RoHS compliant. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 33 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up Table 2: NovAtel GNSS Antenna Models Models 3.1.2 Frequencies Supported GPS GLONASS 701, 511, 521, 536, 537 L1 only 702, 532, 533 L1 and L2 702L, 534 L1 and L2 plus L-Band 701GGL, 538 L1 plus L-Band 701GG L1 only 702GGL L1 and L2 plus L-Band 702GG L1 and L2 Choosing a Coaxial Cable An appropriate coaxial cable is one that matches the impedance of the antenna and receiver being used (50 ohms), and whose line loss does not exceed 10.0 dB. If the limit is exceeded, excessive signal degradation occurs and the receiver may not be able to meet its performance specifications. NovAtel offers a variety of coaxial cables to meet your GNSS antenna interconnection requirements, including: • 5, 15, or 30 m antenna cables with TNC male connectors on both ends (NovAtel part numbers C006, C016 and C032 respectively) • 22 cm interconnect adapter cable between the MCX (OEMV-1/OEMV-1G) or MMCX (OEMV-2/OEMV-3) and the TNC connectors (NovAtel part #GPS-C002) Note that a conversion is required between the female MCX connector on the OEMV-1 and OEMV1G, the male MMCX connector on the OEMV-2, or the male MMCX connector on the OEMV-3, and the female TNC connector on NovAtel’s GNSS antennas. Your local NovAtel dealer can advise you about your specific configuration. If your application requires the use of cable longer than 30 m, refer to the application note RF Equipment Selection and Installation on our website at www.novatel.com, or you can obtain it directly from NovAtel. High-quality coaxial cables should be used because a mismatch in impedance, possible with lower quality cable, produces reflections in the cable that increase signal loss. Though it is possible to use other high-quality antenna cables, the performance specifications of the OEMV family receivers are warranted only when used with NovAtel-supplied accessories. 3.1.3 Power Supply Requirements This section contains information on the requirements for the input power to the receiver. See Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 129 for more power supply specifications. WARNING: 34 If the voltage supplied is below the minimum specification, the receiver will suspend operation. If the voltage supplied is above the maximum specification, the receiver may be permanently damaged, voiding your warranty. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 OEMV Cards The OEMV card contains a DC to DC converter that is very tolerant to noise and ripple at its input. A tightly regulated input supply to the OEMV-3 card is not required, as long as it falls within the given input range. A tightly regulated input supply to the OEMV-1, OEMV-1G or OEMV-2 card is required. The power supply used for any OEMV card should be capable of 5 W. The voltage input range for each the OEMV cards is given in Table 3 on Page 35. Table 3: Voltage Input Range for OEMV OEMV Card Power Input Range OEMV-1 +3.3 V DC +5%/-3% OEMV-1G +3.3 V DC +5%/-3% OEMV-2 +3.3 V DC +5%/-3% OEMV-3 +4.5 to +18 V DC All members of the OEMV family receivers are designed to prevent internal damage when subjected to a reverse polarity power connection. The OEMV also provides protection for a short duration during over-voltage events. It is recommended that appropriate fuses or current limiting be incorporated as a safety precaution on all power lines used. Use a sufficient gauge of wire to ensure that the voltage at the connector is within the OEMV card’s requirements. DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V1 or SMART-V1 Enclosures The DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V2, FlexPak-V1G and FlexPak-V1 enclosures are supplied with a 12V power adapter with a built-in 3 A slow-blow fuse for use with a standard 12 V DC power outlet. In the case of the DL-V3, you can choose to press its power button or wait for the power sequence, when it will monitor the serial ports, as long as a valid voltage is present at the power supply input, see DL-V3 Power Down and the Power Button on Page 40. If a different supply is desired, the table below provides the input range and type of connector required to mate with the enclosure’s power connector. The supply should be capable of 5 W. Table 4: Enclosure Power Requirements Enclosure Power Cable Connector Required Power Input Range DL-V3 4-pin LEMO socket connector a labelled PWR +9 to +28 V DC ProPak-V3 4-pin LEMO socket connector a labelled PWR +6 to +18 V DC b FlexPakV1/V1G/V2 3-pin Deutsch socket connector a labelled +6 to +18 V DC SMART-V1 18-pin Switchcraft connector (not labelled) c +9 to +28 V DC a. See Appendix D, Replacement Parts on Page 213 for connector part numbers. b. +9 to +18 V DC when connected to an IMU. If applicable, see the SPAN Technology User Manual for more information. c. Bare wires on the optional cables are labelled PWR, PWR2, GND and GND2, see also Table 43 on Page 184 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 35 Chapter 3 3.2 Installation and Set Up Installation Overview Once you have selected the appropriate equipment, complete the following steps to set up and begin using your NovAtel GNSS receiver. 1. Install the OEMV card in an enclosure with a wiring harness, as described in Section 3.2.1 on Page 36. 2. Mount the GNSS antenna to a secure, stable structure, as described in Section 3.2.3 on Page 39. 3. Connect the GNSS antenna to the receiver using an antenna RF cable, using the information given in Section 3.2.4 on Page 40. 4. Apply power to the receiver, as described in Section 3.2.5 on Page 40. 5. Connect the receiver to a PC or other data communications equipment by following the information given in Section 3.2.6 on Page 41. 3.2.1 Installing an OEMV Card in a Wiring Harness and Enclosure To install an OEMV card, begin with the following: 1. Ensure you are taking the necessary precautions against ESD, as described in this section below. 2. Mount the OEMV card in a secure enclosure to reduce environmental exposure and RF interference, as described in this section in Mounting the Printed Circuit Board starting below. 3. Prepare a wiring harness to interface to the receiver’s data, status, and power signals using the information given in Preparing the Data, Signal & Power Harness starting on Page 37. Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) Precautions Electrostatic discharge is a leading cause of failure of electronic equipment components and printed circuit boards containing ESD-sensitive devices and components. It is imperative that ESD precautions be followed when handling or installing an OEMV card. Refer to the Anti-Static Practices section of the GPS+ Reference Manual for more information on ESD precautions. Leave the OEMV card in its static-shielding bag or clamshell when not connected in its normal operating environment. When removing the OEMV card from the ESD protection, follow accepted standard anti-static practices. Failure to do so may cause damage to the OEMV card. When you remove the OEMV card from the original packing box, it is recommended that you save the box and ESD protection for future storage or shipment purposes. CAUTION 36 • Always wear a properly grounded anti-static wrist strap when handling the OEMV card. • Always hold the OEMV card by its corners or the RF shield, and avoid direct contact with any of the components. • Do not let the OEMV card come in contact with clothing at any time because the grounding strap cannot dissipate static charges from fabrics. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 • Failure to follow accepted ESD handling practices could cause damage to the OEMV card. • Warranty may be voided if equipment is damaged by ESD. Mounting the Printed Circuit Board The OEMV family cards are OEM products and therefore the printed circuit board is provided without a housing structure. This allows flexibility in creating a mounting environment to suit particular product and marketing requirements. The mounting and enclosure should provide the following: • mounting of external connectors • protection from hostile physical environments (for example, rain, snow, sand, salt, water, extreme temperatures) • electromagnetic shielding to protect from hostile RF environments (for example, nearby transmitters) • electromagnetic shielding so that the final product itself conforms to RF emissions specifications Integrator note: The card can not pass emissions testing by itself. It must be in an enclosure. For example, the ProPak-V3 passes regulatory emissions as shown in the Notice starting on Page 10. For more information on emissions testing, please refer to the regulatory body in your geographic area. For example, in North America that is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and in Europe the Conformité Européenne (CE). • protection from ESD (see Appendix B, Electrostatic Discharge Control (ESD) Practices starting on Page 186) The OEMV card can be held in place by screws when used in a custom assembly. Please see Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 129 for mechanical drawings. Preparing the Data, Signal & Power Harness The wiring harness serves the following interconnect functions: • provide access to the serial communications ports • provide access to input and output timing strobes • provide power input(s) • provide access to control signals For all OEMV cards, the power, status, and data inputs and outputs are accessed from a single connector. Therefore, the harness must be designed to mate with this connector. As shown in Figures 10, 11 and 12, the OEMV cards use a 20, 24 or 40-pin header for the data, power, and status signals. The RF input is a female MCX connector. An external oscillator input is available on the OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 dual frequency cards where the oscillator input is also a female MMCX connector. The pin outs for these connectors are specified in Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 129 for the OEMV-1, OEMV-1G, OEMV-2 and OEMV-3 while their manufacturers’ part numbers are in Section D.5 on Page 213. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 37 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up Figure 10: OEMV-1 and OEMV-1G Connector and Indicator Locations .Reference Description J700 power, data, and signal connector (20 pin dual row male connector with a 2 mm straight 2 x 10 header) LED status indicator J100 RF signal input and LNA power output (MCX female connector) Figure 11: OEMV-2 Connector and Indicator Locations Reference 38 Description P1101 power, data, and signal connector (24 pin dual row male connector with a 2 mm straight 2 x 12 header) LED status indicator J100 RF signal input and LNA power output (MMCX female connector) J501 external oscillator input (MMCX female connector) OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 Figure 12: OEMV-3 Connector and Indicator Locations Reference 3.2.2 Description P1601 power, data, and signal connector (40 pin dual row male connector with 0.025” square pins and 0.1” spacing) LED status indicator J100 RF signal input and LNA power output (MMCX female connector) J700 external oscillator input (MMCX female connector) P1400 CAN Bus connector with transceiver Mounting Bracket (DL-V3 and ProPak-V3 Only) Along with the DL-V3 and ProPak-V3 enclosures, mounting kits are provided to facilitate mounting the receivers to a surface. The mounting kits are not designed for use in high-dynamics/vibration environments. Contact NovAtel if your application needs the DL-V3 or ProPak-V3 to be mounted in this type of environment. To install the mounting bracket provided with the DL-V3 or ProPak-V3, refer to the instructions provided with the mounting kit. Page 164 provides the dimension information for the bracket. 3.2.3 Mounting the GNSS Antenna Once the OEMV card is installed in a wiring harness and enclosure, the antenna to be used with the receiver must be mounted. The GNSS receiver has been designed to operate with any of the NovAtel single-frequency or dual-frequency GNSS antenna models. See Section 3.1.1 on Page 33 for more OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 39 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up information. When installing the antenna system: 3.2.4 • Choose an antenna location that has a clear view of the sky so that each satellite above the horizon can be tracked without obstruction. (Refer to the Multipath section in the GPS+ Reference Manual). • Mount the antenna on a secure, stable structure capable of safe operation in the specific environment. Connecting the Antenna to the Receiver Connect the antenna to the receiver using high-quality coaxial cable, as discussed in Section 3.1.2 on Page 34. The DL-V3, ProPak-V3 and FlexPak enclosures provide a TNC female connector, which can be connected to the antenna directly with any of NovAtel’s coaxial cables. For the OEMV cards, an interconnect adapter cable is required to convert the TNC male end of the coaxial cable to the card’s MCX (OEMV-1/OEMV-1G) or MMCX (OEMV-2/OEMV-3) female RF input connector. The location of the RF connector for the each of the OEMV cards is shown in Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 129. The SMART-V1 is a combined receiver and antenna, therefore no external antenna connection is necessary. 3.2.5 Applying Power to the Receiver Connect the power supply, set to the voltage given in Table 3, Voltage Input Range for OEMV on Page 35, to the wiring harness created previously. For a DL-V3, ProPak-V3, FlexPak-V1, FlexPak-V1G, FlexPak-V2 or SMART-V1, connect a power supply to the power port. For the DL-V3 you can choose to press its power button or wait for the power sequence, see DL-V3 Power Down and the Power Button starting below. See also Table 4, Enclosure Power Requirements on Page 35. DL-V3 Power Down and the Power Button DL-V3 incorporates a power button on its front end-cap, see Figure 6 on Page 26. Pressing this switch, sends a signal to the microprocessor to turn on or off the GNSS receiver. The DL-V3 has a low-power mode called power-down mode. To enter this low-power mode, press the power button for at least three but no more than seven seconds, then release it. This is also the mode the receiver enters into after applying power. In the power-down mode, all logging is disabled. While power consumption in power-down mode is minimal, less than 10 μA, the DL-V3 is not completely off. If power conservation is important in your application, disconnect the power source from the DL-V3 when it is not in use. Press the power button momentarily to turn the DL-V3 back on. Also, the DL-V3 monitors its serial ports, and becomes fully operational as soon as serial port activity is detected. For example, if a key is 40 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 pressed on a handheld data logger that is plugged into one of the DL-V3's serial ports, the time required to come on is only a few seconds. However, it may require an additional few minutes to establish an initial time and position. During power-down and power-up time, the serial ports do not process data. You must wait until the receiver outputs an RXSTATUSA log with a BOOTOK message before typing any commands. The automatic power-down feature is disabled when logging is in progress. However, if the power button is pressed while the DL-V3 is logging data autonomously, the DL-V3 saves any open data files and then goes into power-down mode. An additional function of the power button is that it resets the DL-V3 if it is held depressed for at least 10 seconds. This system reset clears stored logging parameters and reverts to a factory configuration when the power button is released. 3.2.6 Connecting Data Communications Equipment In order to communicate with the receiver by sending commands and obtaining logs, a connection to some form of data communications equipment is required. In the case of the DL-V3, your laptop/PC can also communicate with the receiver using the Bluetooth interface. The default configuration available for each of the receiver types, except for the SMART-V1, is given in Table 5 on Page 41. Details on the SMART-V1 port can be seen in Table 6, at the bottom of this page, and its pin-out tables, in Appendix A on Page 181, for both USB and CAN models. However, if desired, on some of the receivers, the serial ports can be factory configured for either RS232, RS-422, or LVTTL operation. Consult NovAtel Customer Service for more details on factory configuration. See Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 129 for data connection details. Table 5: Default Serial Port Configurations Receiver COM1 COM2 COM3 AUX OEMV-1/ OEMV-1G LVTTL LVTTL USB D+ (default) N/A OEMV-2 RS-232 LVTTL LVTTL N/A OEMV-3 RS-232 / RS-422, see User-Selectable Port Configuration starting on Page 43 Factory-configurable RS-232 \ LVTTL LVTTL N/A DL-V3 RS-232 RS-232 Bluetooth (default) or Ethernet RS-232 ProPak-V3 Factoryconfigurable RS-232 \ RS-422 RS-232 Factoryconfigurable RS-232 \ RS-422 a N/A FlexPakV1/V1G/V2 RS-232 RS-232 / RS-422, see User-Selectable Port Configuration starting on Page 43 Not available N/A a. The COM3 port on the ProPak-V3 is labelled AUX. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 41 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up Table 6: SMART-V1 Port Configuration (RS-232 only) Model Ports USB The single port on the USB model of the SMART-V1 can be used for COM1, COM2 or USB CAN The single port on the CAN model of the SMART-V1 can be used for COM1, CAN or COM3 Each port may support some, or all, of the following signals: • Data Terminal Ready (DTR) • Clear To Send (CTS) • Transmitted Data (TXD) • Request To Send (RTS) • Received Data (RXD) • Data Carrier Detect (DCD) On many of the receivers, extra control lines are provided on COM2 for use with modems or other differential correction data links. The DL-V3, ProPak-V3 and FlexPak enclosures are Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) so that TXD, RTS and DTR are outputs while RXD, CTS and DCD are inputs. A null modem cable, supplied with the receiver, is required to connect to another DTE like a terminal or a PC, while a straight cable is used to connect to another receiver. The port settings (bit rate, parity, and so on) are software-configurable. These are further described in Chapter 4, Operation on Page 56. See Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 129 for further information on data communications characteristics. The SMART-V1 multi-cable is available in four configurations: two for the USB and two for the CAN model. All 4 cables are 3 m in length. Table 7 on Page 43 illustrates the models and their cable options. See also the SMART-V1 antenna cable pinouts and drawings in Appendix A, Technical Specifications starting on Page 183. 42 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 Table 7: SMART-V1 Cable Options (RS-232 only) Model Cables USB SMART-V1 COM1/COM2/USB 01017893 USB: DB9: SMART-V1 Variant 01017923 Bare tagged wire: USB COM1 COM2 PWR PWR2 GND GND2 RESERVED TIMEMARK DIGITAL GND SMART-V1 COM1/CAN/COM3 01017894 DB9: SMART-V1 Variant 01017922 Bare tagged wire: CAN1 COM3 COM1 PWR PWR2 GND GND2 RESERVED TIMEMARK DIGITAL GND CAN Part Numbers Connector Ends USB plug COM1 female COM2 female Bare tagged wire: PWR PWR2 GND GND2 RESERVED TIMEMARK DIGITAL GND CAN1 male COM3 female COM1 female Bare tagged wire: PWR PWR2 GND GND2 RESERVED TIMEMARK DIGITAL GND User-Selectable Port Configuration The FlexPak-V1, FlexPak-V1G and FlexPak-V2 are RS-232/RS-422-selectable through pin 1 of COM2, see Table 38, FlexPak COM2 Port Pin-Out Descriptions on Page 174 and Section A.8.2.2 on Page 176. The ProPak-V3 is not user-selectable but can be factory-configured on both COM1 and COM3 for RS-232 or RS-422 operation, see Table 36, ProPak-V3 I/O Port Pin-Out Descriptions on Page 165. The DL-V3 is RS-232 only but its COM3 port has Bluetooth/Ethernet configuration options. See DLOEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 43 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up V3 COM3 Configuration starting on Page 44. The OEMV-3 offers a user-selectable configuration for the COM1 port. For OEMV-3, the configuration is selected using the USERIO1 pin. By default, RS-232 is selected as the USERIO1 input is set LOW by an internal pull-down resistor. To select RS-422 upon startup, apply 3.3 V to USERIO1. Alternatively, tie USERIO1 to pin 38 of the 40-pin connector on the OEMV-3. Pin 38, on the 40-pin connector, is usually an ERROR indicator, and during normal OEMV card operations is set LOW, but for < 2 s during OEMV card initialization, immediately after applying power to the OEMV card, this pin is set HIGH at 3.3 Volts. It drops to LOW <2 s later when the OEMV card has been fully booted up and the [COMx] prompt is output from the OEMV card on all COM ports. USERIO1 needs to be initialized HIGH during this initial boot-up phase in order to set up the COM1 port for RS-422 mode. Therefore, tie pin 38 to a 3.3 V source to trigger the USERIO1, to set the COM1 port to RS-422 mode. DL-V3 COM3 Configuration You can switch between Ethernet and Bluetooth (default) on COM3 using the APPCONTROL command. In the case of switching to Ethernet, power is automatically applied to it after switching. Bluetooth, on the other hand, may be in sleep mode. If Bluetooth operation is required, it must be put into active mode using the COMVOUT command. The ethenet requires more setup configuration steps. These involve configuring serial, and network, parameters. See also Appendix C starting on Page 189 for details. Further details on the commands above can be found in the DL-V3 Firmware Reference Manual. 3.3 Additional Features and Information This section contains information on the additional features of the OEMV family receivers, which may affect the overall design of your receiver system. 3.3.1 Strobes On OEMV family receivers, a set of inputs and outputs provide status and synchronization signals. These signals are referred to as strobes. Not all strobe signals are provided on all receivers. However, for those products for which strobes are available, you may want to design your installation to include support for these signals. Pin-out information can also be found in Appendix A: • OEMV-1 pin-out starting on Page 135 • OEMV-1G pin-out starting on Page 141 • OEMV-2 pin-out starting on Page 147 • OEMV-3 pin-out starting on Page 153 • DL-V3 port pin-out on Page 158 • ProPak-V3 port pin-out on Page 165 44 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 • FlexPak-V1/V1G/V2 port pin-out starting on Page 173 • SMART-V1 port pin-out on Page 181 3.3.2 Universal Serial Bus (USB) OEMV family receivers, along with the accompanying NovAtel USB drivers for Windows 2000 and Windows XP, provide three virtual serial ports over a single USB 1.1 connection using USB D(+) and USB D(-) signals, see Table 8 below. Table 8: Available USB Signals on Receivers Receiver Pins/Ports OEMV-1/OEMV-1G Pin 2 and Pin 3 OEMV-2 Pin 21 and Pin 22 OEMV-3 Pin 3 and Pin 5 DL-V3 Dedicated USB port labelled: ProPak-V3 COM1 Pins 6 and 9 FlexPak-V1/V1G/V2 COM1 Pins 11 and 12 or COM2 Pins 11 and 12 SMART-V1 a Pins 10 and 16 a. USB model only The three virtual serial ports, identified by the OEMV receiver as USB1, USB2, and USB3, are available to existing Windows applications which use COM ports to communicate (for example, HyperTerminal and CDU). The NovAtel USB drivers assign COM port numbers sequentially following any existing ports on the PC. For example, if a PC has COM1 and COM2 ports, the NovAtel USB drivers assign COM3 to USB1, COM4 to USB2, and COM5 to USB3. Typically, a PC has several physical USB ports. The assignment of COM port numbers is tied to a USB port on the PC. This allows you to switch receivers without Windows assigning new COM ports. However, if you connect the receiver to a different physical USB port, Windows detects the receiver's presence on that USB port and assigns three new COM port numbers. The NovAtel USB Configuration Utility installed with the NovAtel USB drivers allows you to change the COM port numbers assigned to the virtual serial ports. The USB drivers, along with installation instructions, are available on the OEMV Family CD by selecting USB Support from the main menu. You can also check for updates to the drivers or release notes on our website at www.novatel.com. CAUTION Do not connect USB ports if USB communications is not being used or you may risk damaging your receiver. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 45 Chapter 3 3.3.3 Installation and Set Up CAN Bus A Controller Area Network Bus (CAN Bus) is a rugged differential serial bus with a protocol that provides services for processes, data and network management. CAN Bus is a generic term, as well as referring to a specific standard for several rugged differential bus standards that provide services for processes, data, and network management. NovAtel’s MINOS5 ASIC incorporates a CAN Bus controller and the GPS engine creates and interprets the physical level signals, and low-level messages, that are compatible with the appropriate sections of the J1939 and ISO11783 standards. However, the integrator must be aware that there is no single software standard for such development, and a manufacturer can specify messages that are specific to its equipment without violating the standards. Accordingly, NovAtel allows integrators to support the protocol stack they require, to interface to NovAtel’s device drivers, by incorporating this protocol stack within NovAtel’s Application Program Interface (API). Integrators interested in this option are advised to contact NovAtel Customer Service for further information. On the OEMV-1, OEMV-1G and OEMV-2 card, the CAN port is shared with the EVENT2 input on both cards, the VARF output on the OEMV-1/ OEMV-1G, and the GPIO signal on the OEMV-2. The OEMV-1, OEMV-1G and OEMV-2 require external CAN transceivers and proper bus terminations. See Section A.2, OEMV-1 Card on Page 135, or Section A.4, OEMV-2 Card on Page 147, for pin-out information. The OEMV-3 has two CAN transceivers, CAN1 and CAN2. See Figure 55, Top-view of 14-Pin CAN Connector on the OEMV-3 on Page 155. Proper bus termination is required. CAN1 is for slow speed (up to 125 Kb/s) and CAN2 is for high speed (up to 1 Mb/s). Their CAN interface can be accessed using NovAtel's API, but requires that shared signals be disabled in order to avoid conflicts. Refer to the OEMV Firmware Reference Manual and, see also, Table 9 on Page 47. CAN Bus signals are not available on DL-V3, ProPak-V3 or FlexPak receivers. There is a CAN Buscapable model of the SMART-V1 with its own multi-cable. CAN Bus functionality is controlled through NovAtel’s optional API software. The API header file includes documentation on using the CAN bus. For example, oemapi.h. 46 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 Table 9: Available CAN Signals on Receivers Receiver OEMV-1 and OEMV-1G (no transceiver) J700 Pins/Ports CAN1 Tx Pin 7 CAN1 Rx Pin 6 CAN2 Tx Pin 20 CAN2 Rx Pin 8 OEMV-2 (no transceiver) P1100 CAN1 Tx Pin 19 CAN1 Rx Pin 7 OEMV-3 (with transceiver) P1400 CAN1H Pin 2 CAN1L Pin 1 CAN2H Pin 6 CAN2L Pin 5 CANH Pin 3 CANL Pin 4 SMART-V1 3.3.4 CAN Status Indicators OEMV family receiver cards have LED indicators that provide the status of the receiver. The OEMV cards have a single indicator, which is shown in Figure 12 on Page 39 for the OEMV-3. The LED blinks green on and off at approximately 1 Hz to indicate normal operation. If the indicator is red, then the receiver is not working properly. The operation of this indicator is further described in Section 7.6 on Page 122. The enclosures’ status indicators are shown in Tables 10 and 11 below and on Page 48. The LED status indicators on the front of the DL-V3 are shown in Section 3.3.5 starting on Page 48. Table 10: ProPak-V3 Status Indicators Indicator Indicator Color COM1 Green Data is being transmitted from COM1 Red Data is being received on COM1 Green Data is being transmitted from COM2 Red Data is being received on COM2 Green Data is being transmitted from COM3 Red Data is being received on COM3 Red The receiver is powered COM2 AUX PWR Status OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 47 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up Table 11: FlexPak Status Indicators 3.3.5 Indicator FlexPak-V1/FlexPak-V1G FlexPak-V2 Antenna/ Position Valid Solid GREEN with valid position / No error mode Solid GREEN with valid position / Solid RED indicates a board error COM1 Flashing GREEN when transmitting data from COM1 / Flashing RED when receiving data on COM1 Flashing GREEN when transmitting data from COM1 / Flashing RED when receiving data on COM1 COM2 Flashing GREEN when transmitting data from COM1 / Flashing RED when receiving data on COM1 Flashing GREEN when transmitting data from COM1 / Flashing RED when receiving data on COM1 Power Solid RED when +12V applied Solid RED when +12V applied DL-V3 Status Indicators The LEDs on the front of the DL-V3 represent these categories: • Power • Receiver Status • COMs (COM1, COM2 and AUX) • COM3 • Satellite Tracking • Flash Card Memory • Positioning Mode • Occupation Time Power The power indicator glows orange when the receiver is powered and then glows green once the receiver has been turned on. See also the DL-V3 Power Down and the Power Button section on Page 40. Status The status indicator flashes orange when the receiver is first turned on. Under normal operation, this LED is off. If a status event occurs, the LED flashes orange again. See also Chapter 7, Built-In Status Tests starting on Page 118 and the RXSTATUS log. Communication Ports (excluding COM3) The top of the COM1, COM2 and AUX LEDs flash GREEN when transmitting data while the bottom of them flash AMBER when receiving data. 48 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 COM3 The COM3 section of the LED panel on the front of the DL-V3, has two LEDs: • 1 for Bluetooth Mode (default) • 1 for Ethernet Mode Only one mode may be used at a time on COM3. The active mode’s LED glows (blue for Bluetooth and orange for Ethernet). See also Appendix C, Ethernet Configuration starting on Page 189. Satellite Tracking The LED that is glowing, and its color, corresponds to the number of GPS-only, or GLONASS and GPS-combined, satellites being tracked by the DL-V3, where the first LED to the left is #1, see Table 12: Table 12: Satellite Tracking LEDs LED# # of SVs LED Color ≤3 Red 4 or 5 Amber 6 or 7 Green 8 or 9 Green ≥ 10 Green Flash Card Memory The number of LEDs that are glowing, and their colors, correspond to the amount of memory left in the DL-V3’s compact flash card, where the first LED to the left is #1, see Table 13. If all 5 flash card LEDs are flashing, it can mean that there is no compact flash card in the DLV3, or that the card in the unit is not formatted (see Section 3.3.8, DL-V3 Removable Compact Flash Memory Card starting on Page 52). Table 13: Flash Card Memory LEDs # of LEDs Capacity Capacity ≤ 20% 40% ≥ Capacity > 20% 60% ≥ Capacity > 40% 80% ≥ Capacity > 60% Capacity > 80% LED Color Red a Amber Green Green Green a. This red LED can also mean that the card was not formatted, and placed in the receiver, when the receiver was powered off. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 49 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up Positioning Mode Which LEDs are glowing, or blinking, or off, and their colors, correspond to the DL-V3’s current positioning mode. Table 14 below shows the available positioning modes and their corresponding LEDs where the first LED to the left is #1, as you look at the DL-V3, and #5 is the furthest to the right. If the table cell shows the name of a color (red, amber or green) with a solid background, that LED is glowing solidly. The table cells that appear dim, behind their color name, indicate that the LED is flashing that color. The LED may also be off. Table 14: Positioning Mode LEDs Position Mode Single Point Differential GPS OmniSTAR RTK 50 Position Mode Detail Autonomous (fixed height) Amber Off Off Off Off Autonomous (3D) Amber Off Off Off Off SBAS Off Green Off Off Off CDGPS Off Off Green Off Off DGPS Off Green Green Off Off VBS (searching) Amber Green Off Off Off VBS (pulling in) Amber Green Off Off Off VBS Amber Green Off Off Off XP (searching) Amber Off Green Off Off XP (pulling in) Amber Off Green Off Off XP Amber Off Green Off Off HP (searching) Amber Green Green Off Off HP (pulling in) Amber Green Green Off Off HP Amber Green Green Off Off Float (RT-20, unconverged) Amber Off Off Green Off Float (RT-20) Amber Off Off Green Off Fixed (RT-2, unconverged) Amber Off Off Off Green Fixed (RT-2) Amber Off Off Off Green OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 Occupation Time The LED that is glowing green corresponds to the DL-V3’s occupation time gauge. The occupation time LEDs provide an indication of whether sufficient data has been collected for successfully post processing data for the indicated baseline. The LED that appears corresponds to the baseline length that you can process your data to, where the first LED to the left is #1. The occupation time gauge has the following values from left to right, see Table 15: Table 15: Occupation Time LEDs LED# Baseline Length (km) LED Color ≤5 Green 3.3.6 >5 ≤ 10 > 10 ≤ 15 > 15 ≤ 20 ≥ 20 Green Green Green Green External Oscillator (OEMV-2, OEMV-3, DL-V3 and ProPak-V3 only) For certain applications requiring greater precision than what is possible using the on-board 20 MHz, voltage-controlled, temperature-compensated crystal oscillator (VCTCXO), you may wish to connect the OEMV to an external, high-stability oscillator. The external oscillator can be either 5 MHz or 10 MHz. Operation consists of connecting a cable from the external oscillator to the receiver’s external oscillator input connector. For the DL-V3 and ProPak-V3, the BNC external oscillator port, labelled OSC, is used. See Figure 6, DL-V3 (top) and ProPak-V3 (bottom) Enclosures on Page 26. For the OEMV-3, an MMCX female connector (J700) is used, as shown in Figure 12 on Page 39. On the OEMV-2, the external oscillator connector is J501, see Figure 11 on Page 38. The receiver does not have to be powered down during this procedure. If you are handling the OEMV card directly, antistatic practices must be observed. Once the external oscillator has been installed, the EXTERNALCLOCK command must be issued to define the clock model (for example, cesium, rubidium or ovenized crystal). If the input clock rate is 5 MHz, the EXTERNALCLOCK command must be issued to change the 10 MHz default rate. 3.3.7 Antenna LNA Power Receiver RF input gain requirements are easily met when using NovAtel antennas and coaxial cables. NovAtel antennas employ a built-in, low-noise amplifier (LNA), which typically provides 26 dB of gain to the received satellite signal. The power to the antenna LNA is provided through the center conductor of the receiver’s RF port. To achieve the required input gain to the receiver, NovAtel coaxial cables have been designed to exhibit no more than 6 dB loss. Antenna supply over-current protection is provided on the OEMV cards and is limited to 100mA. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 51 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up The OEMV family receivers and their LNA capabilities are listed in this section. OEMV-3 For the OEMV-3 it is possible to supply power to the LNA of an active antenna either from the antenna port of the OEMV-3 card itself or from an external source. The internal antenna power supply of the OEMV-3 cards can produce +4.75 to +5.10 V DC at up to 100 mA; enough for NovAtel’s dualfrequency GNSS antennas, so that an additional LNA power supply is not normally required. If a different antenna is used whose LNA requires voltage capacity beyond what the receiver can produce, then the external LNA power option must be utilized. This simply requires setting an external voltage supply between +5.5 and +18 V DC, 100 mA maximum, and connecting it to pin 40 of the 40-pin connector on the OEMV-3. See also Appendix A, OEMV-3, LNA_PWR on Page 154. In either case, the LNA power is fed to the antenna through the same coaxial cable used for the RF signals (LNA power is enabled by default). The internal LNA power source should be disabled using the ANTENNAPOWER command. OEMV-2 The OEMV-2 card supplies power to the active antenna LNA from its internal LNA supply only. OEMV-1 and OEMV-1G The OEMV-1 and OEMV-1G cards use external LNA power only. Set the external voltage supply between +5.5 and +16 V DC and connect it to pin 1 of the OEMV-1, or OEMV-1G, 20-pin connector. See also Appendix A, OEMV-1, RF Input / LNA Power Output on Page 131 or OEMV-1G, Page 137. CAUTION 3.3.8 NovAtel guarantees performance specifications only using NovAtel antennas. DL-V3 Removable Compact Flash Memory Card Data commands and logs can be recorded from the DL-V3 to a removable Compact Flash (CF) card. The need for a companion handheld data logger is avoided when continuous user interaction is not required, since the DL-V3 is capable of logging data according to pre-configured parameters without any user intervention. In applications when continuous user interaction is required, a simple handheld controller can be used with the DL-V3, as the controller does not require its own data logging memory. The reduced handheld data logger or controller requirement simplifies your system and reduce its total cost and power consumption. By default only a log group named default exists. A powerup group must be created to take advantage of the automatic functionality, refer to the DL-V3 Firmware Reference Manual for more information. WARNING: To minimize the possibility of damage, always keep the CF card cover closed and latched except when exchanging CF cards. Do not change the card while logging is in progress. Data will be lost. It is not necessary to turn the receiver off before inserting or extracting a CF card if you are not logging data. 52 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 An example of a 64 MB CF card is shown in Figure 13 below. Figure 13: 64 MB Flash Card When you insert a CF card into the DL-V3, enter a DISK FORMAT command using the Console window in NovAtel’s Control and Display Unit (CDU) graphical user interface software. Wait a few minutes and use the DL-V3 power button to turn it off and then on again. When power is returned, the DL-V3 should be able to recognize and use the CF card. For more information on CDU see Section 6.2, CDU starting on Page 99. Data Logging See Section 4.4, Using the DL-V3 starting on Page 63 to begin collecting data. Collected data can either be transmitted to a host computer over a serial port, or stored on the CF card. If you choose to log data to the CF card, each logging session is stored in a single, unique file. These files can then be transferred to a host computer, for data analysis or other types of post-processing, by one of two methods: · Transfer the data by means of serial communications, for example, DLVTool in CDU · Physically remove the CF card from the DL-V3 and insert it into the host computer, provided that it is also suitably equipped with a CF card port Refer to the DLVTool chapter, and the DL-V3 commands and logs, detailed in the DL-V3 Firmware Reference Manual. Access Door From Figure 14, Compact Flash Card Door (shown with its latch in the open position) on Page 54, you can see that the CF card access door is closed with a latch (reference 1 in Figure 14 on Page 54). As long as the latch is secured, it provides a water and dust-resistant seal around the CF card. To open the CF card access door, turn the latch counter-clockwise, until it releases the door. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 53 Chapter 3 Installation and Set Up Figure 14: Compact Flash Card Door (shown with its latch in the open position) To remove the CF card, unlock the access door. When the door is open, you can see an eject button to the left of the card. You must push this button to partially eject the card. Grasp the card and pull it all the way out. WARNING: Do not change the card while logging is in progress. Data will be lost. It is not necessary to turn the receiver off before inserting or extracting a CF card if you are not logging data. See Step 4, Stop the Data Logging on Page 64. To insert the card, ensure that it is correctly aligned before gently sliding it into the slot. When the card slides all the way in and locks in place, the eject button extends. If you attempt to insert the card incorrectly, it will not go all the way in, and the eject button will not extend. In this case, do not force the card! Remove it, orient it properly, and then insert it. After the card is locked in place, close the cover. The data logging mechanism is designed to be robust and to endure power interruptions (and similar disruptive events) with minimum loss of data. In this situation, allow for your data to be possibly reduced by several seconds up to a maximum of five minutes. When possible, error messages are generated to identify problems as they arise. See also the RXSTATUS description in Chapter 7, BuiltIn Status Tests starting on Page 33. Card Choice You have the flexibility of choosing the CF card with the storage capacity that is the most appropriate for your needs, based on the selected logging rate. This is discussed in greater detail in Section 4.4, Using the DL-V3 starting on Page 63. Take for example the case where you have to format and use a CF card (the DL-V3 comes with a 64 MB card but up to a 2 GB card is compatible): 54 1. Connect your PC to COM1 of the DL-V3 at 9600 bps using a null modem cable with any simple terminal program, for example, HyperTerminal or CDU. 2. Power on the DL-V3 and wait until you see the BOOTOK message. 3. Type in LOG VERSION in the terminal program and press thekey to ensure you have a two-way serial connection with the DL-V3. If you do, a VERSION output message appears. For OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Installation and Set Up Chapter 3 example: #VERSIONA,COM1,0,75.0,UNKNOWN,0,1608.685,004c0000,3681,2678; 3,GPSCARD,"L12LGRVA","DAB06420097","OEMV3G-3.02-2T2","3.200A10","3.000", "2007/Feb/20","11:44:36",DB_USERAPPAUTO,"DL-V3","0","","1.000A16","", "2007/Jan/03","17:39:23",USERINFO,"LMX9820A","0623","","","","","" *c2605fb9 4. Insert the CF card. 5. Type DISK FORMAT in the terminal program and press the key. 6. Wait a minute and power off the DL-V3. 7. Power on the DL-V3 again and the CF card is ready to use. At least 1% of free space must be available on the CF card to open a log file. On a 64 MB disk, there is a 0.64 MB allowance for the file table. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 55 Chapter 4 Operation Before operating the receiver for the first time, please ensure that you have followed the installation instructions in Chapter 3, Installation and Set Up on Page 33. The following instructions are based on a configuration such as that shown in Figure 15 below. It is assumed that a personal computer is used during the initial operation and testing for greater ease and versatility. 16 11 14 12 15 10 13 Figure 15: Typical Operational Configuration Reference Description Reference Description OEMV Card 10 Power Input OEM Enclosure 11 User-Supplied Base Radio NovAtel GNSS Antenna 12 Data Logger or Rover GPS Signal (RF Cable) 13 External DC Power Source COM1 Link 14 Laptop or PC with NovAtel COM2 Link USB Link 15 External Oscillator COM3 Link 16 PC or Base Station External Oscillator Signal USB drivers installed See also Figure 16 on Page 60 for a base/rover example. 56 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Operation 4.1 Chapter 4 Communications with the Receiver Communication with the receiver typically consists of issuing commands through the communication ports from an external serial communications device. This could be either a terminal or an IBMcompatible PC that is directly connected to the receiver serial port using a null modem cable. If you are using an RTK radio it connects to the receiver’s COM port by means of the radio serial cable supplied with the receiver. It is recommended that you become thoroughly familiar with the commands and logs detailed in the OEMV Firmware Reference Manual to ensure maximum utilization of the receiver’s capabilities. 4.1.1 Serial Port Default Settings The receiver communicates with your PC or terminal via a serial port. For communication to occur, both the receiver and the operator interface have to be configured properly. The receiver’s COM1, COM2 and COM3 default port settings are as follows: • 9600 bps, no parity, 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no handshaking, echo off Changing the default settings requires using the COM command. The data transfer rate you choose determines how fast information is transmitted. Take for example a log whose message byte count is 96. The default port settings allows 10 bits/byte (8 data bits + 1 stop bit + 1 framing bit). It therefore takes 960 bits per message. To get 10 messages per second then requires 9600 bps. Please also remember that even if you set the bps to 9600 the actual data transfer rate is lower and depends on the number of satellites being tracked, data filters in use, and idle time. It is therefore suggested that you leave yourself a margin when choosing a data rate (57600 is recommended for most applications). CAUTION: Although the receiver can operate at data transfer rates as low as 300 bps, this is not desirable. For example, if several data logs are active (that is, a significant amount of information needs to be transmitted every second) but the bit rate is set too low, data will overflow the serial port buffers, cause an error condition in the receiver status and result in lost data. 4.1.2 Communicating Using a Remote Terminal One method of communicating with the receiver is through a remote terminal. The receiver has been pre-wired to allow proper RS-232 interface with your data terminal. To communicate with the terminal the receiver only requires the RX, TX, and GND lines to be used. Handshaking is not required, although it can optionally be used. Ensure the terminal’s communications set-up matches the receiver’s RS-232 protocol. In the case of the DL-V3, Bluetooth (default) and Ethernet are available. 4.1.3 Communicating Using a Personal Computer An IBM-compatible PC can be set up to emulate a remote terminal as well as provide the added flexibility of creating multiple-command batch files and data logging storage files. Any standard communications software package that emulates a terminal can be used to establish bidirectional communications with the receiver, for example, Hyperterminal or our own graphic user interface (GUI) program, CDU. All data is sent as raw 8-bit binary or ASCII characters. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 57 Chapter 4 4.2 Operation Getting Started Included with your receiver are NovAtel’s CDU and Convert programs. CDU is a windows-based GUI which allows you to access the receiver's many features without the need for communications protocol or to write special software. The Convert utility is a windows-based utility that allows you to convert between file formats, and strips unwanted records for data file compilation. See Chapter 6, PC Software and Firmware on Page 99 for more information on these programs and their installation. 4.2.1 Starting the Receiver The receiver’s software resides in flash memory. When first powered, it undergoes a complete selftest. If an error condition is detected during a self-test, the self-test status word changes. This self-test status word can be viewed in the header of any data output log. Refer to the chapter on Messages in the OEMV Firmware Reference Manual for header information. If a persistent error develops, please contact your local NovAtel dealer first. If the problem is still unresolved, please contact NovAtel directly through any of the methods in the Customer Service section at the beginning of this manual on Page 18. 4.2.2 Communicating with the Receiver Using CDU Launch the CDU program and select Device | Open from its main menu. The Open Configuration window appears. The example below shows an Open Configuration window with two possible configurations already set up. Your configurations may be different or you may have none at all, in which case, the Open Configuration window is empty. Refer to CDU’s Help file by selecting the Help | Contents menu. See also Chapter 6, PC Software and Firmware starting on Page 99 for descriptions of the CDU windows available from the View menu. Ensure you can see the Console and ASCII Messages windows by selecting them from the View menu. When the receiver is first turned on, no data is transmitted from the COM ports except for the port prompt. The Console window displays a port name: 58 [COM1] if connected to COM1 port, [COM2] if connected to COM2 port, OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Operation Chapter 4 or [COM3] if connected to COM3 port Any of the above prompts indicate that the receiver is ready and waiting for command input. The screen may display other port names for other port types, for example USB1, USB2, USB3 or AUX. 1. You may also have to wait for output from receiver self tests. For example, on start-up, the OEMV family receiver is set to log the RXSTATUSEVENTA log ONNEW on all ports. See Section 7.4, RXSTATUSEVENT Log on Page 119 for more details. 2. If you find that CDU is unable to locate your OEMV family receiver, it may be that you have previously used the SAVECONFIG command. In this case, try using a different COM port to communicate to the receiver. Once communication has been established, issue a FRESET STANDARD command. You should now be able to use your original communication port again. 3. XCOM1, XCOM2 and XCOM3 virtual ports can be generated by the receiver. However they are unlikely to appear as a port prompt as you cannot connect to these types of ports using CDU. Also, they are not available with the COM command but may be used with other commands, such as INTERFACEMODE and LOG. Refer to the OEMV Firmware Reference Manual for the virtual ports available and details on the above mentioned logs. Commands are typed at the interfacing computing device’s keypad or keyboard, and executed after issuing a carriage return command which is usually the same as pressing the key. An example of a response to an input command is the FIX POSITION command. It can be as: [COM2] fix position 51.11635 -114.0383 1048.2 [carriage return] key. The above example illustrates command input to the base receiver’s COM2 port which sets the position of the base station receiver for differential operation. Confirmation that the command was actually accepted is the appearance of 60 single point or pseudorange differential positioning 2 Mode = Static or Kinematic After 60 seconds reverts to pseudorange positioning (single point or differential depending on messages previously received from the base station). The RT-2 solution can show two pronounced steps in accuracy convergence; these correspond to the single-point solution switching to the floating ambiguity solution which in turn switches to the narrow lane solution. If you were monitoring this using NovAtel’s CDU program, the convergence might look something like this: Time after 5 satellites are tracking with good parity and open sky conditions Figure 30: AdVance RTK - Time to Integer Narrowlane vs. Baseline Length 94 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Positioning Modes of Operation Chapter 5 RT-20 Performance As shown in Table 20, RT-20 Performance below, Figure 31 on Page 96 and Figure 32 on Page 96 the RT-20 system provides nominal 20 cm accuracy (RMS) after 15 minutes of continuous lock in static mode. After an additional period of continuous tracking (from 10 to 20 minutes), the system typically reaches steady state. The time to steady state is about 3 times longer in kinematic mode. RT-20 double-difference accuracies are based on PDOP < 2 and continuous tracking of at least 5 satellites (6 preferred) at elevations of at least 11.5°. All accuracy values refer to horizontal RMS error, and are based on low-latency positions. The level of position accuracy at any time will be reflected in the standard deviations output with the position. Table 20: RT-20 Performance Tracking Time (s) Mode 1 Data Delay (s) Distance (km) Accuracy (RMS) 1 - 180 Static 45 to 25 cm 180 - 3000 Static 25 to 5 cm > 3000 Static 5 cm or less 2 1 - 600 Kinematic 45 to 25 cm 600 - 3000 Kinematic 25 to 5 cm > 3000 Kinematic 5 cm or less 2 Either 0-2 +1 cm/s Either 2-7 +2 cm/s Either 7 - 30 +5 cm/s Either > 30 pseudorange or single point 3 Either 0 - 10 +0.5 cm/km Either 10 - 20 +0.75 cm/km Either 20 - 50 +1.0 cm/km Mode = Static or Kinematic (during initial ambiguity resolution) The accuracy specifications refer to the BESTPOSA/B logs which include about 3 cm extrapolation error. MATCHEDPOSA/B logs are more accurate but have increased latency associated with them. After 60 seconds reverts to pseudorange positioning (single point or differential depending on messages previously received from the base station). OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 95 Chapter 5 Positioning Modes of Operation Figure 31: Typical RT-20 Convergence - Static Mode Figure 32: Typical RT-20 Convergence - Kinematic Mode 96 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Positioning Modes of Operation Chapter 5 Performance Considerations When referring to the “performance” of RTK software, two factors are introduced: 1. Baseline length: the position estimate becomes less precise as the baseline length increases. Note that the baseline length is the distance between the phase centres of the two antennas. Identifying the exact position of your antenna’s phase centre is essential; this information is typically supplied by the antenna’s manufacturer or vendor. The RTK software automatically makes the transition between short and longer baselines, but the best results are obtained for baselines less than 10 km. The following are factors which are related to baseline length: • ephemeris errors - these produce typical position errors of 0.75 cm per 10 km of baseline length. • ionospheric effects - the dominant error for single-frequency GPS receivers on baselines exceeding 20 km. Differential ionospheric effects reach their peak at around 2 pm local time, being at a minimum during hours of darkness. • tropospheric effects - these produce typical position errors of approximately 1 cm per 20 km of baseline length. This error increases if there is a significant height difference between the base and rover stations, as well as if there are significantly different weather conditions between the two sites. A related issue is that of multipath interference, the dominant error on short differential baselines. Generally, multipath can be reduced by choosing the antenna’s location with care, and by the use of the GPS-702 antenna (no need for a choke ring) or a L1/L2 antenna and a choke ring antenna ground plane, refer to the Multipath section of the GPS+ Reference Manual. 2. Convergence time: the position estimate becomes more accurate and more precise with time. However, convergence time is dependent upon baseline length: while good results are available after a minute or so for short baselines, the time required increases with baseline length. Convergence time is also affected by the number of satellites which can be used in the solution (the more satellites, the faster the convergence) and by the errors listed in Baseline Length above. Performance Degradation The performance will degrade if satellites are lost at the rover or if breaks occur in the differential correction transmission link. The degradations related to these situations are described in the following paragraphs. Provided lock is maintained on at least 4 SVs and steady state has been achieved, the only degradation will be the result of a decrease in the geometrical strength of the observed satellite constellation. If steady state has not been achieved, then the length of time to ambiguity resolution under only 4-satellite coverage will be increased significantly. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 97 Chapter 5 Positioning Modes of Operation ROVER TRACKING LOSS If less than 4 satellites are maintained, then the RTK filter can not produce a position. When this occurs, the BESTPOS and PSRPOS logs will be generated with differential (if pseudorange differential messages are transmitted with RTK messages) or single point pseudorange solutions if possible. DIFFERENTIAL LINK BREAKDOWN 98 1. Provided the system is in steady state, and the loss of observation data is for less than 60 seconds, the Low-Latency RTK positions will degrade according to the divergence of the base observation extrapolation filters. This causes a decrease in accuracy of about an order of magnitude per 10 seconds without a base station observation, and this degradation is reflected in the standard deviations of the low latency logs. Once the data link has been reestablished, the accuracy will return to normal after several samples have been received. 2. If the loss of differential corrections lasts longer than 60 seconds, the RTK filter is reset and all ambiguity and base model information is lost. The timeout threshold for RTK differential corrections is 60 seconds, but for Type 1 pseudorange corrections, the default timeout is 300 seconds. Therefore, when the RTK can no longer function because of this timeout, the pseudorange filter can produce differential positions for an additional 240 seconds by default (provided pseudorange differential messages were transmitted along with the RTK messages) before the system reverts to single point positioning. Furthermore, once the link is re-established, the pseudorange filter produces an immediate differential position while the RTK filter takes several additional seconds to generate its positions. The base model must be healthy before solutions are logged to the low latency logs, so there is a delay in the use of real time carrier positioning to the user once the link has been re-established. The RTK logs, such as MATCHEDPOSA/B, use matched observations only (no extrapolated observations). These matched observations will be available after three base observations are received, but will typically have about 1.5 seconds latency associated with them, although longer latencies may occur with some slower data links. 3. The RTK system is based on a time-matched double difference observation filter. This means that observations at the rover site have to be buffered while the base station observation is encoded, transmitted, and decoded. Only 8 seconds of rover observations are saved, so the base station observation transmission process has to take less than 8 seconds if any time matches are to be made. In addition, only rover observations on even second boundaries are retained, so base station observations must also be sent on even seconds if time matches are to be made. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B Chapter 6 PC Software and Firmware Visit the Firmware and Software Updates section of the NovAtel website, www.novatel.com, for the most recent versions of the PC software and receiver firmware. 6.1 CDU/Convert/DLVTool Installation The CD accompanying this manual contains the Windows applications CDU (Control and Display Unit), Convert and DLVTool. They are installed via a standard Install Shield set-up application. Also included on the CD is sample source code, to aid development of software for interfacing with the receiver, and product documentation. These applications utilize a database in their operations so the necessary components of the Borland Database Engine (BDE) are installed as well as the necessary database tables and an alias for the database. The install set-up application does all this automatically so you have only to select where you would like the applications installed on your PC. It is strongly recommended that you close all applications before installing CDU, Convert and DLVTool. You must close any applications that may be using the BDE before installing. The install set-up modifies the BDE configuration so that it can recognize the new CDU, Convert and DL4Tool database. The software operates from your PC’s hard drive. You will need to install the software from the CD supplied by NovAtel or from our website: 1. Start Microsoft Windows. 2. Place the NovAtel CD in your CD-ROM drive. If the setup utility is not automatically accessible, follow these steps: a. b. c. d. 3. Select Run from the Start menu. Select the Browse button. Locate Setup.exe on the CD drive and select Open. Select OK to run the setup utility. Advance through the steps provided by the setup utility. When the installation is complete, click on a program icon to launch the application. DLVTool (for the DL-V3) and DL4Tool (for the DL-4plus) is available to download from our website at http://www.novatel.com/support/fwswupdates.htm. Log groups are sets of logs used by the DL-V3. A log group can be created in DLVTool and then downloaded to the DLV3. Refer to the DL-V3 Firmware Reference Manual, on our website at http:// www.novatel.com/support/docupdates.htm, for more details on DLVTool and its use. If applicable, refer also to your DL-V3 Quick Start Guide. 6.2 CDU OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 99 Chapter 6 PC Software and Firmware CDU is a 32-bit Windows application. The application provides a graphical user interface (GUI) to allow you to set-up and monitor the operation of the NovAtel receiver by providing a series of windows whose functionality is explained in this section. A help file is included with CDU. To access the file, select Contents from the Help menu. See also Section 4.2.2, Communicating with the Receiver Using CDU starting on Page 58. The rest of this section shows the CDU windows from the View menu and their descriptions. Most windows have a popup menu accessible by right clicking on the window with the mouse. They provide a way to customize the window by changing the font or to print the window contents. Some of the windows have access to the Options dialog which contains further settings for certain windows. • 100 Constellation Window: The Constellation window displays each satellite being tracked by the receiver. When you select a satellite, the window shows details of its PRN, Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR), azimuth and elevation. Concentric circles from 0° to 90° represent elevations from the horizon to directly overhead, respectively. The azimuth is mapped on a compass relative to true OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B PC Software and Firmware Chapter 6 North. The colored rings indicate the lowest elevation cut-off angles at which satellites are tracked and can be changed or viewed via the button. Each of the satellites being tracked are represented with icons according to their satellite system as follows: • Circular for GPS • Square for GLONASS • Hexagon for SBAS There are also information icons and values at the bottom of the window: • The number of GPS/GLONASS satellites used in the solution verses the number being tracked. For example, 0/5 next to the Russian flag means that while the receiver is tracking 5 GLONASS satellites, none are currently used in the position solution. • Satellite PRN number Azimuth and elevation angle values • Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR) value and indicator The PRN of the satellite is displayed on the icon and color-coding is used to indicate the status of the satellite or the tracking channel. Click on a satellite to display information on that satellite. When a valid position has been achieved, dilution of precision (DOP) values can be viewed in the DOP window. Open this window by selecting Constellation Window from the View menu or by clicking its button in the Window Toolbar. • Channel Tracking Status Window: The Channel Tracking Status window displays key information for each of the receiver's processing channels, including the PRN of the satellite being tracked by that channel, the Signal to Noise Ratio, Pseudorange measurements, Doppler values, Residuals measurements and Lock Time from the satellite. The TRACKSTAT log provides the data for many of the fields listed in this window. The number of channels displayed depends on the model of your receiver and the bars are color-keyed to indicate the frequency type on the channel. Open these windows by selecting Tracking Status Window GPS/GLONASS from the View menu or by selecting the American and Russian flag buttons in the Window Toolbar. • Position Window: The Position window displays: • The receiver's latitude, longitude and height • The Solution Type, also known as Position Type • The solution or differential age (number of seconds the current solution has been valid). Normally this represents the latency in the correction data. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 101 Chapter 6 PC Software and Firmware • The number of satellites used in the solution • The Solution Status • The receiver's date and time (GMT and local) Open this window by selecting Position Window from the View menu or its button in the Window Toolbar. Right-click in the Position window to that enables you to set the PC clock to the receiver's time, change the font used to display the position data or set the units through the Options dialog box. • Velocity Window: The Velocity window displays vertical and horizontal speed and direction.The numeric displays within the dial, and the velocity values below the dial, show the vector velocity as well as the vertical, North, and East velocity components. If necessary, the scale in the dial increases so that you have room to accelerate. Open this window by selecting Velocity Window from the View menu or its button in the Window Toolbar. • Compass Window: The direction dial is a compass that displays the direction of motion of the receiver over ground and its elevation (both in degrees). The white arrow indicates the elevation value on the vertical scale down the centre of the dial. The black arrow on the outer rim of the dial indicates the Track Over Ground value. Both the track over ground and elevation angles are also shown at the bottom of the Compass window. Open this window by selecting Compass Window from the View menu or its button in the Window Toolbar. • INS Window: If applicable, please refer to your SPAN User Manual for more on INS. Information in the INS Position, Velocity, Attitude window is only available if you have an INScapable receiver model. The dial is a graphical display of the Roll, Pitch and Azimuth values indicated by an arrow on each axis. Open this window by selecting INS Window from the View menu or its button in the Window Toolbar. • 102 Plan Window: The Plan window provides real-time graphic plotting of the current position of each connected device. The latitude and longitude shown at the bottom of the window indicate the receiver's reference position, which is used as the center of the grid system. The receiver's subsequent positions, shown with a yellow + marker, are given relative to this initial starting OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B PC Software and Firmware Chapter 6 point. The current position is shown with a red + marker. The buttons at the top of the window provide options for controlling the plan display: • Zoom in or out of the Plan window • View all configurations or center in on the active configuration • Select a grid or circular display • Show/Hide history • Delete all history (no undo) To open this window, select Plan Window from the View menu or select its button in the Window Toolbar. • Doppler Window: A value representing the uncertainty of the position solution based on the current satellite geometry. The lower the value, the greater the confidence in the solution. In the DOP window, DOP is displayed in the following forms: • • GDOP Geometric DOP: Uncertainty of all parameters (latitude, longitude, height, clock offset) • PDOP Position DOP: Uncertainty of the three-dimensional parameters (latitude, longitude, height) • HDOP Horizontal DOP: Uncertainty of the two-dimensional parameters (latitude, longitude) • VDOP Vertical DOP: Uncertainty of the height • TDOP Time DOP: Uncertainty of the clock offset Console Window: This window allows the user to communicate directly to the receiver through the serial port. It is essentially a terminal emulator with added receiver functionality. Commands can be issued to the receiver via the command editor (at the bottom of the window) and sent by pressing the Enter button or simply pressing on the keyboard. The command editor has recall functionality similar to DosKey whereby pressing the up arrow on the keyboard will move backward through the previously issued commands and pressing the down arrow will move forward through the previously issued commands. This allows the user to scroll through previously issued commands and then press the key to issue that command again. Feedback from the receiver is displayed in the ASCII Messages or Console window depending on the format of the message (ASCII or Abbreviated ASCII respectively). WARNING!: Ensure all other windows are closed in CDU when entering the SAVECONFIG command in the Console window. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 103 Chapter 6 PC Software and Firmware This window automatically opens when CDU is first connected to a receiver. To bring the window to the front, select Console Window from the View menu or click its button in the Window Toolbar. • Logging Control Window: The Logging Control window provides a graphical interface for: • Initiating data logging to a file • Initiating logging to the receiver's serial ports • Specifying a time window for data logging • Stopping logging • Editing log settings To display the Logging Control window, select Logging Control Window from the Tools menu or select its button in the Window Toolbar. WARNING!: • Ensure the Power Settings on your PC are not set to go into Hibernate or Standby modes. Data will be lost if one of these modes occurs during a logging session. Refer to CDU’s online Help for more information. ASCII Messages Window: This window displays ASCII formatted NovAtel logs. To display the ASCII Messages window, select ASCII Messages Window from the View menu or select its button in the Window Toolbar. • Wizards: There are two wizards available: RTK and SPAN. The Real Time Kinematic (RTK) wizard takes you through the steps needed to set up your RTK system. You must have an RTK-capable receiver model or the wizard does not continue past its opening page. The SPAN wizard takes you through the steps needed to set up your Synchronized Position Attitude Navigation (SPAN) system. You must have a SPAN-capable receiver model, or the wizard does not continue past its opening page. The SPAN wizard can help with the alignment or calibration of a SPAN system. To display a wizard window, if you have the necessary receiver model, select SPAN Wizard or RTK Wizard from the Tools menu or select one of their buttons in the Window Toolbar. 104 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B PC Software and Firmware 6.3 Chapter 6 Convert Convert is a 32-bit Windows application and is shown in Figure 33. Convert will accept GPS file formats and convert them to ASCII, Binary or Rinex format. The application also allows the user to screen out particular logs by selecting the desired logs from the list of available logs. This feature is useful for screening particular logs out of large data files in either ASCII or Binary formats. Figure 33: Convert Screen Examples 6.3.1 Rinex Format The Receiver-Independent Exchange (RINEX1) format is a broadly-accepted, receiver-independent format for storing GPS data. It features a non-proprietary ASCII file format that can be used to combine or process data generated by receivers made by different manufacturers. 1. For further information on RINEX Version 2.10 file descriptions, you may wish to consult the U.S. National Geodetic Survey website at http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/CORS/ Rinex2.html. OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 105 Chapter 6 PC Software and Firmware The Convert4 utility can be used to produce RINEX files from NovAtel receiver data files. Although RINEX is intended to be a receiver-independent format, there are many optional records and fields. Please keep this in mind when combining NovAtel and non-NovAtel RINEX data. When converting to RINEX, two files are produced - a RINEX observation file and a RINEX navigation file. A third GLONASS file is produced if the data contains GLONASS observations. The default names of these files conform to the RINEX Version 2.10 recommended naming convention of ssssdddf.yyt, where: ssss 4 character station name - Convert4 uses the first four characters of the parameter as the station ID ddd day of year file sequence number within the day - Convert4 sets this to zero file type: o for the observation and n for the navigation file Selecting the RINEX field, see Figure 33, Convert Screen Examples on Page 105, in the Convert To section causes the: 1. Destination File: field to be replaced by the Observation File: and Ephemeris File: fields. Note that Observation File refers to the RINEX OBS file while Ephemeris File refers to the RINEX NAV file. 2. RINEX Headers buttons to appear allowing you to supply additional information that appears in the header records of the RINEX output files (for example, Company Name, Marker Name and Marker Number). For best results, the NovAtel receiver input data file should contain the logs as in Table 21, NovAtel Logs for Rinex Conversion on Page 107. 106 OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B PC Software and Firmware Chapter 6 Table 21: NovAtel Logs for Rinex Conversion NovAtel OEMV Family Log Recommended Trigger RANGEA/B, or RANGECMPA/B ontime 15 BESTPOSA/B, or PSRPOSA/B, or RTKPOSA/B, or MARKPOSA/B once IONUTCA/B onchanged RAWEPHEMA/B onchanged GLORAWEPHEMA/B onchanged VERSIONA/B a once SITEDEFA/B b once a. Information from this log overrides data entered into the Receiver Number, Type and Version fields using the OBS file button of the RINEX Headers section, see Figure 33 on Page 105 b. Available on DL-V3 receivers, refer to the DL-V3 Firmware User Manual. Information from this log overrides data entered into the Marker Name, Marker Number, Antenna Type and Antenna Delta H fields using the OBS file button of the RINEX Headers section 6.3.2 Convert Command Line Switches Convert4 supports several command-line switches to facilitate batch processing. To access its Command Line Arguments window, open a command prompt window (select Accessories | Command Prompt from the Start menu). Change directory (cd) to the directory on your hard drive that Convert4 is stored. Type the following: convert4 -h The Convert4 Command Line Arguments window appears as shown in Figure 34. Figure 34: Convert Command Line Arguments OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B 107 Chapter 6 PC Software and Firmware The name of the output file is the same as the input file when converting to ASCII or binary formats. The file extension, however, is altered to indicate the format of the data: *.asc for ASCII *.bin for binary When converting to RINEX, the output files are named according to the RINEX Version 2.10 naming convention, see Section 6.3.1, Rinex Format on Page 105. The -batch arguments suppress the window display and convert the specified file automatically. When converting to RINEX in batch mode, the navigation and observation file header information from the most recent interactive Convert session is used. 6.4 USB Drivers Installation The NovAtel USB PC Driver Kit contains the following: ngpsser.sys This driver provides a virtual serial port for each USB port of the receiver. ngpsusb.sys This driver connects the virtual serial ports to the USB stack. novatelusb.exe This utility allows you to control which Windows COM ports are assigned to each USB port of the receiver. This utility can also be used to uninstall the drivers when newer versions are available. During installation, a shortcut is added to the Start Menu under Programs/OEMV PC Software/NovAtel USB Configuration Utility. These drivers have not been certified by Microsoft's Windows Hardware Quality Lab (WHQL). Depending on your computer's Driver Signing Policy, Windows may refuse to install this driver or may display a warning. See Section 6.4.1, Windows Driver Signing below for details. 6.4.1 Windows Driver Signing Depending on how your administrator has configured your computer, Windows 2000 and Windows XP either ignore device drivers that are not digitally signed, display a warning when they detect device drivers that are not digitally signed (the default), or prevent you from installing device drivers without digital signatures. Since the current version of NovAtel USB drivers are not digitally signed, the computer's policy must be either Ignore or Warn to enable the drivers to be installed. To change the Driver Signing Policy on your computer: 1. 108 Double-click on System in the Control Panel. 2. Select the Hardware tab. 3. Click on the Driver Signing button OEMV Family Installation and Operation User Manual Rev 5B
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