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1.         Reproduction forbidden ano written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 6 of 28       elit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       1  Introduction    1 1  Scope    The Jupiter SL869 is a 12 2mm by 16 0mm integrated GPS Glonass receiver module using a  state of the art 32 channel multi constellation receiver  This document expands upon the  product specification to highlight particular areas to allow the hardware engineer to achieve a  successful design implementation  This document only covers the standard and timing  variants of the SL869  A separate hardware user guide is provided for the DR variant of the  SL869     1 2  Audience    This document is intended for helping customer in the integration of the Telit SL869  GPS Glonass module    1 3  Contact Information  Support    For general contact  technical support  to report documentation errors and to order manuals   contact Telit Technical Support Center  TTSC  at     TS EMEA  telit com  TS NORTHAMERICA  telit com  TS LATINAMERICA  telit com  TS APAC  telit com    Alternatively  use     http   www telit com en products technical support center contact php    For detailed information about where you can buy the Telit modules or for recommendations  on accessories and components visit     http   www telit com    To register for product news and announcements or for product questions contact Telit  Technical Support Center  TTSC      Our aim is to make this
2.        Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       8 4  Assembly Issues    Due to the piezo electric components within the SL869  the component should be placed  close to the end of the assembly process to minimize shock to the module  During board  singulation  pay careful attention to unwanted vibrations and resonances introduced into the  board assembly by the board router     For boards using dual sided SMT processes  it is strongly recommended to place the SL869  on the top side of the board           HE Yg i  he  i R a  r   D s   ir k k   4 A v F  ir iai Fa S   i      a    34    i i    Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 25 of 28    ti          Z    Telit    SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       PCB Layout Details    The PCB footprint on the receiving board should match the SL869 pad design shown below   The solder mask opening is generally determined by the component geometry of other parts  on the board and can be followed here     Standard industry practice is to use a paste mask stencil opening the same dimensions as the  pad design     All dimensions shown are in mm     Be    1 1        uat    Figure 6     SL869 Pad Design for PCB          _    ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 26 of 28    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       10  Safety Recommendations    READ CAREFULLY    Be 
3.    1 59  Text Conventions  Danger     This information MUST be followed or catastrophic equipment failure or bodily  injury may occur     Caution or Warning     Alerts the user to important points about integrating the module  if  these points are not followed  the module and end user equipment may fail or malfunction        Tip or Information     The information provides advice and suggestions that may be useful  when integrating the module        All dates are in ISO 8601 format  i e  YY YY MM DD     1 6  Related Documents    SL869 Product Description  80405ST10105a  SL869 EVK User Guide  1VV0301004   SL869 Software User Guide  1VV0301002   SL869 Timing Software User Guide  1VV0301094          j    TETEE     ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 8 of 28    y      Reproduction forbidden without written authoriz    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       2  Powering the SL869    Zul 3 3V Supply Voltage    The SL869 is powered by applying 3 3 volts DC to the VCC_IN pin of the module  Internal  linear and switching regulators generate all of the necessary internal voltages for the module     The supply voltage must be within specification  3 3 volts DC   0 3 volts  within 10  milliseconds of initial application  Slow ramping up of the main supply voltage may cause the  SL869 not to start up        VCC_IN Ramp Time Requirement    Figure 1 VCC _IN Ramp    The powerup sequence must not be interrupted during the first second
4.   Free space path loss  Extraneous path loss such as rain  Partial or total path blockage such as foliage or building  Multipath caused by signal reflection  GPS Glonass antenna  e Signal path after the GPS Glonass antenna  The GPS Glonass signal is relatively immune to rainfall attenuation and does not really need  to be considered     However  the GPS Glonass signal is heavily influenced by attenuation due to foliage such as  tree canopies  etc   as well as outright blockage caused by building  terrain or other items in  the line of sight to the specific GPS or Glonass satellite  This variable attenuation is highly  dependent upon GPS or Glonass satellite location  If enough satellites are blocked  say at a  lower elevation  or all in a general direction  the geometry of the remaining satellites will  result is a lower accuracy of position  The SL869 reports this geometry in the form of PDOP   HDOP and VDOP    For example  in a vehicular application  the GPS Glonass antenna may be placed embedded  into the dashboard or rear package tray of an automobile  The metal roof of the vehicle will       Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       cause significant blockage  plus any thermal coating applied to the vehicle glass can attenuate  the GPS Glonass signal by as much as 15 dB  Again  both of these factors will affect the  performance of the receiver     Multipath is a phenomena where the signal from a particular satellite is reflected and is  receive
5.   which would be rejected by the  RHCP antenna by typically 20 dB or so  If the multipath signal is attenuating the line of sight  signal  then the RHCP antenna would show a higher signal level than a linearly polarized  antenna because the interfering signal is rejected     However  in the case where the multipath signal is replacing the line of sight signal  such as in  an urban canyon environment  then the number of satellites in view could drop below that  needed to determine a 3D solution  This is a case where a bad signal may be better than no  signal  The system designer needs to make tradeoffs in their application to determine the  better choice     5 3  GPS Glonass Antenna Gain    Antenna gain is defined as the extra signal power from the antenna as compared to a  theoretical isotropic antenna  equally sensitive in all directions      For example  a 25mm by 25m square patch antenna on a reference ground plane  usually  70mm by 70mm  will give an antenna gain at zenith of 5 dBic for a GPS signal  A smaller  18mm by 18mm square patch on a reference ground plane  usually 50mm by 50mm  will give  an antenna gain at zenith of 2 dBic     While an antenna vendor will specify a nominal antenna gain  usually at zenith  or directly  overhead  they should supply antenna pattern curves specifying gain as a function of  elevation  and gain at a fixed elevation as a function of azimuth  Pay careful attention to the          yo       4 Cae    den without written authorization from 
6.  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       Updating the Firmware    During normal operations  the low true BOOT signal should be left floating  This will ensure  the SL869 module executes the code out of the internal flash memory     However  if the internal flash memory needs to be updated  the following steps should be  performed to place the SL869 module into a state suitable for programming the internal flash  memory     Remove all power to the module    Pull the low true BOOT signal low through a 1K pull down resistor to ground    Apply main power    Run the software utility to re flash the SL869 module  Clearing the entire flash   memory is strongly recommended prior to programming    5  Upon successful completion of re flashing  remove main power to the module for a  minimum of 10 seconds    6  Remove the pull down resistor on the low true BOOT signal    Apply main power to the SL869    8  Verify the SL869 has returned to the normal operating state     ore         The Low True Boot signal is different than the BOOT signal on the JN3 product     Reprogramming the SL869 using the USB interface is not supported     When the receiver is placed into BOOT mode  the data can be transferred on any of the three  serial UARTs without user intervention           3 i a M    L i  Tat H 7 F hi   err   4 vd     ed E lE   A i Sd d      MTERA     ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 10 of 28       4 1     4 2     4 3        B     Reprod
7.  antenna has its own built in low noise amplifier to overcome  RF trace or cable losses after the active antenna           Fl ordnen without written VK from Telit I S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 15     28    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       However  an active antenna has a low noise amplifier  LNA  with associated gain and noise  figure  In addition  many active antennas have either a pre select filter  a post select filter  or  both     5 6  RF Trace Losses    RF Trace losses are difficult to estimate on a PCB without having the appropriate tables or RF  simulation software to estimate what the losses would be  A good rule of thumb would be to  keep the RF traces as short as possible  make sure they are 50 ohms impedance and don t  contain any sharp bends     OT External LNA Gain and Noise Figure    The SL869 can be used with an external LNA such as what might be found in an active  antenna  Because of the internal LNA  the overall gain  including signal losses past the   external LNA  should not exceed 35 dB  Levels higher than that can affect the jamming  detection capability of the SL869     The external LNA should have a noise figure  NF1  better than 1 dB  This will give an overall  system noise figure of around 2 dB assuming the LNA gain is 14 dB  The formula below is  the simplified version of the cascaded Noise Figure formula  Any losses added before the  LNA  NF1  add directly to the NFtotal  losses after the LNA are added to
8.  circuit is being designed to work with either an active or a passive  antenna        ge    ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 17 of 28    B     Reproduction forbidden without written authoriz    elit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       5 9  RF Interference    RF Interference into the GPS Glonass receiver tends to be the biggest problem when  determining why the system performance is not meeting expectations  As mentioned earlier   the GPS and Glonass signals are at  130 dBm and lower  If signal higher than this are  presented to the receiver it can be overwhelmed  The SL869 can reject a CW in band  jamming signals  but would still be affected by non CW signals     The most common source of interference is digital noise  This is created by the fast rise and  fall times and high clock speeds of modern digital circuitry  For example  a popular netbook  computer uses an Atom processor clocked at 1 6 GHz  This is only 25 MHz away from the  GPS signal and virtually at the same frequency as the Glonass signal  Because of the nature of  the address and data lines  this would be broadband digital noise at a relatively high level   Such devices are required to adhere to a regulatory standard for emissions such as FCC Part  15 Subpart J Class B or CISPR 22  However  these regulatory emission levels are far higher  than the GPS Glonass signal     9 10  Shielding    Shielding the RF circuitry generally is ineffective because the 
9.  guide as helpful as possible  Keep us informed of your comments and  suggestions for improvements     Telit appreciates feedback from the users of our information              x F a   7      a ke    Fe E   n dd a    et MTERA     ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 7 of 28    Pla K    Reproduction forbidden without written authoriz    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       1 4  Document Organization       Chapter 1     Introduction    provides a scope for this document  target audience  contact and  support information  and text conventions        Chapter 2     Powering the SL868    gives an overview about power supply       Chapter 3     Updating Firmware    describes the SW updating procedure for Flash version      Chapter 4     Serial interface    describes the three serial interfaces       Chapter 5     RE Front End Design    describes in details the characteristics of the Front end      Chapter 6     Reference Design    gives an overview about the reference design       Chapter 7     Handling and soldering    describes packaging and soldering of the module        Chapter 8     PCB layout details    describes the mechanical design of the module        Chapter 9     Safety recommendations    provides some safety recommendations that must be  followed by the customer in the design of the application that makes use of the SL868        Chapter 10     Document History    describes the history of the present product  
10.  or the module may fail  to start up  In many designs  an LDO with enable driven by a host microcontroller is used to  provide main power to the SL869  Make sure that during initial startup of the host  microcontroller the LDO enable line is maintained at the proper state  Many microcontrollers  set GPIO lines to tri state or input during initial bootup  If an LDO enable is tied to this  GPIO  it is possible for the LDO to turn on during the boot process and then be shut down   This can cause the SL869 to fail to initialize properly  If this happens  a full power cycle of  both VCC_IN and VBATT would be required on the SL869        2 2  Battery Back up    VBATT is applied to the module to keep the RTC running and battery backed RAM alive  whenever main power is removed  This allows for faster startup upon reapplication of main  power     Internal diode OR    ing provides an internal source for VBATT even if this pin is not used        The internal reset of the SL869 is generated upon removal and reapplication of VBATT  not  VCC_IN  If the module does not initialize properly due to improper application of VCC_IN   the module can only be reset if both supplies are removed and then reapplied in the proper    manner              r 7       R M D el ol    F  j Sele       P    F a r ai    j 4    kh   r i re    ii TE a   z    E   g      Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 9 of 28          AN  A       Telit 
11.  the necessary satellites  download the necessary ephemeris  data and compute the location within a 5 minute period  In the GPS and Glonass signal  acquisition process  downloading and decoding the data is the most difficult task  which is  why Cold Start acquisition requires a higher signal level than navigation or tracking signal  levels  For the purposes of this discussion  autonomous operation is assumed  which makes  the Cold Start acquisition level the important design constraint  If assistance data in the form  of time or ephemeris aiding is available  then even lower signal levels can be used to compute  a navigation solution     The GPS signal is defined by IS GPS 200E  This document states that the signal level  received by a linearly polarized antenna having 3 dBi gain will be a minimum of  130 dBm  when the antenna is in the worst orientation and the satellite is 5 degrees or more above the  horizon     The Glonass signal is defined by ICD L1 L2 Glonass Edition 5 1 2008  This document has  similar power levels as compared to the GPS signal for a similar antenna     The SL869 will display a reported C No of 40 dB Hz for a signal level of  130 dBm into the  RF input     Each GPS and Glonass satellite presents its own signal to the SL869  and best performance is  obtained when the signal levels are between  125 dBm and  117 dBm  These received signal  levels are determined by    GPS and Glonass satellite transmit power  GPS and Glonass satellite elevation and azimuth
12.  the next stage NF2  and are reduced by the gain of the LNA as shown in the formula  The effect of additional  losses and or external LNA on the overall system Noise Figure can be determined by applying  this formula  Overall System noise figure affects the sensitivity of the receiver     NF2 1 4 _ NF3 1 NF n   1    Nae ens Gain1 Gain1xGain2   Gain1xGain2xGain n 1     Figure 2  Cascaded Noise Figure formula    The external LNA  if having no pre select filter  needs to be able to handle other signals other  than the GPS Glonass signal  These signals are typically at much higher levels  The amplifier  needs to stay in the linear region when presented with these other signals  Again  the system  designer needs to determine all of the unintended signals and their possible levels that can be  presented and make sure the external LNA will not be driven into compression  If this were to  happen  the GPS Glonass signal itself would start to be attenuated and the GPS Glonass  performance would suffer              i  f    V k     a all is 4    th fy Ser on    Vt it j  R     _ SATA       Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 16 of 28    elit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       5 8  Powering the External LNA  active antenna     The external LNA needs a source of power  Many of the active antennas accept a 3 volt or 5  volt DC voltage that is impressed upon the RF signal line  This volta
13. 13 12 7       Contents  1  WME OCC TION  F FF T 7  1 1 218 0   0    eee eee eee ee ee eee 7  1 2  AE E E aes seuaeensessnceseasseae scene ceeeesacessaccecet 7  1 93  Contac tino maion Support a arai l  ta kaa RL SR staa 7  1 4  Document organza ON ss ten ctasedcmdastnatisetaaaden a a ta 8  Igo  TO COV CONN e sccnqe E pause dseveeseseteueneru lt de  8  1 6  FS CCG OC UNG NS seur e EE EE NEE EE se  8  2  POWERING UNC  ESOT s ani E 9  Za  ON UO VOU E 9  2 2  Bay BICK oea EEI E E EEEE E EEE N EEE ET 9  3  Oe ING ME IVI  roie E E E 10  4  GCOMMUNGANONS reccann E E E E E aa ala a 11  4 1  Main Serial Interi det ee ne nero ene een nee eee eee 11  4 2  Secondary SG ila MVC ACC ie a eese a ees sees aa L a aO Sa st a scene a saal 11  4 3  Tertiary Serial Interface USB Interface             iaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaannnnnnnnnnnnnannnnnnnnnnnnnn   11  D  RKFEFOnNFENAd De 5100 122 sr r   ano E E E EEEE EEE 12  Sells Ar SIG Ie QUIGEI CIS    n    aa 13  5 2  GPS Glonass Antenna Polarization            i2aaaaaaiiaaaaaaaas  aaaaaaaananssannannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnaan 14  5 3  GPS Glonass Antenna Gain          aaiaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaasssaaaaaaaaannsannnnnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnaani 14  5 4  SV SSM NOI E F   a u a a 15  0 0  Active versus Passive Antenna            a  aannaanaaiaaaanannaanuaanuannaannannananuannaannannunanaannannaa 15  9 6  BS CS EOS 5 eS ae ecice ces scese nga S sassy scteeeaaeeus 16  Ir  External LNA Gain and Noise Figure            nniaininaaananaaasnnnanaananananannananananana
14. Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 14 of 28    Reproduction forbid       5 4     0 0        Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       requirement to meet these specifications  such as ground plane required and any external  matching components  Failure to follow these requirements could result in very poor antenna  performance     It is important to note that GPS Glonass antenna gain is not the same thing as external LNA  gain  Most antenna vendors will specify these numbers separately  but some combine them  into a single number  It is important to know both numbers when designing and evaluating the  front end of a GPS Glonass receiver     For example  antenna X has an antenna gain of 5 dBiC at azimuth and an LNA gain of 20 dB  for a combined total of 25 dB  Antenna Y has an antenna gain of  5 dBiC at azimuth and an  LNA gain of 30 dB for a combined total of 25 dB  However  in the system  antenna X will  outperform antenna Y by about 10 dB  refer to Section 7 4 for more details on system noise  floor      An antenna with higher gain will generally outperform an antenna with lower gain  Once the  signals are above about  130 dBm for a particular satellite  no improvement in performance  would be gained  However  for those satellites that are below about  125 dBm  a higher gain  antenna would improve the gain and improve the performance of the GPS receiver  In the  case of really weak signals  a good antenna could mean the differ
15. d Materials    Software and documentation are copyrighted materials  Making unauthorized copies is  prohibited by law  No part of the software or documentation may be reproduced  transmitted   transcribed  stored in a retrieval system  or translated into any language or computer language   in any form or by any means  without prior written permission of Telit    High Risk Materials    Components  units  or third party products used in the product described herein are NOT  fault tolerant and are NOT designed  manufactured  or intended for use as on line control  equipment in the following hazardous environments requiring fail safe controls  the operation  of Nuclear Facilities  Aircraft Navigation or Aircraft Communication Systems  Air Traffic  Control  Life Support  or Weapons Systems  High Risk Activities    Telit and its supplier s   specifically disclaim any expressed or implied warranty of fitness for such High Risk  Activities     Trademarks    TELIT and the Stylized T Logo are registered in Trademark Office  All other product or  service names are the property of their respective owners     Copyright    Telit Communications S p A           gt i      7 a a ia  t j Prt H i ty 4    FF  FF v      ab   M Se   wi       z   ur uaig    pe      s   enai     k   E   i   F    iG EL r x               a    Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 4 of 28    elit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   20
16. d by the GPS Glonass antenna in addition to or in place of the original line of sight  signal  The multipath signal has a path length that is longer than the original line of sight path  and can either attenuate the original signal  or if received in place of the original signal add  additional error in determining a solution because the distance to the particular GPS or  Glonass satellite is actually longer than expected  It is this phenomena that makes  GPS Glonass navigation in urban canyons  narrow roads surround by high rise buildings  so  challenging  In general  the reflecting of the GPS or Glonass signal causes the polarization to  reverse  The implications of this are covered in the next section     The advantage of combine GPS Glonass operation is more satellites are directly visible in the  challenging urban canyon environments     5 2  GPS Glonass Antenna Polarization    The GPS signal and the Glonass signal as broadcast are right hand circularly polarized signals   The best antenna to receive the GPS Glonass signal is a right hand circularly  RHCP   polarized antenna  Remember that IS GPS 200E specifies the receive power level with a  linearly polarized antenna  A linearly polarized antenna will have 3 dB loss as compared to an  RHCP antenna assuming the same antenna gain  specified in dBi and dBic respectively     An RHCP antenna is better at rejecting multipath than a linearly polarized antenna  This is  because the reflected signal changes polarization to LHCP
17. e installed with care in order to avoid any interference with other electronic  devices     The European Community provides some Directives for the electronic equipment introduced    to the market  All the relevant information   s are available on the European Community  website     http   ec europa eu enterprise sectors rtte documents     The text of the Directive 99 05 regarding telecommunication equipment is available   The applicable Directives  Low Voltage and EMC  are available at     http   ec europa eu enterprise sectors electrical             _ 2    Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 27 of 28    Z    Telit    SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       11  Document History    Revision  Date   Changess                     2012 03 12   Firstissue ees    E  1 2012 07 25     4 3 and   6   Updated USB availability in SL869  variants       Issue ee 2103 12 17   Additional information on usage of USB  powering the  module  the using the three UART ports and timing  diagram        Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 28 of 28    
18. ence between being able to  use a particular satellite signal or not     System Noise Floor    As mentioned earlier  the SL869 will display a reported C No of 40 dB Hz for an input signal  level of  130 dBm  The C No number means the carrier  or signal  is 40 dB greater than the  noise floor measured in a one Hz bandwidth  This is a standard method of measuring GPS  receiver performance     Thermal noise is  174 dBm Hz at around room temperature  From this we can compute a  system noise figure of 4 dB for the SL869  This noise figure consists of the loss of the pre   select SAW filter  the noise figure of the LNA as well as implementation losses within the  digital signal processing unit     If a good quality external LNA is used with the SL869  then the noise figure of that LNA   typically better than 1dB  could reduce the overall system noise figure of the SL869 from 4  dB to around 2 dB  Some of the factors in the system noise figure are implementation losses  due to quantization and other factors and do not scale with improved front end noise figure     Active versus Passive Antenna    If the GPS Glonass antenna is placed near the SL869 and the RF traces losses are not  excessive  nominally 1 dB   then a passive antenna can be used  This would normally be the  lowest cost option and most of the time the simplest to use  However  if the antenna needs to  be located away from the SL869 then an active antenna may be required to obtain the best  system performance  The active
19. er  temperature baking is feasible if the humidity level is low and time is available  Please see  IPC JEDEC J STD 033 for additional information     Additional information can be found on the MSL tag affixed to the outside of the hermetical  seal bag     Note  JEDEC standards are available for free from the JEDEC website http   www jedec org                 2 i H     a P te     r h N   a 4    FF  FF Pi  Ee E 5 a ld t      MTERA     ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 23 of 28    r    Telit    SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       CAUTION    This bag contains    MOISTURE SENSITIVE DEVICES      Calculated shelf life in sealed bag  12 months at  lt  40  C and 90    relative hunidity  RH      Peak package body temperature  240 L    If blank see adjacent bar code label   After bag is opened  devices that will be subject to reflow solder or   other high temperature process must be     a  mounted within 48 hours  at factory conditions      blank see adjacent bar code label   lt  30  C 60  RH  or  b  stored at   10  RH       Devices require baking before mounting if    a  humidity indicator card is  gt  10  when read al 23  5  C    b  condition 3a or 3b not met   5  lf baking is required  devices may be baked for 48 hours at 125   5  C   Note  If device containers cannot be subjected to high temperature or  shorter bake times are desired   reference  IPC JEDEC J STD 033 for bake procedure   Bag seal date C    lf blank see adjace
20. ference design above are not supported in the  standard and timing product variants of the SL869  The USB interface is covered in the next  section     If the USB interface is used  it is not possible to reprogram the SL869 using the USB  interface as it is not supported        The reference design is similar to the reference design shown in Figure 3  Additional circuitry  is added to implement the USB interface  The USB supply voltage on pin   of J2 is fed  through a LDO to drop it down to 3 volts for application to the VDD_USB pin of the SL869           f  2 v  gt     s  1 z  i r F F E    4 s    1 F ri   J    F  U M rot P 4 z   P i    FF fl r   K fr        kh i aay A 11 4 F   r j     L r  j          M Jr r f  faa a   E      Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 21 of 28    Z    Telit    SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       7  Advanced Features    7 1  CW Jamming Detection    The SL869 module detects  tracks and removes a narrow band interfering signal  CW  jammer  without the need for external components or tuning     7 2  SBAS    The SL869 receiver is capable of using Satellite Based Augmentation System  SBAS   satellites as a source of both differential corrections and satellite range measurements  These  systems  WAAS  EGNOS  MSAS  use geostationary satellites to transmit regional  differential corrections via a GPS compatible signal  The use of SBAS corrections can  impr
21. ge is not supplied by the  SL869  but can be easily supplied by the host design     Two approaches can be used  The first is to use an inductor to tie directly to the RF trace  This  inductor should be at self resonance at L1  1 6 GHz  and should have good Q for low loss      the higher the Q  the lower the loss  The side of the inductor connecting to the antenna supply  voltage should be bypassed to ground with a good quality RF capacitor  again operating at  self resonance at the L1 frequency     The second approach is to use a quarter wave stub in place of the inductor  The length of the  stub is designed to be exactly a quarter wavelength  which has the effect of making an RF  short at L1 at one end of the stub to appear as an RF open  The RF short is created by the  good quality RF capacitor operating at self resonance     The choice between the two would be determined by     e RE path loss introduced by either the inductor or quarter wave stub   e Cost of the inductor   e Space availability for the quarter wave stub    Simulations done by Telit show the following     e Murata LQG15HS27NJ02 Inductor 0 65 dB of additional signal loss  27 nH  SRF 1 7GHz  Q approx  20 at L1    e Quarter wave stub on FR4 0 59 dB of additional signal loss    e Coilcraft BOOTJLC Inductor  used in ref  design  0 37 dB of additional signal loss  35 5 nH  SRF 1 5GHz  Q approx  40 at L1  This additional loss occurs after the LNA in the active antenna  so it is generally not  significant unless the
22. interference is getting into the  GPS Glonass antenna itself  the most sensitive portion of the RF path  The antenna cannot be  shielded because then it can   t receive the GPS Glonass signals     There are two solutions  one is to move the antenna away from the source of interference or  the second is to shield the digital interference to prevent it from getting to the antenna              N    2 PE kai   pae  i     1 i 2 P   d nett     R  ary k T i g   2    Corre      m ETER E    Reproduction forbidden without written authoriz       p i       ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 18 of 28    ge    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       6  Reference Designs    Below are two different reference designs  one utilizing the serial UART and the second  utilizing USB     6 1  UART Interface    The SL869 Serial UART Reference Design 1s presented in the figure below       Figure 3     SL869 Serial UART Reference Design    The CAN and  2C interfaces shown in the reference design above are not supported in the  standard and timing product variants of the SL869  The USB interface is covered in the next  section           Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 19 of 28    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       The minimum number of connections required to operate the SL869 properly are     VCC_IN to provide main power    GND 
23. is the  case with all serial data  the idle state is logic one     If the RX signal is used  it is important that it be either logic low or high impedance whenever  VCC_IN has been removed from the device  Failure to follow this requirement can lead to  improper receiver operation upon next powerup        6 1 1  Host Serial Interface    As mentioned above in Section 5  the host serial interface is a UART  The UART can operate  at bps rates of 4800  9600  19200  38400  57600 and 115200 bps  The SL869 currently only  implements NMEA protocol     The lower UART bps rates are typically used for NMEA protocol  Note should be taken  however of the bandwidth limitation at 9600 bps  By default  the SL869 module  communicates using NMEA at 9600 bps  with the periodic output messages limited to the  GPGGA  GPGSA  GLGSA and GPRMC messages at once per second and the GPGSV and  GLGSV messages once every five seconds     Reference the SL869 SW User Guide for additional message details        i   aF   H ld j   p  b  Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 20 of 28    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       6 2  UART Interface    The SL869 USB Reference Design is presented in the figure below     CANOTX   CANORX   1PPS   EXT_INT   USB_DM   USB_DP   VDDUSB   NC   VCC_IN   GND   TX2 BOOT RF_IN  GND GND       Figure 4     SL869 USB Reference Design    The CAN and  2C interfaces shown in the re
24. license under its patent rights or the rights of  others     It is possible that this publication may contain references to  or information about Telit  products  machines and programs   programming  or services that are not announced in your  country  Such references or information must not be construed to mean that Telit intends to  announce such Telit products  programming  or services in your country     Copyrights   This instruction manual and the Telit products described in this instruction manual may be   include or describe copyrighted Telit material  such as computer programs stored in  semiconductor memories or other media  Laws in the Italy and other countries preserve for  Telit and its licensors certain exclusive rights for copyrighted material  including the  exclusive right to copy  reproduce in any form  distribute and make derivative works of the  copyrighted material  Accordingly  any copyrighted material of Telit and its licensors  contained herein or in the Telit products described in this instruction manual may not be  copied  reproduced  distributed  merged or modified in any manner without the express  written permission of Telit  Furthermore  the purchase of Telit products shall not be deemed  to grant either directly or by implication  estoppel  or otherwise  any license under the  copyrights  patents or patent applications of Telit  as arises by operation of law in the sale of a  product     Computer Software Copyrights    The Telit and 3rd Party sup
25. nnanananana 16  5 8  Powering the External LNA  active antenna                aiaaiiaaaiaiaaaasaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanani 17  5 9  RF  Interference            inaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaaaananaunaaunananananaannnanunanananannnannananaaanaaannananaaanaaa 18  5 10  SDS E er E     FE E Fj F FFF E E E ee 18  6  Kerr rica Designs Ta a a ala 19          a      Fl   K  i t a      Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 5 of 28    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       6 1  OT UCT CS wares erect ee cecstene a E E S 19  6 1 1  FOS ee DN MCT AG Sa a E ER 20   6 2  JAKFMARAaca VT TT TT UT AE EE r 21   7 Pavane d FES UTOG t e EE EE ERRE EE a asa a ER 22  7 1  CW Jamming Detectlion           aiiiiiaaanaiaaaananaaanaaaananunananunaanananananunaannnnnananunaanannnanananaa 22  7 2  SBAS S onguanceebaedmanegeancaesetnd starccmucesseraetas R 22  7 3  DOP EF F FV TV TT TV TT TT TT 22  8  Handling and Soldering    402isss  sssl  sakupdlunit slab ienn a a EEEE ar SR Singin 23  8 1  Moisture Sensitivity       aaiaaaniaaaaaaaanaaanaaaaaaaunaaunaaananananannaannaaunaaananannanannananaaanaaanaaaanaaani 23  8 2  e D E EEE t EE aoes 24  8 3  KONON e E E E 24  8 4  A SVN IS UE 25  9  PCB Layout Details            aaaanananaaaaaaanananaananananannunananananannunanananannunananananannananananana 26  10  Safely KeECOMMeNAadHN0nNSisnanastk  nisravdavslugaa  s aka 27  E DOCUMEN Nl i a    a l a a s 28           uT 
26. nt bar code label    Note  Level and body temperature defined by IPC JEDEC J STD 020       Figure 5     Label for Moisture Sensitive Devices    8 2  ESD    The SL869 is an electrostatic discharge sensitive device and should be handled in accordance  with JESD625 A requirements for Handling Electrostatic Discharge Sensitive  ESDS   Devices  Although the SL869 is a module  the expecting handling of the SL869 during  assembly and test is identical to that of a semiconductor device     Note  JEDEC standards are available for free from the JEDEC website http   www jedec org     8 3  Reflow    The SL869 is compatible with lead free soldering processes as defined in IPC JEDEC J STD   020  The reflow profile must not exceed the profile given IPC JEDEC J STD 020 Table 5 2      Classification Reflow Profiles     Although IPC JEDEC J STD 020 allows for three reflows   the assembly process for the SL869 uses one of those profiles  Thus the SL869 is limited to  two reflows     Note  JEDEC standards are available for free from the JEDEC website http   www jedec org   When reflowing a dual sided SMT board  it is important to reflow the side containing the  SL869 module last  This prevents heavier components within the SL869 becoming dislodged  if the solder reaches liquidus temperature while the module is inverted          f      1 j     TRE      Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 24 of 28                  H     
27. ove typical position accuracy to 3m or less in open sky applications     7 3  DGPS    Differential corrections can also be supplied to the SL869 using an RTCM beacon receiver   Only RTCM SC 104 messages 1 and 9 are supported  The use of DGPS corrections can  improve typical position accuracy to 1 5m or less in open sky applications           a     a   r at E i i i      p J nf K     z r     q      iae         i d f j       Reproduction forbidden without written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 22 of 28          Telit    SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       8  Handling and soldering    8 1  Moisture Sensitivity    The SL869 module has a moisture sensitivity level rating of 3 as defined by IPC JEDEC J   STD 020  This rating 1s assigned due to some of the components used within the SL869   The SL869 is supplied in trays or tape and reel and is hermetically sealed with desiccant and  humidity indicator card  The SL869 parts must be placed and reflowed within 48 hours of  first opening the hermetic seal provided the factory conditions are less than 30  C and less  than 60  and the humidity indicator card indicates less than 10  relative humidity     If the package has been opened or the humidity indicator card indicates above 10   then the  parts will need to be baked prior to reflow  The parts may be baked at  125  C   5  C for 48  hours  However  the trays  nor the tape and reel can withstand that temperature  Low
28. plied Software  SW  products described in this instruction manual  may include copyrighted Telit and other 3rd Party supplied computer programs stored in  semiconductor memories or other media  Laws in the Italy and other countries preserve for  Telit and other 3rd Party suppled SW certain exclusive rights for copyrighted computer  programs  including the exclusive right to copy or reproduce in any form the copyrighted  computer program  Accordingly  any copyrighted Telit or other 3rd Party supplied SW  computer programs contained in the Telit products described in this instruction manual may  not be copied  reverse engineered  or reproduced in any manner without the express written  permission of Telit or the 3rd Party SW supplier  Furthermore  the purchase of Telit products  shall not be deemed to grant either directly or by implication  estoppel  or otherwise  any  license under the copyrights  patents or patent applications of Telit or other 3rd Party supplied  SW  except for the normal non exclusive  royalty free license to use that arises by operation  of law in the sale of a product        TE      pon oe  jin           Te li   elit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       Usage and Disclosure Restrictions    License Agreements    The software described in this document is the property of Telit and its licensors  It is  furnished by express license agreement only and may be used only in accordance with the  terms of such an agreement     Copyrighte
29. sure the use of this product is allowed in the country and in the environment required  The  use of this product may be dangerous and has to be avoided in the following areas     e Where it can interfere with other electronic devices in environments such as hospitals   airports  aircrafts  etc     e Where there is risk of explosion such as gasoline stations  oil refineries  etc  It is  responsibility of the user to enforce the country regulation and the specific  environment regulation     Do not disassemble the product  any mark of tampering will compromise the warranty  validity  We recommend following the instructions of the hardware user guides for a correct  wiring of the product  The product has to be supplied with a stabilized voltage source and the  wiring has to be conforming to the security and fire prevention regulations  The product has to  be handled with care  avoiding any contact with the pins because electrostatic discharges may  damage the product itself  The system integrator is responsible for the functioning of the final  product  therefore  care has to be taken to the external components of the module  as well as  of any project or installation issue  because of the risk of disturbing external networks or  devices or having impact on the security  Should there be any doubt  please refer to the  technical documentation and the regulations in force     Every module has to be equipped with a proper antenna with specific characteristics  The  antenna has to b
30. to provide a DC return for VCC_IN and an RF return for RF_IN   RF_IN to provide the received GNSS signal    TX to provide the serial data stream output from the receiver     If battery backup of receiver settings  current satellite data  position  time and date  information are desired  then VBATT is required to power the receiver when VCC_IN is  removed     If command and control of the SL869 is desired  then the RX signal is also required to be  connected     If in circuit firmware updates are desired  then the BOOT and RX signals must be connected     The RF input can be connected directly to a GPS Glonass antenna  The reference design  shows a DC power feed for an active antenna  C5 is used to block the DC voltage from  entering the SL869  The inductor L1 is chosen to be self resonant at the GPS Glonass  frequency  1 6 GHz  to minimize loading on the RF trace  Capacitor C6 is chosen to be self   resonant at the GPS Glonass frequency such that is looks pretty close to an RF short at that  frequency  V_ANT is the supply voltage for the external active antenna     TX is the normal digital output and is a serial UART with a default bit rate of 9600 bps  1  stop bit and 8 data bits  This is a 3 3 volt logic level signal  As is the case with all serial data   the idle state is logic one     RX is the normal digital input and is a serial UART with a default bit rate of 9600 bps  1 stop  bit and 8 data bits  This is a 1 8 volt logic level signal  but is tolerant to 3 6 volts  As 
31. uction forbidden without written authoriz       Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       Communications    Main Serial Interface    Upon power up  the SL869 will communicate using a standard asynchronous 8 bit protocol   UART  with messages appearing on the TX line  pin 20   and commands and data being  entered on the RX line  pins 21   There is no parity bit  and no flow control operations are  performed     Upon initial application of power all I O on the SL869 are initially inputs  with the TX2 pin  serving as an auxiliary low true BOOT pin  Internally  this pin has a 10K pullup to VCC_IN  to allow the SL869 to properly start up  This pin must not be grounded or pulled low at any   time for normal operation     Secondary Serial Interface    The SL869 implements a secondary UART on pins 14 and 15  Normally these pins are not  used but may be used to provide RTCM 104 differential corrections into the receiver     Upon initial application of power all I O on the SL869 are initially inputs  with the TX2 pin  serving as the main low true BOOT pin  Internally  this pin has a 10K pullup to VCC_IN to  allow the SL869 to properly start up  This pin must not be grounded or pulled low at any time     Tertiary Serial Interface USB Interface    The SL869 implements a tertiary UART which is multiplexed with the USB interface on pins  5 and 6  If the USB_Detect pin is left floating or is pulled low  the interface is a tertiary  UART normally used to output deb
32. ug messages  If the USB_Detect pin is connected to a 3 3  volt supply voltage  not a pullup   the port is then configured as a USB port and serial data  that was previously on the main serial interface will be routed to the USB port        ge    ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 11 of 28          Z    Telit    SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       D  RF Front End Design    The SL869 contains an integrated LNA and post select SAW filter  This allows the SL869 to  work well with a passive GPS Glonass antenna  If the antenna cannot be located near the  SL869  then an active antenna  that is  an antenna with a low noise amplifier built in  can be  used  The following items will be discussed in turn to assist in designing the    RF front end        9     Aen a a    RF signal requirements   GPS Glonass antenna polarization  GPS Glonass antenna gain   System noise floor   Active versus passive antenna   RF trace losses   Implications of the pre select SAW filter  External LNA gain and Noise Figure  Powering the external LNA  active antenna     10  RF interference  11  Shielding       Reproduction forbidden   t written authorization from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 12 of 28       9 1     Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       RF Signal Requirements    The SL869 can achieve Cold Start acquisition with a signal level of  147 dBm at its input   This means the SL869 can find
33. wireless  solutions    Teli       SL869 Hardware User Guide    es Rev 2   2013 12 17    oe   i   l i    o aaa a   l 4            R   R         Wh      g ll M  iM          leg ki    H       r       as  eal          a  E       hy    x       n        R    1 k m hi      W P    Le  4 Pa     PF         f    j a 1  A H   lt i N  1 N 5 EA    s P       Making machines talk           Z    Telit       SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7    APPLICABILITY TABLE    PRODUCT             _    ation from Telit Communications S p A    All Rights Reserved  Page 2 of 28    Telit  SL869 Hardware User Guide  1vv0301001 Rev 2   2013 12 7       SPECIFICATIONS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE    Notice    While reasonable efforts have been made to assure the accuracy of this document  Telit  assumes no liability resulting from any inaccuracies or omissions in this document  or from  use of the information obtained herein  The information in this document has been carefully  checked and is believed to be entirely reliable  However  no responsibility is assumed for  inaccuracies or omissions  Telit reserves the right to make changes to any products described  herein and reserves the right to revise this document and to make changes from time to time  in content hereof with no obligation to notify any person of revisions or changes  Telit does  not assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product  software  or  circuit described herein  neither does it convey 
    
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