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| 2.4 Ghz Spread Spectrum Technology Discuss Spektrum, Futaba FASST, and all of the exciting 2.4 transmitter/receiver technology here! |
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| | #61 (permalink) |
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() ![]() |
I'm not sure on the laws regarding 2.4Ghz in the USA but the smaller wireless video cameras I use are very low powered, way under 1 watt. I have seen some at our field that are 1 watt and we fly Spektrum systems with that thing going with no issues. Its on a glider and the guy flies it with video goggles so he gets a real feeling of being inside the thing. Never has caused a problem so far. As for the systems having to hop I know thats not the case here. Baby monitors, wireless door phone video etc all use a fixed channel. Some higher end ones allow you to select from three or four channels or on some you have four cameras running and it switches every few seconds. Hopping with smaller cheaper electronics is pretty much unheard of. However most of these smaller wireless vids do not use up all the band width on the channel. The easy way to explain it is 2.4 has a channel more like a 3D box than a flat line. That box can be seperated up into smaller squares that will theoretically allow up to ten devices to work at peace with each other on the same channel. Thats how XPS can claim to be able to run 90 radios concurrently. FASST say they can run some enormous number and SPEKTRUM say 40. What ever the number, it really is irrelevant because your not going to get 40 planes or helis in the same airspace with out a lot of control from the CD. Plus I am sure there would be some serious latency as units clashed with each other looking for a gap to send packets of information. As for XPS claiming to have the only system with Bi Directional capability my understanding is the others have that turned off as they dont want it or need it yet. Sure thing later on you will have your onboard info recorded on your radio and you can download it to your PC at night. Those things are not rocket science to include for either FASST or SPEKTRUM. They just choose not to do it for the time being I am sure. I have some new software that I hope is going to show the depth or band width usage for each channel. Its pretty technical to make it understandable (for me that is) but if I can get the moons to line up again I will try to do some work tomorrow for you guys and post it. You know guys something I am not worried about is being proved wrong if anyone can counter what I am doing. This is my hobby, learning by pushing my boundaries of knowledge is rewarding and enjoyable. So dont be shy to fire away if you have proof that shows otherwise. I'm not here for the fight, but I am sure here for the fun. |
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| | #62 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() ![]() |
Charlie, The extremely difficult part here for me is to just touch on the point where reception is being lost by the receiver but not enough to put the unit into fail safe. In my mind if we go to fail safe before we hop a channel then the system just plain does not work. What would be the sense of a system that cannot move before it gets swamped. There was another video on RCG showing the noise levels being slowly increased until XPS chucked in the towel. That was done with a slowly rising noise floor and a rapid rising noise floor. In both cases the Receiver defaulted to fail safe before being able to get out of the noise. One of the abilties of my signal generator is it can pulse so it creates a variable noise environment that in my mind should be sufficient to make XPS move if it can move at all. But as I said above. I can be wrong, maybe it does hop but if someone can show us 100% ON A SCANNER or with some device that proves it moves then I stand corrected. | ||||||||||||||||||
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| | #63 (permalink) |
| Flyin' Around ![]() Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: KS
Posts: 6
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I did a little playing around last night with an X-10 2.4ghz camera that I have had a for a few years. I'm not sure of the power it puts out but they are readily available in the US. With my XDP running in analyzer mode, the camera powered on and sitting about 10 ft from my plane and the Tx about 12 ft from the plane and 6 ft from the camera. The camera showed up at 15 on the XDP analyzer, I then powered up the Rx and Tx and they linked up on 20 right next to the camera. With the Tx antenna removed and NOT pressing the range check button I was getting intermittent control of the Rx (start to move the elevator and it would go part way then stop, then come back to life or go to neutral failsafe setting). So I cycled the power on the XPS Tx and Rx while leaving the wireless camera on, XPS came up on 20 again and was still intermittent. I then moved the camera about 30 ft away and it stopped interfering with the XPS even if I held the Tx right by the camera. I then brought the camera back near the plane and after another power cycle of the XPS it came up on 60 and then it functioned fine unless I put the camera's antenna right against the Rx antenna. I relinked the XPS about 4 more times and it always came up on 60, even with the camera off, maybe it uses that last channel it had success with?? So, I'm very surprised that XPS linked on a channel that had sufficient noise to prevent it from functioning properly (more than once) AND, I never saw it change channel except when relinked. I may play with this a bit more with a battery pack on the camera so I can vary its distance from the plane. |
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| | #64 (permalink) |
| That Was a Close Shave! ![]() Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: USA
Posts: 641
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Looks like I was mistaken about the power levels of the AV transmitters. They are covered under FCC Part 15 until it looks like 100 milliwatts, then FCC Part 97, requiring an amateur license. The Black Widow 200 milliwatt rigs require a Technician Class license. So it would appear (I haven't read all of Part 15 or Part 97, just going off a few snippets here and there) that anything over 100 milliwatts needs a license in the US. The ARRL quotes power levels in microvolts/meter, This video retailer uses microvolts/meter on its Part 15 rigs, milliwatts on its Part 97 rigs. So the guy with the 2 watt Ebay special needs his Ham ticket.
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| | #65 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||||||
| It's official, thanks Verne... ![]() |
It was our understanding that Mr. Drew chose to spend his time on another forum due to the difficulty in keeping up with all of the threads in all of the forums. C'mon back Jim, we'd love to have you!!
__________________ Ken Thompson Fellowship of Christian Modelers http://www.fcmodelers.com Team Black Magic http://www.customairframes.com Team DragonFire http://www.dragonfirecustoms.com Last edited by Toro; 03-10-2008 at 05:10 PM. | ||||||||||||||||||
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| | #67 (permalink) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: New Zealand Age: 55
Posts: 791
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Is this not a little naive? Do Ford and GM just knock a car together then go drive it rather than putting it through a rigorous set of tests for durability, safety, performance and reliability? I think not.
Unfortunately the promotion of "patented 8-element spherical antennas" and other things clearly indicate that JD's grip on "The Real World" (TM) is tenuous at best. I also wonder at what constitutes a "test" in JD's world. When he first rolled out the XPS transmitter modules I posted my concerns that the small quarter-wave whip on the transmitter module would be inadequate, due partly to its low gain and also because of its positioning (wasting most of the power that was radiated anyway -- further reducing the ERP). JD scoffed and said that he'd done extensive "testing" that proved the 1/4wave whip was all that's needed. Just a few weeks later (at Vegas), we saw the 1/4wave whip being replaced by a 1/2 wave dipole and now all the transmitter modules sport this "unncessary" enhancement. This is an example of why I question the quality (or even the existence) of JD's "real-world testing".
I think JD has become the victim of his own attempts to guerilla-market XPS by making wildly unfounded claims and over-hyping the technology behind it. Making these wild claims certainly got people talking -- and that's good for sales. Unfortunately, he's now unable to really retract many of those ludicrous claims for fear of being exposed as being somewhat less than totally honest. So he persists with the mythical antennas, the "useful" hopping capabilities and the denial of any need for receiver/antenna diversity. Those who have bought his products and had no problems will doubtless support him, others who are not phased by the smoke and mirrors or who have had issues with XPS are not so supportive of this kind of silliness. I suspect that if the system had not been so grossly over-hyped, we wouldn't be having these discussions right now. Interestingly enough, there are a growing number of "satisfied users" of non-redundant, non-agile 2.4GHz systems such as ASSAN and iMax who live with even more limitations than those intrinsic to XPS. These people aren't complaining because their expectations were not unreasonably raised and the manufacturers of these systems never made claims that weren't substantiated in practice. As I've said before -- the XPS system does work and is as good as other second-tier products. But it is somewhat akin to driving a car without seatbelts or air-bags. Many of us drove cars without belts or bags back in the 1950s and 1960s without ever suffering an injury. However, now that such safety devices are available, who in their right mind would want to drive a modern car without them? They don't make a difference on a day-to-day basis but on that one day when something unexpected happens, they can save your life. FASST and Spektrum have the RC equivalent of belts and bags, XPS doesn't. If fly XPS and you're lucky you'll never miss this added safety. If something goes wrong however, you'll sorely miss it. It's a consumer's choice -- but just as I wouldn't want to be the passenger in a car without belts or bags, I wouldn't want to fly alongside someone using XPS in a large or fast model - just in case. JD has dug a deep hole for himself and I really can't see a way to climb out. Unfortunately, from what I've seen of JD, I strongly suspect he'll go to the grave denying any deficiencies in his system and boasting things that fly in the face of the laws of physics. It's a shame really. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| | #68 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: NJ
Posts: 1,370
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My favorite is " We do have to say that our competition is doing a great job of stirring up things. We appreciate the extra attention we are getting." Yea like FAAST and Spektrum are worried about XPS---Please!! For a fun time goto RCgroups and read how all the Fanboys are drinking Jim's Kool_Aid....
__________________ Welcome to New Jersey...Where fun comes to die. Last edited by Pale Rider; 03-10-2008 at 09:03 PM. | ||||||||||||||||||
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| | #69 (permalink) | |||||||||||||||
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Goldsboro,NC,USA Age: 49
Posts: 396
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| | #70 (permalink) |
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Swansea MA USA
Posts: 6,289
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I just found this, Mate great job, never knew you had this much talent, you proved that XPS does not hop, anybody can prove otherwise, please post a video, thank you for your efforts mate .
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| | #71 (permalink) |
| Gettin' Lower! ![]() Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 35
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I appreciate the work put into the tests but without actually testing the responsiveness of the system during the test, I don't see that it proves much of anything. Yes it could not be made to hop, but what we don't know is if it really *needed* to hop. I assume XPS Tx antenna was on and it was running at full power during all the tests shown in the video. If the Rx was still maintaining full control (which we don't know because nobody checked), then there's no reason it would need to hop. Why would we expect it to? If it was totally blocked by the noise (which we also don't know), then it would not hop, by design, per admission of JD. And frankly, while JD and apparently Kiwi too thinks it's a silly idea to hop *after* onset of failsafe, that is frankly the only case I care about. That's the only time it makes sense to me. "Potential noise" is just too nebulous and you could easily get yourself in more trouble hopping when it's not absolutely necessary (still maintaining control but there's more noise than there was before) than waiting until the link is actually lost long enough to cause failsafe when you *know* that it can't get any worse. And as for "first tier" versus "second tier" systems, with the implication that Spektrum having two frequencies to XPS's one (100% better) makes it first tier is still a bit short sighted. I watched a Spektrum DX7/AR6100 combo lock out and fall out of the sky twice the other day in a non-motorized Easy Glider. After our ground testing with very surprising results, and my subsequent thread in the Radio forum on RCG, I come to learn that if a Spektrum AR6100 Rx (maybe all models) loses the signal on both channels for any reason for more than about a second, it goes off into la la land and scans for the Tx on all 80 channels (assuming that the Tx has been turned off and back on) and may not find it for another 5, 10, 15 (and in my tests 25 and 40) seconds before it finds it. People are telling me this is "normal" behavior. And no, we're not talking about the known low voltage reboot issue, for which there is a fix. We reproduced this behavior on a fully charged 6V battery pack, on video. All it needs is anything blocking the Rf signal (range/orientation/shadowing of Rx or Tx) for more than 1 second. At *least* XPS always hot-links instantly as soon as the Rf signal can get through again. The other model Spektrum Rxs basically try to avoid this issue by having better diversity (more Rxs and/or more widely spaced antennas), and that's better, but if the link is lost anyway, then you're still screwed for that 5-15 seconds while it scans and I don't know of many planes that can survive that long without control. That's not Tier 1 behavior as far as I'm concerned. BTW, with regard to 2.4Ghz video transmitters. *Most* people still use 100-200mW. More people these days are buying 500mW units, and only a small handful of people use 1-2W systems. Anything above 100mW requires a HAM license to use legally. A 500mW video Tx placed between XPS Tx and Rx will easily swamp the signal if it's on an overlapping "channel". And contrary to what Kiwi said, the video transmission is fully analog and consumes pretty much 100% of the bandwidth on its channel 100% of the time.. It may look similar to the rectangular shaped spectrum of say a Wifi router but it is *not* spread spectrum, it is much higher power density, it does not play nicely with *anything* close up. If I turn my video Tx on on certain channels inside the house, it will just kick everything off my Wifi router instantly. In terms of making XPS upset, a single 2.4Ghz video Tx of sufficient power is a pretty good noise generator (I've got a bunch of videos showing how I used mine). You can vary the distance between them to increase and decrease the noise floor gradually. Anyway, back to the topic at hand. I still think the "How do these systems actually react to noise" (as in what they actually do, rather than what the manufacturer claims they do or don't) would be more useful. Test like this. 1. Increase noise floor on all channels used by the system until onset of failsafe. How much does it take? 2. Increase noise on all channels used by system gradually while monitoring actual responsiveness. Do they slow down? Do they get glitchy? Intermittent.. etc 3. Repeat test 1, and then immediately shut off all sources of interference and see how long it takes before they become responsive again (based on my testing, we'd see XPS come back instantly, and Spektrum take however long it takes.. 5-15 seconds). After the change that JD is talking about in the software to make it hop after onset of failsafe, that might make XPS take longer to relink because it has to scan (like Spektrum does now). 4. Introduce noise that is narrower than the SS channel, overlapping that channel, and see how it reacts. Basically testing the spread spectrum ability of each system. XPS has 12 wide SS channels so may be more resistant to narrow band interference, than Spektrum for instance. FASST has very narrow invidividual channels, but it sort of simulates one big fat channel that covers the whole spectrum. I agree with XJet's assessement of how it'd probably react to interference. Saturate half the spectrum, it'll run at 50% responsiveness. We're talking about ability to work through noise to gauge whether the designed in capabilies are any good. If we discovered that XPS could function normally through twice the level of noise on its single channel, than Spektrum can on its two channels, would that level the playing field? ian |
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| | #72 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||||||
| Bad-ass Super Contributer! ![]() Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: NJ
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__________________ Welcome to New Jersey...Where fun comes to die. | ||||||||||||||||||
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