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users manual BT part3 | Users Manual | 207.54 KiB | / June 02 2008 | |||
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1 2 3 | RF Exposure Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Setup Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | RF Exposure Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | RF Exposure Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | RF Exposure Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | RF Exposure Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Cover Letter(s) | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | External Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | External Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Setup Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | External Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | ID Label/Location Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | ID Label/Location Info | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Setup Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Test Report | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Attestation Statements | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | External Photos | / June 02 2008 | ||||||
1 2 3 | Internal Photos | / June 02 2008 |
1 2 3 | Users Manual HC25 | Users Manual | 718.07 KiB | / June 02 2008 |
s i w e v r e v O e c a f r e n t HC25 Siemens Cellular Engine Version:
DocId:
00.220 HC25_HO_v00.220 I e r a w d r a H HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 2 s Document Name:
Version:
Date:
DocId:
HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 00.220 2007-03-20 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Status:
Supported Products: HC25 General Notes Product is deemed accepted by Recipient and is provided without interface to Recipients products. The Product constitutes pre-release version and code and may be changed substantially before commercial release. The Product is provided on an as is basis only and may contain deficiencies or inadequacies. The Product is provided without warranty of any kind, express or implied. To the maximum extent per-
mitted by applicable law, Siemens further disclaims all warranties, including without limitation any implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and noninfringement of third-party rights. The entire risk arising out of the use or performance of the Product and documentation remains with Recipient. This Product is not intended for use in life support appliances, devices or systems where a malfunction of the product can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Applications incor-
porating the described product must be designed to be in accordance with the technical specifications provided in these guidelines. Failure to comply with any of the required procedures can result in malfunc-
tions or serious discrepancies in results. Furthermore, all safety instructions regarding the use of mobile technical systems, including GSM products, which also apply to cellular phones must be followed. Sie-
mens AG customers using or selling this product for use in any applications do so at their own risk and agree to fully indemnify Siemens for any damages resulting from illegal use or resale. To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, in no event shall Siemens or its suppliers be liable for any conse-
quential, incidental, direct, indirect, punitive or other damages whatsoever (including, without limitation, damages for loss of business profits, business interruption, loss of business information or data, or other pecuniary loss) arising out the use of or inability to use the Product, even if Siemens has been advised of the possibility of such damages. Subject to change without notice at any time. Copyright Transmittal, reproduction, dissemination and/or editing of this document as well as utilization of its con-
tents and communication thereof to others without express authorization are prohibited. Offenders will be held liable for payment of damages. All rights created by patent grant or registration of a utility model or design patent are reserved. Copyright Siemens AG 2007 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 2 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview Contents 39 Contents s 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Introduction ................................................................................................................. 6 Related Documents ........................................................................................... 6 1.1 Terms and Abbreviations ................................................................................... 6 1.2 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information ....................................................... 9 1.3.1 Directives and Standards...................................................................... 9 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles ............................................... 11 1.4.1 SELV Requirements ........................................................................... 11 Safety Precautions........................................................................................... 12 1.5 1.4 Product Concept ....................................................................................................... 13 2.1 Key Features at a Glance ................................................................................ 13 Application Interface................................................................................................. 16 3.1 Operating Modes ............................................................................................. 16 Antenna Interface...................................................................................................... 17 Antenna Installation ......................................................................................... 17 4.1 Antenna Pad .................................................................................................... 18 4.2 4.3 Antenna Connector .......................................................................................... 19 Electrical, Reliability and Radio Characteristics.................................................... 23 5.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings ............................................................................. 23 Operating Temperatures.................................................................................. 24 5.2 Storage Conditions .......................................................................................... 25 5.3 5.4 Reliability Characteristics................................................................................. 26 Mechanics.................................................................................................................. 27 Mechanical Dimensions of HC25..................................................................... 27 6.1 Mounting HC25 to the Application Platform ..................................................... 29 6.2 6.3 Board-to-Board Application Connector ............................................................ 29 Reference Approval .................................................................................................. 31 7.1 Reference Equipment for Type Approval......................................................... 31 Compliance with FCC Rules and Regulations ................................................. 32 7.2 Appendix.................................................................................................................... 33 8.1 List of Parts and Accessories........................................................................... 33 Fasteners and Fixings for Electronic Equipment ............................................. 35 8.2 8.2.1 Fasteners from German Supplier ETTINGER GmbH ......................... 35 Mounting Advice Sheet .................................................................................... 38 8.3 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 3 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview Tables 4 s Tables Table 1:
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Table 19:
Directives ......................................................................................................... 9 Standards of North American type approval .................................................... 9 Standards of European type approval.............................................................. 9 Requirements of quality ................................................................................. 10 Overview of operating modes ........................................................................ 16 Return loss in the active band........................................................................ 17 Product specifications of U.FL-R-SMT connector.......................................... 19 Material and finish of U.FL-R-SMT connector and recommended plugs ....... 20 Ordering information for Hirose U.FL Series.................................................. 22 Absolute maximum ratings............................................................................. 23 Board temperature ......................................................................................... 24 Sample operating conditions without forced air circulation
(according to IEC 60068-2)............................................................................ 24 Sample operating conditions with forced air circulation (air speed 0.9m/s) ... 24 Storage conditions ......................................................................................... 25 Summary of reliability test conditions............................................................. 26 Electrical and mechanical characteristics of the board-to-board connector... 29 List of parts and accessories.......................................................................... 33 Molex sales contacts (subject to change) ...................................................... 34 Hirose sales contacts (subject to change) ..................................................... 34 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 4 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview Figures 5 s Figures Figure 1:
Figure 2:
Figure 3:
Figure 4:
Figure 5:
Figure 6:
Figure 7:
Figure 8:
Figure 9:
Restricted area around antenna pad (side and bottom view) ......................... 18 Mechanical dimensions of U.FL-R-SMT connector......................................... 19 U.FL-R-SMT connector with U.FL-LP-040 plug .............................................. 20 U.FL-R-SMT connector with U.FL-LP-066 plug .............................................. 20 Specifications of U.FL-LP-(V)-040(01) plug .................................................... 21 HC25 Top and bottom view.......................................................................... 27 Dimensions of HC25 (all dimensions in mm) .................................................. 28 Mechanical dimensions of the board-to-board connector ............................... 30 Reference equipment for Type Approval ........................................................ 31 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 5 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1 Introduction 12 1 Introduction s This document describes the hardware of the Siemens HC25 module that connects to the cel-
lular device application and the air interface. It helps you quickly retrieve interface specifica-
tions, electrical and mechanical details and information on the requirements to be considered for integrating further components. 1.1 Related Documents
[1] HC25 AT Command Set 00.220
[2] HC25 Release Notes 00.220 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations Abbreviation ANSI AMR ARP B2B BB BEP BTS CB or CBM CE CS CS CSD DAC dBm0 DCS DL DRX DSB DSP DTMF DTX EDGE EFR EGSM Description American National Standards Institute Adaptive Multirate Antenna Reference Point Board-to-board connector Baseband Bit Error Probability Base Transceiver Station Cell Broadcast Message Conformit Europene (European Conformity) Coding Scheme Circuit Switched Circuit Switched Data Digital-to-Analog Converter Digital level, 3.14dBm0 corresponds to full scale, see ITU G.711, A-law Digital Cellular System Download Discontinuous Reception Development Support Board Digital Signal Processor Dual Tone Multi Frequency Discontinuous Transmission Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution Enhanced Full Rate Enhanced GSM HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 6 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations 12 s Abbreviation EMC ERP ESD ETS ETSI FCC FDD FDMA FR GPRS GSM HiZ HSDPA HR I/O IF IMEI ISO ITU kbps LED Mbps MCS MO MS MT NTC PBCCH PCB PCL PCM PCS PS PDU PSK R&TTE Description Electromagnetic Compatibility Effective Radiated Power Electrostatic Discharge European Telecommunication Standard European Telecommunications Standards Institute Federal Communications Commission (U.S.) Frequency Division Duplex Frequency Division Multiple Access Full Rate General Packet Radio Service Global Standard for Mobile Communications High Impedance High Speed Downlink Packed Access Half Rate Input/Output Intermediate Frequency International Mobile Equipment Identity International Standards Organization International Telecommunications Union kbits per second Light Emitting Diode Mbits per second Modulation and Coding Scheme Mobile Originated Mobile Station, also referred to as TE Mobile Terminated Negative Temperature Coefficient Packet Switched Broadcast Control Channel Printed Circuit Board Power Control Level Pulse Code Modulation Personal Communication System, also referred to as GSM 1900 Packet Switched Protocol Data Unit Phase Shift Keying Radio and Telecommunication Terminal Equipment HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 7 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations 12 s Abbreviation RACH RF RTC Rx SAR SELV SIM SLIC SMS SRAM SRB TA TDMA TE TS Tx UL UMTS URC USB UICC USIM WCDMA Description Random Access Channel Radio Frequency Real Time Clock Receive Direction Specific Absorption Rate Safety Extra Low Voltage Subscriber Identification Module Subscriber Line Interface Circuit Short Message Service Static Random Access Memory Signalling Radio Bearer Terminal adapter (e.g. GSM engine) Time Division Multiple Access Terminal Equipment Technical Specification Transmit Direction Upload Universal Mobile Telecommunications System Unsolicited Result Code Universal Serial Bus USIM Integrated Circuit Card UMTS Subscriber Identification Module Wideband Code Division Multiple Access HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 8 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 12 s 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 1.3.1 Directives and Standards HC25 has been designed to comply with the directives and standards listed below. Table 1: Directives 99/05/EC 2002/95/EC Directive of the European Parliament and of the council of 9 March 1999 on radio equipment and telecommunications terminal equipment and the mutual recognition of their conformity (in short referred to as R&TTE Direc-
tive 1999/5/EC). The product is labeled with the CE conformity mark Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003 on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equip-
ment (RoHS) Table 2: Standards of North American type approval CFR Title 47 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 22 and Part 24 (Telecommunications, PCS); US Equipment Authorization FCC Product Safety Certification (Safety requirements) UL 60 950 NAPRD.03 V3.9.1 RSS132, RSS133 Overview of PCS Type certification review board Mobile Equipment Type Certification and IMEI control PCS Type Certification Review board (PTCRB) Canadian Standard Table 3: Standards of European type approval 3GPP TS 51.010-1 Digital cellular telecommunications system (Release 5); Mobile Station
(MS) conformance specification GCF-CC V3.23.1 ETSI EN 301 489-1 V1.4.1 ETSI EN 301 511 V9.0.2 Candidate Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Global System for Mobile communications (GSM); Harmonized standard for mobile stations in the GSM 900 and DCS 1800 bands covering essen-
tial requirements under article 3.2 of the R&TTE directive (1999/5/EC)
(GSM 13.11 version 7.0.1 Release 1998) Global Certification Forum - Certification Criteria Candidate Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Electro Magnetic Compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Elec-
tro Magnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and ser-
vices; Part 1: Common Technical Requirements Candidate Harmonized European Standard (Telecommunications series) Electro Magnetic Compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Elec-
tro Magnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and ser-
vices; Part 7: Specific conditions for mobile and portable radio and ancillary equipment of digital cellular radio telecommunications systems
(GSM and DCS) Safety of information technology equipment (2000) ETSI EN 301 489-7 V1.2.1 (2000-09) IEC/EN 60950-1 (2001) HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 9 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 12 s Table 3: Standards of European type approval EN 301 489-24 V1.2.1 EN 301 908-01 V2.2.1 EN 301 908-02 V2.2.1 3GPP TS 34.124 3GPP TS 34.121 3GPP TS 34.123-1 3GPP TS 34.123-3 Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio Spectrum Matters (ERM); Elec-
tromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and ser-
vices; Part 24: Specific conditions for IMT-2000 CDMA Direct Spread
(UTRA) for Mobile and portable (UE) radio and ancillary equipment Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Base Stations (BS) and User Equipment (UE) for IMT-2000 Third Generation cellular networks; Part 1: Harmonized EN for IMT-2000, introduction and common requirements of article 3.2 of the R&TTE Directive Electromagnetic compatibility and Radio spectrum Matters (ERM); Base Stations (BS) and User Equipment (UE) for IMT-2000 Third Generation cellular networks; Part 2: Harmonized EN for IMT-2000, CDMA Direct Spread (UTRA FDD) (UE) covering essential requirements of article 3.2 of the R&TTE Directive Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) for mobile terminals and ancillary equipment. Technical Specification Group Radio Access Network; Terminal conform-
ance specification; Radio transmission and reception (FDD) User Equipment (UE) conformance specification; Part 1: Protocol con-
formance specification. User Equipment (UE) conformance specification; Part 3: Abstract Test Suites. Table 4: Requirements of quality IEC 60068 DIN EN 60529 Environmental testing IP codes HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 10 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1.4 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles 12 s 1.4 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles Mobile phones, PDAs or other portable transmitters and receivers incorporating a GSM module must be in accordance with the guidelines for human exposure to radio frequency energy. This requires the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of portable HC25 based applications to be evalu-
ated and approved for compliance with national and/or international regulations. Since the SAR value varies significantly with the individual product design manufacturers are advised to submit their product for approval if designed for portable use. For European and US markets the relevant directives are mentioned below. It is the responsibility of the manufacturer of the final product to verify whether or not further standards, recommendations or directives are in force outside these areas. Products intended for sale on US markets ES 59005/ANSI C95.1Considerations for evaluation of human exposure to Electromagnetic Fields (EMFs) from Mobile Telecommunication Equipment (MTE) in the frequency range 30MHz - 6GHz Products intended for sale on European markets EN 50360 Product standard to demonstrate the compliance of mobile phones with the basic restrictions related to human exposure to electromagnetic fields (300MHz - 3GHz) IMPORTANT:
Manufacturers of portable applications based on HC25 modules are required to have their final product certified and apply for their own FCC Grant and Industry Canada Certificate related to the specific portable mobile. See also Section 7.2. 1.4.1 SELV Requirements The power supply connected to the HC25 module shall be in compliance with the SELV requirements defined in EN 60950-1. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 11 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 1.5 Safety Precautions 12 1.5 Safety Precautions s The following safety precautions must be observed during all phases of the operation, usage, service or repair of any cellular terminal or mobile incorporating HC25. Manufacturers of the cellular terminal are advised to convey the following safety information to users and operating personnel and to incorporate these guidelines into all manuals supplied with the product. Fail-
ure to comply with these precautions violates safety standards of design, manufacture and intended use of the product. Siemens AG assumes no liability for customers failure to comply with these precautions. When in a hospital or other health care facility, observe the restrictions on the use of mobiles. Switch the cellular terminal or mobile off, if instructed to do so by the guide-
lines posted in sensitive areas. Medical equipment may be sensitive to RF energy. The operation of cardiac pacemakers, other implanted medical equipment and hearing aids can be affected by interference from cellular terminals or mobiles placed close to the device. If in doubt about potential danger, contact the physician or the manufac-
turer of the device to verify that the equipment is properly shielded. Pacemaker patients are advised to keep their hand-held mobile away from the pacemaker, while it is on. Switch off the cellular terminal or mobile before boarding an aircraft. Make sure it can-
not be switched on inadvertently. The operation of wireless appliances in an aircraft is forbidden to prevent interference with communications systems. Failure to observe these instructions may lead to the suspension or denial of cellular services to the offender, legal action, or both. Do not operate the cellular terminal or mobile in the presence of flammable gases or fumes. Switch off the cellular terminal when you are near petrol stations, fuel depots, chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. Operation of any electri-
cal equipment in potentially explosive atmospheres can constitute a safety hazard. Your cellular terminal or mobile receives and transmits radio frequency energy while switched on. Remember that interference can occur if it is used close to TV sets, radios, computers or inadequately shielded equipment. Follow any special regulations and always switch off the cellular terminal or mobile wherever forbidden, or when you suspect that it may cause interference or danger. Road safety comes first! Do not use a hand-held cellular terminal or mobile when driv-
ing a vehicle, unless it is securely mounted in a holder for speakerphone operation. Before making a call with a hand-held terminal or mobile, park the vehicle. Speakerphones must be installed by qualified personnel. Faulty installation or opera-
tion can constitute a safety hazard. IMPORTANT!
Cellular terminals or mobiles operate using radio signals and cellular networks. Because of this, connection cannot be guaranteed at all times under all conditions. Therefore, you should never rely solely upon any wireless device for essential com-
munications, for example emergency calls. Remember, in order to make or receive calls, the cellular terminal or mobile must be switched on and in a service area with adequate cellular signal strength. Some networks do not allow for emergency calls if certain network services or phone features are in use (e.g. lock functions, fixed dialing etc.). You may need to deactivate those features before you can make an emergency call. Some networks require that a valid SIM card be properly inserted in the cellular termi-
nal or mobile. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 12 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 2 Product Concept 15 2 2.1 Product Concept Key Features at a Glance s Feature General Frequency bands GSM class Output power
(according to Release 99) Implementation UMTS/HSDPA: Triple band, 850//1900/2100MHz GSM/GPRS/EDGE: Quad band, 850/900/1800/1900MHz Small MS Class 4 (+33dBm 2dB) for EGSM850 Class 4 (+33dBm 2dB) for EGSM900 Class 1 (+30dBm 2dB) for GSM1800 Class 1 (+30dBm 2dB) for GSM1900 Class E2 (+27dBm 3dB) for GSM 850 8-PSK Class E2 (+27dBm 3dB) for GSM 900 8-PSK Class E2 (+26dBm +3 /-4dB) for GSM 1800 8-PSK Class E2 (+26dBm +3 /-4dB) for GSM 1900 8-PSK Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 2100, WCDMA FDD BdI Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 1900,WCDMA FDD BdII Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 850, WCDMA FDD BdV Power supply Physical 3.2V < VBATT+ < 4.2V Dimensions: 50mm x 34mm x 4.5mm Weight: approx. 10g RoHS All hardware components fully compliant with EU RoHS Directive HSDPA features 3GPP Release 5 3.6 Mbps, UL 384 kbps UE CAT. [1-6], 11, 12 supported Compressed mode (CM) supported according to 3GPP TS25.212 UMTS features Release 99, June 2004, W-
CDMA FDD standard PS data rate 384 kbps DL / 384 kbps UL CS data rate 64 kbps DL / 64 kbps UL HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 13 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 2.1 Key Features at a Glance 15 s Feature GSM / GPRS / EGPRS features Data transfer Implementation GPRS Multislot Class 10 Full PBCCH support Mobile Station Class B Coding Scheme 1 4 EGPRS Multislot Class 10 EDGE E2 power class for 8 PSK Downlink coding schemes CS 1-4, MCS 1-9 Uplink coding schemes CS 1-4, MCS 1-9 BEP reporting SRB loopback and test mode B PBCCH support NACC, extended UL TBF Mobile Station Class B CSD V.110, RLP, non-transparent 1 phase/2 phase access procedures Link adaptation and IR 8-bit, 11-bit RACH 9.6 kbps SMS Fax Audio Point-to-point MT and MO Cell broadcast Text and PDU mode Group 3; Class 1 Audio speech codecs GSM: AMR, EFR, FR, HR 3GPP: AMR One ringing melody supported CEPT supervisory tones supported DTMF supported 6 audio modes: Approval, Router, Handset, Headset, Speakerphone and Transparent mode TTY support selecting a dedicated audio mode Download of audio parameters Gains and volumes can be controlled by AT commands Several additional ringing melodies CEPT and ANSI supervisory tones supported Software AT commands AT-Hayes GSM 07.05 and 07.07, Siemens AT commands for RIL compatibility (NDIS/RIL) MicrosoftTM compatibility SIM Application Toolkit Firmware update RIL / NDIS for Windows MobileTM SAT Class C Firmware update from host application over USB. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 14 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 2.1 Key Features at a Glance 15 s Feature Interfaces USB Wakeup Control Status Audio UICC interface Antenna Module interface Power on/off, Reset Power on/off Reset Emergency off Evaluation kit DSB Implementation Supports a USB 2.0 Full Speed (12Mbit/s) device interface. Signal pin to wake up an inactive USB Host into an active state. Signal pins to indicate network connectivity status. 1 analog interface Supported chip cards: SIM / UICC 3V, 1.8V 50Ohms. External antenna can be connected via antenna connector or antenna pad (spring contact). 50-pin board-to-board connector Switch-on by hardware pin IGT Switch-off by hardware pin IGT Switch-off by AT command Orderly shutdown and reset by AT command Emergency off by hardware pin EMERG_OFF and restart with hardware pin IGT Emergency off by hardware pin EMERG_OFF DSB75 Evaluation Board designed to test and type approve Siemens cel-
lular engines and provide a sample configuration for application engineer-
ing. A special adapter is required to connect the module to the DSB75. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 15 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 3 Application Interface 16 3 Application Interface s HC25 is equipped with a 50-pin board-to-board connector that connects to the external appli-
cation and incorporates several sub-interfaces: power supply, USB interface, UICC/SIM inter-
face, analog audio interface, as well as various status and control lines (see also Chapter 2). 3.1 Operating Modes The table below briefly summarizes the various operating modes referred to in the following chapters. Table 5: Overview of operating modes Mode Normal operation Function GSM /
GPRS / UMTS /
HSDPA SLEEP GSM IDLE Power saving mode set automatically when no call is in progress and the USB connection is suspended by host or not present. Software is active. Once registered to the GSM network, paging with BTS is carried out in order to achieve synchrony with the GSM network. The repetition rate depends on the parameter BSPA_Multiframe. The module is ready to send and receive. Connection between two subscribers is in progress. Power consump-
tion depends on the GSM network coverage and several connection settings (e.g. DTX off/on, FR/EFR/HR, hopping sequences and antenna connection). The following applies when power is to be mea-
sured in TALK_GSM mode: DTX off, FR and no frequency hopping, otherwise same as for IDLE measurements. Module is attached and ready for GPRS data transfer, but no data is currently sent or received. GPRS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. power control level), uplink / downlink data rates and GPRS configuration (e.g. used multislot settings). EGPRS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. power control level), uplink / downlink data rates and EGPRS configuration (e.g. used multislot settings). Module is attached and ready for UMTS / HSDPA data transfer, but no data is currently sent or received. UMTS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. HSDPA data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. GSM TALK/
GSM DATA GPRS IDLE GPRS DATA EGPRS DATA UMTS /
HSDPA IDLE UMTS TALK/
UMTS DATA HSDPA DATA Power Down The internal power section is shut down. The SW on the module is not active. The interfaces are not accessible. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 16 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 4 Antenna Interface 22 4 Antenna Interface s The RF interface has an impedance of 50. HC25 is capable of sustaining a total mismatch at the antenna connector or pad without any damage, even when transmitting at maximum RF power. The external antenna must be matched properly to achieve best performance regarding radi-
ated power, DC-power consumption, modulation accuracy and harmonic suppression. Antenna matching networks are not included on the HC25 PCB and should be placed in the host application. Regarding the return loss HC25 provides the following values in the active band:
Table 6: Return loss in the active band State of module Receive Transmit Idle Return loss of module
> 8dB not applicable
< 5dB Recommended return loss of application
> 12dB
> 12dB not applicable The connection of the antenna or other equipment must be decoupled from DC voltage. This is necessary because the antenna connector is DC coupled to ground via an inductor for ESD protection. Note: The antenna must be isolated for ESD protection (to withstand a voltage resistance up to 8kV air discharge). 4.1 Antenna Installation To suit the physical design of individual applications HC25 offers two alternative approaches to connecting the antenna:
Recommended approach: U.FL-R-SMT antenna connector from Hirose assembled on the top side of the PCB. See Section 4.3 for connector details. Antenna pad and grounding plane placed on the bottom side. See Section 4.2. The U.FL-R-SMT connector has been chosen as antenna reference point (ARP) for the Sie-
mens reference equipment submitted to type approve HC25. All RF data specified throughout this manual are related to the ARP. IMPORTANT: Both solutions can only be applied alternatively. This means, whenever an antenna is plugged to the Hirose connector, the pad must not be used. Vice versa, if the antenna is connected to the pad, then the Hirose connector must be left empty. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 17 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 4.2 Antenna Pad 22 s No matter which option you choose, ensure that the antenna pad does not come into contact with the holding device or any other components of the host application. It needs to be sur-
rounded by a restricted area filled with air, which must also be reserved 1.4mm in height. Figure 1: Restricted area around antenna pad (side and bottom view) 4.2 Antenna Pad The antenna can be attached via contact springs. If you decide to use the antenna pad take into account that the pad has not been intended as antenna reference point (ARP) for the Siemens HC25 type approval. The antenna pad is pro-
vided only as an alternative option which can be used, for example, if the recommended Hirose connection does not fit into your antenna design. Also, consider that according to the GSM recommendations TS 45.005 and TS 51.010-01 a 50 connector is mandatory for type approval measurements. This requires GSM devices with an integral antenna to be temporarily equipped with a suitable connector or a low loss RF cable with adapter. HC25 material properties:
HC25 PCB: FR4 Antenna pad: Gold plated pad HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 18 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 4.3 Antenna Connector 22 4.3 Antenna Connector s HC25 uses an ultra-miniature SMT antenna connector supplied from Hirose Ltd. The product name is:
U.FL-R-SMT Figure 2: Mechanical dimensions of U.FL-R-SMT connector Table 7: Product specifications of U.FL-R-SMT connector Item Ratings Nominal impedance 50 Specification Conditions Operating temp:-40C to + 90C Operating humidity: max. 90%
DC to 3GHz Rated frequency Mechanical characteristics Female contact holding force Repetitive operation Contact resistance:
0.15N min Vibration Shock Center 25m Outside 15m No momentary disconnections of 1s;
No damage, cracks and looseness of parts No momentary disconnections of 1s. No damage, cracks and looseness of parts. Environmental characteristics Humidity resistance No damage, cracks and looseness of parts. Insulation resistance:
100M min. at high humidity 500M min. when dry Measured with a 0.475 pin gauge 30 cycles of insertion and disengage-
ment Frequency of 10 to 100Hz, single amplitude of 1.5mm, acceleration of 59m/s2, for 5 cycles in the direction of each of the 3 axes Acceleration of 735m/s2, 11ms duration for 6 cycles in the direction of each of the 3 axes Exposure to 40C, humidity of 95% for a total of 96 hours HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 19 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 4.3 Antenna Connector 22 s Table 7: Product specifications of U.FL-R-SMT connector Item Temperature cycle Specification No damage, cracks and looseness of parts. Contact resistance:
Center 25m Outside 15m No excessive corrosion Conditions Temperature: +40C 5 to 35C
+90C 5 to 35C Time: 30min within 5min 30min within 5min 48 hours continuous exposure to 5%
salt water Salt spray test Material Phosphor bronze Table 8: Material and finish of U.FL-R-SMT connector and recommended plugs Part Shell Male center contact Brass Female center con-
tact Insulator Finish Silver plating Gold plating Gold plating Phosphor bronze Plug: PBT Receptacle: LCP Black Beige Mating plugs and cables can be chosen from the Hirose U.FL Series. Examples are shown below and listed in Table 9. For latest product information please contact your Hirose dealer or visit the Hirose home page, for example http://www.hirose.com. Figure 3: U.FL-R-SMT connector with U.FL-LP-040 plug Figure 4: U.FL-R-SMT connector with U.FL-LP-066 plug HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 20 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 4.3 Antenna Connector 22 s In addition to the connectors illustrated above, the U.FL-LP-(V)-040(01) version is offered as an extremely space saving solution. This plug is intended for use with extra fine cable (up to 0.81mm) and minimizes the mating height to 2mm. See Figure 5 which shows the Hirose datasheet. Figure 5: Specifications of U.FL-LP-(V)-040(01) plug HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 21 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 4.3 Antenna Connector 22 s Part number U.FL-R-SMT U.FL-LP-040 Table 9: Ordering information for Hirose U.FL Series Item Connector on HC25 Right-angle plug shell for 0.81mm cable Right-angle plug for 0.81mm cable Right-angle plug for 1.13mm cable Right-angle plug for 1.32mm cable Extraction jig U.FL-LP-068 U.FL-LP-066 E.FL-LP-N U.FL-LP(V)-040 (01) HRS number CL331-0471-0-10 CL331-0451-2 CL331-053-8-01 CL331-0452-5 CL331-0452-5 CL331-04441-9 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 22 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 5 Electrical, Reliability and Radio Characteristics 26 s 5 5.1 Electrical, Reliability and Radio Characteristics Absolute Maximum Ratings The absolute maximum ratings stated in Table 10 are stress ratings under any conditions. Stresses beyond any of these limits will cause permanent damage to HC25. Table 10: Absolute maximum ratings Parameter Supply voltage BATT+
Voltage at digital pins in POWER DOWN mode Voltage at digital pins in normal operation Voltage at analog pins in POWER DOWN mode Voltage at analog pins in normal operation Voltage at STATSUSx pins VUSB USB_DP, USB_DN PWR_IND VDDLP Min
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
-0.5
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3 Max 4.5 0.3 2.8 0.3 2.5 7.5 7.5 7.5 10 3.25 Unit V V V V V V V V V V HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 23 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 5.2 Operating Temperatures 26 5.2 Operating Temperatures s The values stated below are in compliance with GSM recommendation TS 51.010-01. Table 11: Board temperature Parameter Operating temperature range Automatic shutdown1 Temperature measured on HC25 board Min
-20 Typ
+25 Max
+85 Unit C
< -30
>+85 C 1. Due to temperature measurement uncertainty, a tolerance on the stated shutdown thresholds may occur. The possible deviation is in the range of 3C at the overtemperature limit and 5C at the undertem-
perature limit. Table 11 shows the temperatures for automatic shutdown as measured by the on-board mea-
suring element NTC. The maximum allowable ambient temperature that causes the module to shut down depends on various conditions. The following tables Table 12 and Table 13 show sample lab environment conditions. Please be aware that the operating duration and the max-
imum ambient temperature will vary significantly for your application. Table 12: Sample operating conditions without forced air circulation (according to IEC 60068-2) Mode RF Power Voltage GSM, GPRS/EDGE Class 8 WCDMA WCDMA GRPS/EDGE Class10 WCDMA GSM, GPRS/EDGE Class 8 WCDMA WCDMA GRPS/EDGE Class 10 WCDMA Ambient Temperature
+65C
+55C
+65C
+65C
+65C
+60C
+70C
+65C
+60C Ambient Temperature
+75C VBATT+ < 3.8V Max. VBATT+ < 3.4V VBATT+ < 3.4V VBATT+ < 3.8V VBATT+ < 3.8V
< 10dBm
< 0dBm Max. Max. VBATT+ < 3.8V Max. VBATT+ < 3.4V VBATT+ < 3.4V VBATT+ < 3.8V VBATT+ < 3.4V
< 10dBm
< 0dBm Max. Max. Table 13: Sample operating conditions with forced air circulation (air speed 0.9m/s) Mode RF Power Voltage Operating Duration
< 2min
< 2min Operating Duration Note: Generally it is strongly recommended to implement additional measures to lead the heat out of the application, especially at maximum transmission power levels of WCDMA (24dBm), e.g. use of ground area for a heat sink or convection (see Section 6.1 for the ground area that may be used for a heat sink). HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 24 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 5.3 Storage Conditions 26 5.3 Storage Conditions s The conditions stated below are only valid for modules in their original packed state in weather protected, non-temperature-controlled storage locations. Normal storage time under these conditions is 12 months maximum. Table 14: Storage conditions Type Air temperature: Low High Humidity relative: Low High Condens. Air pressure: Low High Movement of surrounding air Water: rain, dripping, icing and frosting Radiation:
Solar Heat Chemically active substances Mechanically active substances Vibration sinusoidal:
Displacement Acceleration Frequency range Shocks:
Shock spectrum Duration Acceleration Condition
-40
+85 10 90 at 30C 90-100 at 30C 70 106 1.0 Not allowed Unit C
kPa m/s
Reference ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 68-2-1 Ab ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 68-2-2 Bb
ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 68-2-56 Cb ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 68-2-30 Db IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4
1120 600 Not recom-
mended Not recom-
mended 1.5 5 2-9 9-200 semi-sinusoidal 1 50 W/m2 ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 68-2-2 Bb ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 68-2-2 Bb IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1C1L IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1S1 IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1M2 IEC 68-2-27 Ea mm m/s2 Hz ms m/s2 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 25 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 5.4 Reliability Characteristics 26 5.4 Reliability Characteristics s The test conditions stated below are an extract of the complete test specifications. Table 15: Summary of reliability test conditions Type of test Vibration Conditions Frequency range: 10-20Hz; acceleration: 3.1mm amplitude Frequency range: 20-500Hz; acceleration: 5g Duration: 2h per axis = 10 cycles; 3 axes Standard DIN IEC 68-2-6 Shock half-sinus Dry heat Temperature change (shock) Damp heat cyclic Cold (constant exposure) Acceleration: 500g Shock duration: 1msec 1 shock per axis 6 positions ( x, y and z) Temperature: +70 2C Test duration: 16h Humidity in the test chamber: < 50%
Low temperature: -40C 2C High temperature: +85C 2C Changeover time: < 30s (dual chamber system) Test duration: 1h Number of repetitions: 100 High temperature: +55C 2C Low temperature: +25C 2C Humidity: 93% 3%
Number of repetitions: 6 Test duration: 12h + 12h Temperature: -40 2C Test duration: 16h DIN IEC 68-2-27 EN 60068-2-2 Bb ETS 300 019-2-7 DIN IEC 68-2-14 Na ETS 300 019-2-7 DIN IEC 68-2-30 Db ETS 300 019-2-5 DIN IEC 68-2-1 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 26 of 39 2007-03-20 s HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 6 Mechanics 30 6 6.1 Mechanics Mechanical Dimensions of HC25 Length:50.00mm Width: 34.00mm Height:4.5mm RF Antenna Connector Ground Pin 1 Pin 25 Pin 50 Pin 26 Ground
(for Heat Sink) Ground Figure 6: HC25 Top and bottom view HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 27 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 6.1 Mechanical Dimensions of HC25 30 s Figure 7: Dimensions of HC25 (all dimensions in mm) HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 28 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 6.2 Mounting HC25 to the Application Platform 30 s 6.2 Mounting HC25 to the Application Platform There are many ways to properly install HC25 in the host device. An efficient approach is to mount the HC25 PCB to a frame, plate, rack or chassis. Fasteners can be M2 screws plus suitable washers, circuit board spacers, or customized screws, clamps, or brackets. In addition, the board-to-board connection can also be utilized to achieve better support. To help you find appropriate spacers a list of selected screws and dis-
tance sleeves for 3mm stacking height can be found in Section 8.2. When using the holes the screws can be inserted from top or bottom. For proper grounding it is strongly recommended to use the large ground plane on the bottom of board in addition to the five GND pins of the board-to-board connector. The ground plane may also be used to attach cooling elements, e.g. a heat sink or thermally conductive tape. Please take care that attached cooling elements do not touch the antenna pads on the mod-
ules bottom side, as this may lead a short-circuit. To prevent mechanical damage, be careful not to force, bend or twist the module. Be sure it is positioned flat against the host device (see also Section 8.3 with mounting advice sheet). 6.3 Board-to-Board Application Connector This section provides specifications for the 50-pin board-to-board (B2B) connector used to con-
nect HC25 to the host application. For the modules external interface the following connector series has been chosen:
Supplier: Hirose ( www.hirose.com ) Type:
Height:
DF12C (3.0)-50DS-0.5V (SlimStack Receptacle) 3.0 mm Table 16: Electrical and mechanical characteristics of the board-to-board connector Parameter Number of Contacts Quantity delivered Voltage Current Rating Resistance Dielectric Withstanding Voltage Operating Temperature Contact Material Insulator Material FFC/FPC Thickness Maximum connection cycles Cable Specification (50-way connector) 50 2000 Connectors per Tape & Reel 50V 0.4A max per contact 0.05 Ohm per contact 150V RMS AC for 1min
-40C...+85C phosphor bronze finish: solder plating PPS, deep brown / Polyamide, beige 0.3mm 0.05mm (0.012" 0.002") 20 (@ 50mOhm max) FFC (Flat Flexible Cable), max. length 150mm from SIM interface HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 29 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 6.3 Board-to-Board Application Connector 30 s A recommended corresponding board-to-board connector series for external applications is:
Supplier: Hirose ( www.hirose.com ) Type:
Height:
DF12x-50DP-0.5V (SlimStack Header) 3.0 5.0 mm For Hirose sales contacts see Chapter 8. Note: There is no inverse polarity protection for the board-to-board connector. It is therefore very important that the board-to-board connector is connected correctly to the host application, i.e., pin1 must be connected to pin1, pin2 to pin 2, etc. Pin assignments are listed in Section 5.5, pin locations are shown in Figure 6. Figure 8: Mechanical dimensions of the board-to-board connector HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 30 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 7 Reference Approval 32 s 7 7.1 Reference Approval Reference Equipment for Type Approval The Siemens reference setup submitted to type approve HC25 consists of the following com-
ponents:
Siemens HC25 cellular engine Development Support Box DSB75 and HC15/HC25-DSB75-Adapter for mounting the HC25 module SIM card reader integrated on DSB75 U.FL-LP antenna cable Handset type Votronic HH-SI-30.3/V1.1/0 PC as MMI Figure 9: Reference equipment for Type Approval HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 31 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 7.2 Compliance with FCC Rules and Regulations 32 s 7.2 Compliance with FCC Rules and Regulations The Equipment Authorization Certification for the Siemens reference application described in Section 7.1 will be registered under the following identifiers:
FCC Identifier: QIPHC25 Industry Canada Certification Number: 267W-HC25 Granted to Siemens AG Manufacturers of mobile or fixed devices incorporating HC25 modules are authorized to use the FCC Grants and Industry Canada Certificates of the HC25 modules for their own final prod-
ucts according to the conditions referenced in these documents. In this case, the FCC label of the module shall be visible from the outside, or the host device shall bear a second label stating
"Contains FCC ID QIPHC25". IMPORTANT:
Manufacturers of portable applications incorporating HC25 modules are required to have their final product certified and apply for their own FCC Grant and Industry Canada Certificate related to the specific portable mobile. This is mandatory to meet the SAR requirements for por-
table mobiles (see Section 1.4 for detail). Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential 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 by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 32 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8 Appendix 39 8 Appendix s List of Parts and Accessories 8.1 Table 17: List of parts and accessories Description HC25 Supplier Siemens Ordering information Standard module (Siemens IMEI) Siemens ordering number: L30960-N1050-A100 Customer IMEI mode:
Siemens Ordering number: L30960-N1060-A100 Siemens ordering number: L36880-N3015-A117 Siemens ordering number: L36880-N8811-A100 Siemens ordering number: L30960-N1001-A100 Votronic HH-SI-30.3/V1.1/0 VOTRONIC Entwicklungs- und Produktionsgesellschaft fr elek-
tronische Gerte mbH Saarbrcker Str. 8 66386 St. Ingbert Germany Phone: +49-(0)6 89 4 / 92 55-0 Fax: +49-(0)6 89 4 / 92 55-88 e-mail: contact@votronic.com Ordering numbers: 91228 91236 Sales contacts are listed in Table 18. Sales contacts are listed in Table 18. Sales contacts are listed in Table 19. Siemens Siemens Car Kit Portable DSB75 Support Box Siemens HC15/HC25-DSB75-Adapter Siemens Votronic Handset VOTRONIC SIM card holder incl. push button ejector and slide-in tray Board-to-board connector Antenna connector Molex Molex Hirose HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 33 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8.1 List of Parts and Accessories 39 Table 18: Molex sales contacts (subject to change) Molex For further information please click:
http://www.molex.com Molex China Distributors Beijing, Room 1319, Tower B, COFCO Plaza No. 8, Jian Guo Men Nei Street, 100005 Beijing P.R. China Phone: +86-10-6526-9628 Phone: +86-10-6526-972 Phone: +86-10-6526-9731 Fax: +86-10-6526-9730 s American Headquarters Lisle, Illinois 60532 U.S.A. Phone: +1-800-78MOLEX Fax: +1-630-969-1352 Molex Japan Co. Ltd. Yamato, Kanagawa, Japan Phone: +81-462-65-2324 Fax: +81-462-65-2366 Molex Deutschland GmbH Felix-Wankel-Str. 11 4078 Heilbronn-Biberach Germany Phone: +49-7066-9555 0 Fax: +49-7066-9555 29 Mail: mxgermany@molex.com Molex Singapore Pte. Ltd. Jurong, Singapore Phone: +65-268-6868 Fax: +65-265-6044 Table 19: Hirose sales contacts (subject to change) Hirose Ltd. For further information please click:
http://www.hirose.com Hirose Electric (U.S.A.) Inc 2688 Westhills Court Simi Valley, CA 93065 U.S.A. Phone: +1-805-522-7958 Fax: +1-805-522-3217 Hirose Electric UK, Ltd Crownhill Business Centre 22 Vincent Avenue, Crownhill Milton Keynes, MK8 OAB Great Britain Phone: +44-1908-305400 Fax: +44-1908-305401 Hirose Electric Co., Ltd. 5-23, Osaki 5 Chome, Shinagawa-Ku Tokyo 141 Japan Phone: +81-03-3491-9741 Fax: +81-03-3493-2933 Hirose Electric GmbH Herzog-Carl-Strasse 4 73760 Ostfildern Germany Phone: +49-711-456002-1 Fax: +49-711-456002-299 Email info@hirose.de Hirose Electric Co., Ltd. European Branch First class Building 4F Beechavenue 46 1119PV Schiphol-Rijk Netherlands Phone: +31-20-6557-460 Fax: +31-20-6557-469 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 34 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8.2 Fasteners and Fixings for Electronic Equipment 39 s 8.2 Fasteners and Fixings for Electronic Equipment This section provides a list of suppliers and manufacturers offering fasteners and fixings for electronic equipment and PCB mounting. The content of this section is designed to offer basic guidance to various mounting solutions with no warranty on the accuracy and sufficiency of the information supplied. Please note that the list remains preliminary although it is going to be updated in later versions of this document. 8.2.1 Fasteners from German Supplier ETTINGER GmbH Sales contact:
ETTINGER GmbH http://www.ettinger.de/main.cfm Phone: +49-81-046623-0 Fax: +49-81-046623-99 The following tables contain only article numbers and basic parameters of the listed compo-
nents. For further detail and ordering information please contact Ettinger GmbH. Please note that some of the listed screws, spacers and nuts are delivered with the DSB75 Support Board. See comments below. Article number: 05.71.038 Length Material For internal diameter Internal diameter External diameter Vogt AG No. Spacer - Aluminum /
Wall thickness = 0.8mm 3.0mm AlMgSi-0,5 M2=2.0-2.3 d = 2.4mm 4.0mm x40030080.10 HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 35 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8.2 Fasteners and Fixings for Electronic Equipment 39 s Article number: 07.51.403 Length Material Surface Internal diameter External diameter Flammability rating Insulating Spacer for M2 Self-gripping1 3.0mm Polyamide 6.6 Black 2.2mm 4.0mm UL94-HB 1. 2 spacers are delivered with DSB75 Support Board Article number: 05.11.209 Length Material Thread 1 / Length Thread 2 / Length Width across flats Recess Type Threaded Stud M2.5 - M2 Type E /
External thread at both ends 3.0mm Stainless steel X12CrMoS17 M2.5 / 6.0mm M2 / 8.0mm 5 yes External / External HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 36 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8.2 Fasteners and Fixings for Electronic Equipment 39 s Article number: 01.14.131 Length Material Surface Thread Head diameter Head height Type Screw M21 DIN 84 - ISO 1207 8.0mm Steel 4.8 Zinced A2K M2 D = 3.8mm 1.30mm Slotted cheese head screw 1. 2 screws are delivered with DSB75 Support Board Article number: 01.14.141 Length Material Surface Thread Head diameter Head height Type Screw M2 DIN 84 - ISO 1207 10.0mm Steel 4.8 Zinced A2K M2 D = 3.8mm 1.30mm Slotted cheese head screw HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 37 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8.3 Mounting Advice Sheet 39 s Article number: 02.10.011 Material Surface Thread Wrench size /
Thickness / L Type Hexagon Nut1 DIN 934 - ISO 4032 Steel 4.8 Zinced A2K M2 4 1.6mm Nut DIN/UNC, DIN934 1. 2 nuts are delivered with DSB75 Support Board 8.3 Mounting Advice Sheet To prevent mechanical damage, be careful not to force, bend or twist the module. Be sure it is positioned flat against the host device. The advice sheet on the next page shows a number of examples for the kind of bending that may lead to mechanical damage of the module. HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 38 of 39 2007-03-20 HC25 Hardware Interface Overview 8.3 Mounting Advice Sheet 39 s HC25_HO_v00.220 Confidential / Preliminary Page 39 of 39 2007-03-20
1 2 3 | users manual BT part1 | Users Manual | 268.57 KiB | / June 02 2008 |
BlueCore01 BlueTest Instruction Manual AN047 July 2001 CSR Unit 400 Cambridge Science Park Milton Road Cambridge CB4 0WH UK Registered in UK 3665875 Tel: +44 (0)1223 692000 Fax: +44 (0)1223 692001 http://www.csr.com This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2000 bc01-an-047b Contents BlueTest Instruction Manual Contents ............................................................................................................................... 2 Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 3 Getting Started Simple Tests ............................................................................................... 4 Simple Tests ........................................................................................................................ 5 Quantitative Tests............................................................................................................... 10 Transmitter Only ............................................................................................................... 10 Receiver Only................................................................................................................... 14 Loopback Test Mode ........................................................................................................ 16 Configuration Commands .................................................................................................. 22 Built-in-Self Test (BIST) Routines....................................................................................... 22 Miscellaneous Test Routines ............................................................................................. 42 Persistent Store Keys......................................................................................................... 49 Appendix 1.......................................................................................................................... 49 BIST Parameters .............................................................................................................. 49 Appendix 2.......................................................................................................................... 51 Known Software Issue(s) in BlueTest Version 1.4 ........................................................... 51 Appendix 3.......................................................................................................................... 52 Combining Tests Using a Second Unit ............................................................................... 52 Appendix 4.......................................................................................................................... 52 Configuration Commands Available During Tests................................................................ 53 Appendix 5.......................................................................................................................... 54 Bluetooth Packet Types .................................................................................................... 54 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b Copyright CSR Ltd 2000 This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement Page 2 of 56 BlueTest Instruction Manual All of the following tests are designed to run with CSRs firmware versions Beta 10.4 and above. Several tests include entries for Related Test Spec Name. These refer to tests in the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) Test Specification for RF document, rev. 0.9r, dated 31 January 2000. l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Example Display Introduction BlueTest is a program that controls the on-chip built-in-self-test (BIST) software for RF testing. This document explains the facilities offered by the BIST. BlueTest does not execute any of these tests. It sends commands to BlueCore01 and/or enables the on-chip BIST, then reports any results. The tests fall into six categories:
g Simple RF tests; used for PCB de-bug and optimisation g Quantitative tests for transmit and receive; used to establish the performance of the Bluetooth device. g Loopback test modes; used for qualification and regulatory testing g Configuration commands to set parameters for other tests g Built-in self-test routines g Miscellaneous test routines Further details about commands, parameters and packet types are included in the appendices following the tests. Running a Test In a BlueTest dialog select the Standard button to display the entire test. This applies to all of the tests except for the BIT ERR1 and BIT ERR2 tests. Click on Bit Error to display these results in a column format. When running the tests, the results display in a dialog box. The default file name is logfile.txt. It is located in the current directory in which the program resides. Select Browse for File to create your own file name and path (using test examples provided). To save test results to a file, tick Save to File. Note: Some of these tests require two Bluetooth modules to function correctly. The PCM External Loopback test has notes specifically for use with CSRs Casira development kit. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2000 Page 3 of 56 Getting Started Run Bluetest.exe. Select a Protocol (Default BCSP). Select Port and Baud Rate (Default com1, 115200). BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 4 of 56 Simple Tests RF Test Mode Title PAUSE Summary Halts the current test and stops any radio activity. Test Arguments Return Data None None Exit Click on Reset Chip or enter a new command. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 PAUSE Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 5 of 56 bc01-an-047b Title RADIO STATUS Summary Returns the values from the radio control registers. Test Arguments None Return Data Internal transmission level External transmission level Internal receiver gain Internal receiver attenuation Local oscillator level IQ trim Signal/image ratio for IQ trim Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 RADIO STATUS Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 6 of 56 Title TXSTART Summary Test Arguments Return Data Enables the transmitter in continuous transmission at a designated frequency (LO Freq) with a designated output Power
(Ext, Int) and designated tone modulation frequency (Modulatn Freq). LO Freq (Carrier Frequency in MHz) = 2402 to 2480 Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63 (Default = 50) Modulatn Freq = -32768 to 32767 in units of 1/4096MHz None Use RF Analyser to check carrier output. Exit Click on Reset Chip. bc01-an-047b BlueTest Instruction Manual TXSTART Example Display l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 7 of 56 Title RXSTART1 Summary Enables the receiver in continuous reception at a designated frequency (LO Freq) with a choice of low or high side modulation
(hi-side) and with a designated attenuation setting (RX Attenuation). Requires a second unit to be running TXSTART. Routes final IF to TEST_A pin. LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 Test Arguments hi-side (default = False) set 0 or 1 RX Attenuation = 0 to 15 (Default = 0) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 RXSTART1 Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 8 of 56 Title RXSTART2 Summary Test Arguments Enables the receiver in continuous reception, at a designated frequency (LO Freq), with a choice of low or high side modulation (hi-side) and with a designated attenuation setting
(RX Attenuation). Digitises the RSSI and sends report regularly to host. Requires a second unit to be running TXSTART. LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz) = 2402 to 2480 hi-side (default = false) set 0 or 1 RX Attenuation = 0 to 15 (Default = 0) Return Data Exit RSSI values, as a uint16, sent over BCSP channel 3 at a rate of about 10 per second. Can be saved to log file. H4 and USB use manufacturers extensions. Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 RXSTART2 Example Display Page 9 of 56 BlueTest Instruction Manual Note: TXDATA and RXDATA require the same Bluetooth address in each module for RXDATA to receive data transmitted by TXDATA. Use CFG_UAP_LAP to set the address used by the BIST. Quantitative Tests Quantitative Tests Transmitter Only Transmitter Only Title Summary Related Test Spec Name Test Arguments TXDATA1 Enables the transmitter, with a designated frequency (LO Freq) and output Power
(Ext, Int). Payload is PRBS9 data. Receiver is not operating. Packet type and duty cycle can be configured. Refer to Configuration Commands section. TRM/CA/03/C (power control), TRM/CA/04/C (Tx output spectrum frequency range), TRM/CA/05/C (Tx output spectrum 20dB bandwidth), TRM/CA/06/C
(Adjacent channel power), TRM/CA/08/C (Initial carrier frequency tolerance), TRC/CA/01/C (Out -of-band spurious emissions). LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63 (Default = 50). Return Data None Use an RF Analyser to check carrier output. Exit Click on Reset Chip or select another TXDATA command. bc01-an-047b TXDATA1 Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 10 of 56 l l B B u u e e C C o o r r e e T T M M 0 0 1 1 Title TXDATA2 Enables the transmitter, with a simplified hop sequence designated by Country Code and sets output Power (Ext, Int). Summary Payload is PRBS9 data (Default DH1). Receiver is not operating. Packet type and duty cycle can be configured. Refer to Configuration Commands section. TRM/CA/01/C (output power), TRM/CA/02/C (power density) Related Test Spec Name Test Arguments Country Code = 0 to 3 (Default = 0) Return Data None Use RF Analyser to check carrier output. Exit Click on Reset Chip or select another TXDATA command. bc01-an-047b BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 TXDATA2 Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 11 of 56 Title TXDATA3 Enables the transmitter, with a designated frequency (LO Freq) and output Power (Ext, Int). Summary Payload is sequence 101010. Receiver is not operating. Packet type and duty cycle can be configured. Refer to Configuration Commands section. Related Test Spec Name TRM/CA/07/C (modulation characteristic), TRM/CA/09/C
(carrier frequency drift) Test Arguments LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63 (Default = 50). Return Data None BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Exit bc01-an-047b Use RF Analyser to check out carrier Click on Reset Chip or select another TXDATA command. TXDATA3 Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 12 of 56 Title Summary Related Test Spec Name Test Arguments TXDATA4 Enables the transmitter with a designated frequency (LO Freq) and output Power (Ext, Int). Payload is sequence 1111000011110000. Receiver is not operating. Packet type and duty cycle can be configured. Refer to Configuration Commands section. TRM/CA/07/C (modulation characteristic), TRM/CA/09/C (carrier frequency drift) LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz) = 2402 to 2480 Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63 (Default = 50). BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Return Data None Use an RF Analyser to check out carrier. Click on Reset Chip or select another TXDATA command. TXDATA4 Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 13 of 56 Exit bc01-an-047b BlueTest Instruction Manual Note: TXDATA and RXDATA require the same Bluetooth address in each module for RXDATA to receive data transmitted by TXDATA. Use CFG_UAP_LAP to set the address used by the BIST. l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Receiver Only Title RXDATA1 Summary Enables the receiver, at a designated frequency (LO Freq) with a choice of low or high side modulation (hi-side), and with a designated attenuation setting (RX Attenuation). The software counts the number of received packet and the number of payloads with correctable errors. The payload itself is thrown away. The time between receive slots and report frequency can be set. Refer to Configuration Commands section. Test Arguments LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 Return data hi-side = 0 or 1 (default = 0) RX Attenuation = 0 to 15 (default = 0) NP = number of packets NP = number of good packets, NCP = number of corrected packets RSSI = value as shown True = RSSI is reliable, otherwise false The numbers wrap, rather than being reset to 0. Exit Click on Reset Chip. RXDATA1 example display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 14 of 56 Title RXDATA2 Enables the receiver with a simplified hop sequence designated by Country Code, with a choice of low or high side modulation
(hi-side) and with a designated attenuation setting (RX Attenuation). Summary The software counts the number of received packets and the number of payloads with correctable errors. The payload itself is thrown away. The time between receive slots and report frequency can be set. Refer to Configuration Commands Section. Related Test Spec Name Test Arguments Return Data Standby mode spurious emissions (FCC test) Country Code = 0 to 3 (default = 0) hi-side = 0 or 1 (default = 0) RX Attenuation = 0 to 15 (default = 0) NP = number of packets NG = number of good packets NCP = number of corrected packets RSSI = value as shown True = RSSI is reliable, otherwise false The numbers wrap, rather than being reset to 0. Exit Click on Reset Chip. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 RXDATA2 Example Display Page 15 of 56 Title BIT ERR1 Summary bc01-an-047b Enables the receiver at a designated frequency (LO Freq) with a choice of low or high side modulation (hi-side) and with a designated attenuation setting (RX Attenuation). Returns a set of reports to the host:
g Number of data bits received (payload excluding FEC and CRC) g Number of data bits that were in error. Assumes PRBS9 data starting with 1FF in each packet g Number of packets received g Number of packets expected, based on txrx_freq (default 12500) g Number of packets with header errors as reported by hardware g Number of packets with CRC errors g Number of packets with uncorrected errors (currently same as CRC errors) g Number of sync timeouts. Note that until a transmission is received a long timeout is used, so this does not reflect the number of packets expected Each report has two unint32 values. First is value since last report, second is summed over the last bits_count (default =
1.6Mbits). Reports are sent according to report_freq set (default = 1 second). The times between receive slots and report frequency can be set, and the count reset. Refer to Configuration Commands section. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BIT ERR1 Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 16 of 56 Title BIT ERR1 (Continued) Related Test Spec Name RCV/CA/01/C and RCV/CA/02/C (sensitivity), RCV/CA/03/C (C/I performance), RCV/CA/04/C (blocking performance), RCV/CA/05/C
(intermodulation performance), RCV/CA/06/C (maximum input level) LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz) = 2402 to 2480 Test Arguments hi-side = 0 or 1 (default = 0) RX Attenuation = 0 to 15 (default = 0) Note With a second unit, execute CFG UAP/LAP to set the Bluetooth address. Execute TXDATA1 then execute CFG UAP/LAP to set the same Bluetooth address on the Equipment Under Test (EUT) before executing BIT ERR1. Return Data Eight reports, each two uint32 values (refer to BIT ERR1 Summary). Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 17 of 56
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Title BIT ERR2 Summary Related Test Spec Name Enables the receiver with simplified hopping defined by Country Code with a choice of low or high side modulation (hi-side), and with a designated attenuation setting (RX Attenuation) as for RXDATA2. Returns information on bit errors to the host as those given for BIT ERR1. None, but note that this test allows (as in BIT ERR1) the tests RCV/CA/01/C and RCV/CA/02/C (sensitivity), RCV/CA/04/C
(blocking performance) to be performed with hopping on. This is a more thorough test than that possible with the 7 Layers equipment. Country Code = 0 to 3 (default 0) Test Arguments hi-side = 0 or 1 (default = 0) Note RX Attenuation = 0 to 15 (default = 0) With a second unit, execute CFG UAP/LAP to set BT address then execute TXDATA2, then execute CFG UAP/LAP to set the same BT address on the Equipment under Test (EUT) before executing BIT ERR2. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Return Data Nine reports, each two uint32 values as for BIT ERR1. BIT ERR2 Example Display Exit Click on Reset Chip. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 18 of 56 BlueTest Instruction Manual Loopback Test Mode Title LOOP BACK Summary Related Test Spec Name Test Arguments Receives data on LO Frequency for data packets and then retransmits this data on the same channel at transmit level lvl. Highside reception is off and attenuation is set to 0. Expected reception frequency, txrx_freq (default = 12500 microsecs) with single slot packets returned lb_offs after receipt (default = 1875 microsecs). Defaults can be changed. See Configuration Commands section. None, but note that this test RCV/CA/01/C to RCV/CA/06/C to be performed in loopback without using the LMP commanded loopback test mode. RCV/CA/01/C to RCV/CA/06/C to be performed in loopback, but without using the LMP commanded loopback test mode. LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 (default =
2432) Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63
(Default = 50). Return Data None Click on Reset Chip. LOOP BACK Example Display l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 19 of 56 Exit bc01-an-047b Title Summary RX LOOP BACK Transmit PRBS9 data on LO Frequency at transmit level and listen for transmissions in the next slot but one. Sends reports as RXDATA1 back to the host once per second (configurable). Highside reception is off and attenuation is set to 0. Default is single-slot packets (configurable with config_freq). This is designed to be used with a second unit in LOOP_BACK test mode. Related Test Spec Name None, but note that this test allows transmission to and reception from Implementation under Test (IUT) in LOOP_BACK test mode with RSSI and BER calculated from FEC. Test Arguments Note Return Data LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63
(Default = 50). With a second unit execute CFG UAP/LAP to set the Bluetooth address. Execute LOOP BACK then execute CFG UAP/LAP to set the same BT address on the Equipment under Test (EUT) before executing RX LOOP BACK. NP = Number of packets NGP = Number of good packets NCP = Number of corrected packets RSSI = Received Signal Strength Indication True = RSSI is reliable, otherwise false Exit Click on Reset Chip. bc01-an-047b BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 RX LOOP BACK Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 20 of 56 Title Summary BER LOOP BACK Transmit PRBS9 data on LO Frequency at transmit level and listen for transmissions in the next slot but one. Sends reports as BIT ERR1 back to the host once per second
(configurable). Highside reception is off and attenuation is set to zero Default is single slot packets (configurable with config_freq). Designed to be used with a second unit in loop_back test mode. Related Test Spec Name None, but note that this test allows transmission to and reception from IUT in loopback test mode, with calculation of BER to BT specification. Called via BCSP channel 2 LO Freq (Carrier Frequency MHz)= 2402 to 2480 Test Arguments Power (Ext, Int) = gain of external amplifier (if present) and internal amplifier. Ext value is specific to the design and Int value is 0 to 63 (Default = 50). Note With a second unit execute CFG UAP/LAP to set BT address then execute LOOP BACK, then execute CFG UAP/LAP to set the same BT address on the EUT before executing BER LOOP BACK. Return Data Nine reports as for BIT ERR1. Exit Click on Reset Chip. bc01-an-047b l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Instruction Manual BER LOOP BACK Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 21 of 56 Configuration Commands Title CFG FREQ Summary Sets three values used in deciding timing details of tests. Tx/Rx Int (txrx_freq) sets the period in microseconds between TX and RX events in RXDATA, TXDATA, BIT ERR and LOOP BACK test modes. Default is 1250 (20 slots), maximum 65536. If passed as 0, current value unchanged. Loopback (lb_offs) sets the offset in microseconds between a reception event and retransmission of the data in loopback. Default is 1875 (two slots later), must be less than TX/Rx Int (txrx_freq). If passed as zero current value unchanged. Report Int(report_freqs) sets the time in seconds between reports to host sent by RXDATA and BIT ERR functions. Default 1, if passed as 0 current value unchanged. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments TX/RX Int (S) = 1 to 65535 (default = 1250) Loopback (S) = 1 to 65535 (default = 1875) Report Int (S) = 1 to 65535 (default = 1) Return Data None. Exit bc01-an-047b Click on Reset Chip. CFG FREQ Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 22 of 56 BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Title CFG PKT Summary Sets packet type and size for transmitter tests. It has no effect on RX or LOOP BACK tests. Packet Type (pkt-type) is the standard Bluetooth packet type, 0-15 (12-13 not allowed). Any other number sets default:
DM5 for TXDATA1/2, DH5 for TXDATA3/4. Packet Size (pkt_size) is the size of data in packet, from one to maximum for type. If zero sets default: 20 bytes for TXDATA1/2, 192 bytes for TXDATA3/4. Since the two values are connected both values must be set no default is inferred. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments Packet Type = 0 to 15 (default = 4) (see Appendix 5) Packet Size = 0 to 339 (default = 27) Return data None BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Click on Reset Chip. Exit bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 CFG PKT Example Display Page 23 of 56 Title CFG BIT ERR Sets two values used in bit error measurements. Summary If Bits Count (bits_count) is non-zero, the target for total counters is set to this and total count resets at this value. If passed as 0 current value, unchanged. If Reset is not false and BIT ERR/2 is active, immediately resets the counters for the total statistics, but not over the last report period. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments Bits Count = 1 to 4.2 x 109 (default = 1600000 Bit) Reset = false (0) or true (1) (default = false) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG BIT ERR Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 24 of 56 Title CFG TX IF Summary Sets the IF frequency used in transmit test modes. The target is zero, but the stack currently uses a default of -1MHz. Offset is a signed integer with a range from +5 to 5, in units of 0.5MHz. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments IF Offset = -5 to +5 (default = 0) Return data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 CFG TX IF Example Display Page 25 of 56 Title CFG XTAL FTRIM Timing for BlueCore01 is controlled by a crystal. This requires trimming for new hardware. This command can be used to set a new trim value either before a radiotest command is started or while a test is already in operation; the change takes effect immediately. Crystal Trim (xtal_ftrim) is a number between 0 and 63 inclusive. This is not a permanent change. None Crystal Trim = 0 to 63 (typical = 27) Summary Related Test Spec Name Test Arguments Note With Crystal Trim set to 0, the current settings will not change. Return data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG XTAL FTRIM Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 26 of 56 Title CFG UAP/LAP Summary Sets the UAP and LAP to be used in tests. BlueCore01 usually uses its own Bluetooth Device address to determine the access sync code, as if it is master of a piconet. The UAP and LAP are the only parts used. This command allows a special UAP and LAP to be used only in the test modes. Related Test Spec Name None Bluetooth Address:
Test Arguments UAP = 0 to FF (Default = 6b) LAP = 0 to FFFFFF (Default = c6967e) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG UAP/LAP Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 27 of 56 Title CFG ACC ERRS Summary The receiver uses a sliding correlator to determine that it has matched the start of a packet. The receiver allows up to # of errors (n_errs) before a match is rejected. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments
# of errors = 0 to 15 (default = 10) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG ACC ERRS Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 28 of 56 Title CFG IQ TRIM Summary Sets the IQ Trim (trim) value overriding the value calculated by the internal calibration algorithm. This command is not executed in normal use. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments IQ Trim = 0 to 511 (default 149 (hex)) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG IQ TRIM Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 29 of 56 bc01-an-047b Title CFG TX TRIM Summary Sets the Active Member Address (am_addr) for the device to be used in the header of all test transmissions to am_addr. If the transmitter and receiver are used for the same test, both devices will normally have to be set to the same am_addr. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments Trim (am_addr) = 0 to 7, Default = 7 Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG TX TRIM Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 30 of 56 Title CFG LO LVL Summary Sets the value of the Analogue Local Oscillator output level to LO level (lvl), overriding the value calculated by the internal calibration algorithm. This command is not executed in normal use. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments LO level = 0 to 15 (default = 13) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG LO LVL Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 31 of 56 Title CFG TX COMP Summary Sets TX Offset (tx_offset) and LO Offset (lo_offset) for the firmwares algorithm, which sets the maximum power. Run TXSTART before executing CFG TX COMP, otherwise there is no transmit power to set. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments TX Offset, minimum = 0 (default = 7) LO Offset, minimum = 0 (default = 8) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 CFG TX COMP Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 32 of 56 Title CFG SETTLE Summary Sets the period (radio_on_offset) in microseconds between turning the radio on and starting to transmit. Related Test Spec Name None Test Arguments Offset, minimum = 0 (default = 130) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b CFG SETTLE Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 33 of 56 Built-in-Self Test (BIST) Routines Title Deep Sleep Summary Puts the chip into deep-sleep after a delay of half a second until woken by reset or any activity on USB or UART interface. Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip or another routine being called. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Deep Sleep Example Display Page 34 of 56 Title PCM LB Sets the PCM into LOOP BACK mode, whereby the data read from the PCM input is output again on the PCM out pin. The LOOP BACK is via software and the buffers so there is a pipeline delay. The PCM port mode is selectable. Summary If PCM Mode = 0, BlueCore01 is slave in normal 4-wire configuration If PCM Mode = 1, BlueCore01 is master in normal 4-wire configuration If PCM Mode = 2, BlueCore01 is master in Manchester encoded, 2-wire configuration. Test Arguments PCM Mode = 0 to 2 (default = 1) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip or another routine being called. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 PCM LB Example Display Page 35 of 56 Title PCM EXTERNAL LOOPBACK Summary Sets the PCM into external LOOPBACK mode, whereby the data written to the PCM output is read again on the input pin. A check is made that the data read back is the same (up to usual codec transformations) as that written. The LOOP BACK consists of 512 bytes of random data. The PCM port mode is selectable as PCM Mode (pcm_mode), which is the same as for PCM LB
(radiotest_pcm_loop_back) The external LOOP BACK may be a simple wire. Related Test Spec Name None Note On the Casira under test, set CN8 jumper to Codec BYP and on header CN12 link pins 10 and 11. Test Arguments PCM Mode = 0 to 2 (default = 1) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 PCM EXT LB Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 36 of 56 Title SETTLE Summary Builds the LUT as normal, then does a step from Start Channel
(chan1) to Finish Channel (chan2), while the synthesiser is running. It digitises the synthesiser (LO_TUNE) error voltage at intervals of 10 20m s over the next 200m s and writes the results to an array. Test Arguments Start Channel (chan1) = 0 to 78 (default 0) Finish Channel (chan2) = 0 to 78 (default 78) Return Data A sequence of ten reports of the synthesiser (LO_TUNE) error voltage over the next 200m s. Exit Click on Reset Chip or another routine being called. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 SETTLE Example Display Page 37 of 56 Title IF RESP Summary Test Arguments Sweeps transmit IF carrier frequency over designated number of samples (n_samples) within range (0-3MHz maximum) and measures RSSI. Returns table of RSSI value against frequency offset to characterise IF filter response. No. of Samples(n_samples) = 0 to 65535 (default = 10) Start (lo_offset) = 0 to 3MHz (default 0.001 MHz) Finish (hi_offset) = 0 to 3 MHz (default = 3.000 MHz. Must be greater than lo_offset) Return Data A sequence of reports of RSSI and frequency offset. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 IF RESP Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 38 of 56 bc01-an-047b Title RF IQ MATCH Summary Measures RF IQ match by injecting test signal, sweeping IQ trim and measuring RSSI for on-channel and image. Returns array of IQ measurements against IQ trim. Return Data An array of 16 IQ measurements against IQ trim. Exit Click on Reset Chip. bc01-an-047b BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 RF IQ MATCH Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 39 of 56
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Title IF IQ MATCH Summary Measures IF IQ match by injecting test signal, sweeping IQ trim and measuring RSSI for on-channel and image. Returns array of IQ measurements against IQ trim. Return Data An array of 16 IQ measurements against IQ trim. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 IF IQ MATCH Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 40 of 56 Title VCO TRIM Summary Produces look up table of VCO trim versus hop frequencies for a designated country hop sequence. Test Arguments Country Code (cc) = 0 to 3 (default = 0) Return Data An array of 79 values for VCO trim if Country Code is 0 otherwise 23 values. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 VCO TRIM Example Display Page 41 of 56 Miscellaneous Test Routines Title Summary Set PIO Enables designated PIO lines as outputs and sets them as desired. To be used with caution since it over-rides previous settings. Bit 0 corresponds to PIO[0], and a logic one enables it as an output. Test Arguments Mask (default = 11111111) Values (default = 00000000) Return Data None Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Set PIO Example Display Page 42 of 56 Title Read PIO Summary Reads the logic state of the PIO pins. Valid whether they are inputs or outputs. Return Data PIO Lines (uint8) sent over BCSP channel 3, giving the logic level at each of the pins. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 READ PIO Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 43 of 56 Title BUILD LUT Summary Builds the radios channel LO_TRIM frequency look-up table then returns it to the host. Return Data A sequence of 79 uint16 numbers, containing the calibration data just generated. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual BUILD LUT Example Display l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 44 of 56 Title READ LUT Summary Reports the radios channel LO_TRIM frequency look-up-table
(LUT) to the host. Return Data A sequence of 79 (uint16) numbers containing the contents of the look up table (LUT) for Europe and North America or a sequence of 23 (uint16) numbers for other countries. The upper byte contains the transmitter trim and the lower byte contains the receiver trim. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual READ LUT Example Display l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 45 of 56 Title PROVOKE FAULT Summary Provokes a fault mode in the on-chip processor. Return Data None Test Arguments Fault (hex) = 0 to 2b (default = 0) Note: Contact CSR for more information about using fault modes. Exit Click on Reset Chip. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 PROVOKE FAULT Example Display This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 46 of 56 bc01-an-047b Title READ CHIP VERSION Summary Reads the hardware ID and firmware version of device. Return data Hardware ID and firmware version. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 READ CHIP VERSION Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 47 of 56 Persistent Store Keys Select PS from the main menu. Enter a Key number. To read a PS Key value, click on Read. The setting displays in the Value field. To change a PS key setting, enter a different value in the Value field and click on Set. To exit, click on OK. BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 PERSISTENT STORE KEY Example Display bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR Ltd 2001 Page 48 of 56 FCC Regulations:
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 device has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiated radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
-Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
-Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
-Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.
-Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the users authority to operate the equipment.
This device complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment. In order to avoid the possibility of exceeding the FCC radio frequency exposure limits, human proximity to the antenna shall not be less than 20cm (8 inches) during normal operation.
The antenna(s) used for this transmitter must be installed to provide a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons and must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Instruction Manual Appendix 1 BIST Parameters Type Min Max Meaning uint16 2402 2480 Bluetooth channel frequency in MHz Name lo_freq lxlvl mod_freq highside rx_attn uint16 uint16 bool uint16 country_code uint16 txrx_freq uint16 lb_offs uint16 report_freq uint16 pkt_type pkt_size bits_count Reset uint16 uint16 uint32 bool 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 63 Internal amplifier power setting. Use 50 for maximum power 65535 Modulation frequency for modulated carrier transmit test in units of 1/4096 MHz Non-
zero 15 3 65535 Receive IF setting, use false (0) Initial attenuation setting, overwritten by AGC Simplified hop sequence code, use country_code 0 for 79 hops Period in microseconds between RX and TX events; default 12500 (20 slots) 65535 Offset in microseconds between receive and transmit in loopback 65535 Time in seconds between reports to host, default 1 15 Standard Bluetooth packet type (12-
13 disallowed. 0, 1, 2 not useful) 339 Size of payload for packet type 4.2 x 109 Target for total bits used in BER measurement; default 1.6 M bit 1 1 resets total count for BER measurement offset_half_mhz int16
-5
+5 Transmit IF offset; default 2 pcm_mode uint16 0 2 PCM loopback mode; 0 = 4-wire slave, 1 = 4-wire master, 2 = 2-wire slave bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 49 of 56 Name chan1 chan2 n_samples lo_offset hi_offset output_mask output xtal_trim uap Lap Trim n_errs Lvl tx_offset lo_offset BlueTest Instruction Manual l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Type Min Max Meaning uint16 uint16 uint16 uint16 uint16 Uint8 Uint8 Uint16 Uint16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 78 78 Bluetooth channel number Bluetooth channel number 65535 Number of samples in range from min to max for IF filter response test 65535 Min offset in 1/4096MHz for IF filter response test 65535 Max offset in 1/4096MHz for IF filter response test FF FF 63 FF Bit mask for PIO; 0=input, 1=output Bit values for PIO output Crystal trim value Bluetooth address; Upper Address Part 0 FFFFFF Bluetooth address; Lower Address Part Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 Uint16 0 0 0 0 0 0 511 Value for configuring IQ trim 15 15 Number of errors Local oscillator output level Transmitter offset Local oscillator offset Time between turning radio on and starting to transmit in microseconds radio_on_offset Uint16 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 50 of 56 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Instruction Manual Appendix 2 Known Software Issue(s) in BlueTest Version 1.4
(a) Pressing the Reset Chip button on the GUI while data is being transmitted sends a hardware reset command to the chip and restarts the serial stack software. Closing the GUI sends a hardware reset command to the chip. If the link fails, the connection can only be recreated by manually resetting the chip
(power off/on) and by clicking on Reset Chip or closing down and restarting the GUI (both of which will restart the serial stack software). The above will not occur if no data is visibly scrolling in the window. The tests concerned are:
g VCOTRIM g BUILD LUT g READ g LUT
(b) There is a race between command responses indicating that a test has started and the first data relating to that test. This does not affect the test results.
(c) It is not possible to rouse the chip from Deep Sleep except by powering down the chip and restarting. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 51 of 56 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Instruction Manual Appendix 3 Combining Tests Using a Second Unit Several tests require a second BlueCore01 unit to be operating to provide a test signal for the equipment under test. The following table provides a quick reference guide to tests that use a second unit. N O I S R E V P I H C D A E R T L U A F E K O V O R P T U L D L I U B T U L D A E R O I P D A E R O I P T E S H C T A M Q I F I M I R T O C V H C T A M Q I F R B L T X E B L M C P M C P E L T T E S P S E R F I T R A T S X T 1 A T A D X T 2 A T A D X T 3 A T A D X T 4 A T A D X T T R A T S X R 2 T R A T S X R 1 A T A D X R 2 A T A D X R 1 R R E 2 R R E T T I B I B K C A B P O O L X R K C A B P O O L K C A B P O O L R E B P E E L S P E E D X X X X X X X X S U T A T S O I D A R E S U A P T I N U D N O C E S EQUIPMENT UNDER TEST PAUSE RADIO STATUS TXSTART TXDATA1 TXDATA2 TXDATA3 TXDATA4 RXSTART1 RXSTART2 RXDATA1 RXDATA2 BIT ERR1 BIT ERR2 LOOP BACK RX LOOP BACK BER LOOP BACK DEEP SLEEP PCM LB PCM EXT LB SETTLE IF RESP RF IQ MATCH IF IQ MATCH VCO TRIM BUILD LUT READ LUT SET PIO READ PIO PROVOKE FAULT READ CHIP VERSION bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 52 of 56 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Appendix 4 Configuration Commands Available During Tests BlueTest Instruction Manual Particular configuration commands are appropriate to use during certain tests. The following table is a quick reference guide to which configuration commands can be used during which tests. Q E R F G F C T K P G F C R R E T I B G F C F I X T G F C X X X X X X X X X X X I M R T F L A T X G F C X X X X X X X X X X X X X X P A L
P A U G F C S R R E C C A G F C I M R T Q I G F C I M R T X T G F C P M O C X T G F C L V L O L G F C E L T T E S G F C X X X X X X X X X X X X X X n o i t a r u g i f n o C s d n a m m o C EQUIPMENT UNDER TEST PAUSE RADIO STATUS TXSTART TXDATA1 TXDATA2 TXDATA3 TXDATA4 RXSTART1 RXSTART2 RXDATA1 RXDATA2 BIT ERR1 BIT ERR2 LOOP BACK RX LOOP BACK BER LOOP BACK DEEP SLEEP PCM LB PCM EXT LB SETTLE IF RESP RF IQ MATCH IF IQ MATCH VCO TRIM BUILD LUT READ LUT SET PIO READ PIO PROVOKE FAULT bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 53 of 56 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Instruction Manual Appendix 5 Bluetooth Packet Types Use the CFG FREQ command to set the frequency as appropriate to the size of the packet type being used in the test. Extracted from Packet Types section of Specification of the Bluetooth System, v1.1, dated 1 December 2000. bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 54 of 56 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 BlueTest Instruction Manual CSRs Life Support Policy and Use in Safety-Critical Applications CSRs products are not authorised for use in life-support or safety-critical applications. Trademarks and Patents BlueCore is a trademark of CSR. Bluetooth and the Bluetooth logos are trademarks owned by Bluetooth SIG Inc, USA and licensed to CSR. CSR reserves the right to make technical changes to its products as part of its development programme. For further information, refer to the following document(s):
Document Reference Bluetooth (SIG) Test Specification - RF Rev 0.9r, dated 31 January 2000 Specification of the Bluetooth System, v1.1 Rev 1.1, dated 01 December 2000 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 55 of 56 l B u e C o r e T M 0 1 Record of Changes BlueTest Instruction Manual Date:
Revision:
Reason for Change:
13 SEP 00 16 JUL 01 a b Original publication of this document
(CSR reference: bc01-an-047a). Revision and addition of tests and appendices BlueTest Instruction Manual AN047 July 2001 bc01-an-047b This material is subject to CSRs non-disclosure agreement. Copyright CSR 2001 Page 56 of 56
1 2 3 | users manual regulatory | Users Manual | 520.71 KiB | / June 02 2008 |
WORKABOUT PRO Hand-Held Computer Regulatory & Warranty Guide February 21, 2007 PN 8000126.A ISO 9001 Certified 7527C & 7527S
' Copyright 2007 by Psion Teklogix Inc., Mississauga, Ontario, Canada This document and the information it contains is the property of Psion Teklogix Inc., is issued in strict confidence, and is not to be reproduced or copied, in whole or in part, except for the sole purpose of promoting the sale of Psion Teklogix manufactured goods and services. Furthermore, this docu-
ment is not to be used as a basis for design, manufacture, or sub-contract, or in any manner detrimental to the interests of Psion Teklogix Inc. All trademarks are the property of their respective holders. Return-To-Factory Warranty Psion Teklogix provides a return to factory warranty on this product for a period of twelve (12) months in accordance with the statement of Warranty and Product Support provided at:
www.psionteklogix.com/warranty. The warranty on Psion Teklogix manufactured equipment does not extend to any product that has been tampered with, altered, or repaired by any person other than an employee of an authorized Psion Teklogix service organization. See Psion Teklogix terms and conditions of sale for full details. Important: Psion Teklogix warranties take effect on the date of shipment. Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive 2002/96/EC This Product, and its accessories, comply with the requirements of the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive 2002/96/EC. If your end-of-life Psion Teklogix product or accessory carries a label as shown here, please contact your local country representative for details on how to arrange recycling. For a list of international subsidiaries, please go to:
http://www.psionteklogix.com/EnvironmentalCompliance Restriction on Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 2002/95/EC What is RoHS?
The European Union has mandated that high environmental standards be met in the design and manufacture of electronic and electrical products sold in Europe, to reduce hazardous substances from entering the environment. The
Restriction on Hazardous Substances Directive (RoHS) prescribes the max-
imum trace levels of lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, and flame retardants PBB and PBDE that may be contained in a product. Only products meeting these high environmental standards may be placed on the market in EU member states after July 1, 2006. RoHS Logo Although there is no legal requirement to mark RoHS-compliant products, Psion Teklogix Inc. indicates its compliance with the directive as follows:
The RoHS logo located either on the back of the product or underneath the battery in the battery compartment (or on a related accessory such as the charger or docking station) signifies that the product is RoHS-compliant as per the EU directive. Other than as noted below, a Psion Teklogix product that does not have an accompanying RoHS logo signifies that it was placed on the EU market prior to July 1, 2006, and is thereby exempt from the directive. Note: Not all accessories or peripherals will have a RoHS logo due to physical space limitations or as a result of their exempt status. Disclaimer Every effort has been made to make this material complete, accurate, and up-
to-date. In addition, changes are periodically added to the information herein;
these changes will be incorporated into new editions of the publication. Psion Teklogix Inc. reserves the right to make improvements and/or changes in the product(s) and/or the program(s) described in this document without notice, and shall not be responsible for any damages, including but not lim-
ited to consequential damages, caused by reliance on the material presented, including but not limited to typographical errors. Table Of Contents 1. Declaration Of Conformity. 2 2. Safety Summary . 2 3. The Battery . 9 4. Support Services & Worldwide Offices . 11 4.1 Technical Support . 11 4.2 Product Repairs . 12 4.3 Worldwide Offices. 12 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 1 1. Declaration Of Conformity Declaration of Conformity documents are provided at:
www.psionteklogix.com/DoC 2. Safety Summary CE Marking When used in a residential, commercial or light industrial environment the product and its approved UK and European peripherals fulfil all requirements for CE marking. R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC This equipment complies with the essential requirements of EU Directive 1999/5/EC (Declaration available: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Cet quipement est conforme aux principales caractristiques dfinies dans la Directive europenne RTTE 1999/5/CE. (Dclaration disponible sur le site:
www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Die Gerte erfllen die grundlegenden Anforderungen der RTTE-Richtlinie
(1999/5/EG). (Den Wortlaut der Richtlinie finden Sie unter: www.psiontek-
logix.com/DoC). Questa apparecchiatura conforme ai requisiti essenziali della Direttiva Europea R&TTE 1999/5/CE. (Dichiarazione disponibile sul sito:
www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Este equipo cumple los requisitos principales de la Directiva 1995/5/CE de la UE, Equipos de Terminales de Radio y Telecomu-nicaciones. (Declaracin disponible en: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Este equipamento cumpre os requisitos essenciais da Directiva 1999/5/CE do Parlamento Europeu e do Conselho (Directiva RTT). (Declarao disponvel no endereo: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). EU R&TTE 1999/5/E. (
: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) 2 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide Deze apparatuur voldoet aan de noodzakelijke vereisten van EU-richtlijn betreffende radioapparatuur en telecommunicatie-eindappa-ratuur 199/5/EG.
(verklaring beschikbaar: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Dette udstyr opfylder de Vsentlige krav i EUs direktiv 1999/5/EC om Radio- og teleterminaludstyr. (Erklring findes p: www.psionteklogix.com/
DoC). Dette utstyret er i overensstemmelse med hovedkravene i R&TTE-direktivet
(1999/5/EC) fra EU. (Erklring finnes p: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Utrustningen uppfyller kraven fr EU-direktivet 1999/5/EC om ansluten tel-
eutrustning och msesidigt erknnande av utrustningens verensstmmelse
(R&TTE). (Frklaringen finns att lsa p: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). Tm laite vastaa EU:n radio- ja teleptelaitedirektiivin
(EU R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC) vaatimuksia. (Julkilausuma nhtvill osoitteessa: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC). PSION TEKLOGIX tmto prohlauje, e tohle mobiln zazen je ve shod se zkladnmi poadavky a dalmi pslunmi ustanovenmi smrnice 1995/5/ES (NV . 426/2000 Sb.) a Prohlen o shod je k dispozici na www.psionteklogix.com/DoC. Toto zazen lze provozovat v esk republice na zklad generln licence . GL - 12/R/2000. PSION TEKLOGIX tmto vyhlasuje, e toto mobiln zariadenie spa zkladn poiadavky a vetky prslun ustanovenia Smernice 1995/5/ES (NV . 443/2001 Z.z.) a Vyhlsenie o zhode je k dispozcii na www.psionteklogix.com/DoC. Toto zariadenie je mon prevdzkova v Slovenskej republike na zklade Veobecnho povolenia . VPR-01/2001. 1999/5/EC
: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 3 Acest echipament satisface cerinele eseniale ale Directivei UE 1999/5/EC
(Declaraia poate fi gasit pe site-ul: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) Oprema je skladna z bistvenimi zahtevami EU direktive 1999/5/EC
(Deklaracija je na voljo: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) Kesolev seade vastab EU Direktiivile 1999/5/EC (selgitus saadaval:
www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) Az eszkz megfelel az EU 1999/5/EC f direktvinak (a nyilatkozat megtallhat: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC)
aparatra nodroina nepiecieamas ES Direktvas prasbas
(Deklarcija ir pieejama: www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) ranga atitinka pagrindinius EU direktyvos 1999/5/EC reikalavimus
(Deklaracij galima rasti www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) Dan l-apparat huwa konformi mal-kriterji tad-direttiva ta l- EU 1999/5/EC
(Din id-dikjarazzjoni tista ssiba fuq is sit www.psionteklogix.com/DoC) To urzdzenie spenia wymagania zasadnicze dyrektywy Unii Europejskiej 1999/5/EC (Deklaracj zgodnoci mona znale pod adresem internetowym www.psionteklogix.com/DoC)
Use of the 802.11 device in France: Owing to French Government restrictions, the 802.11 device are limited to indoor use. They may be used outdoors, on private property, only with prior authorization from the French Ministry of Defense. 4 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide FCC Information To Users Federal Communication Commission Interference Statement This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential 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. How-
ever, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. to which the receiver is connected.
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. 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 interfer-
ence, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. FCC Caution: Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the users authority to operate this equipment. IMPORTANT NOTE:
FCC Radiation Exposure Statement:
This equipment complies with FCC radiation exposure limits set forth for an uncontrolled environment under 47 CFR 2.1093 paragraph (d)(2), for use in a PDA. End users must follow the specific operating instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance. Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 5 This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. Some equipment in hospitals and aircraft are not shielded from radio fre-
quency energy. Do not use the device onboard aircraft, or in hospitals, with-
out first obtaining permission. Do not use near pacemakers. The product may affect the operation of some medically implanted devices such as pacemakers, causing them to malfunc-
tion. Avoid placing your product next to such devices. Keep a minimum dis-
tance of 20 cm between the device and the product to reduce the risk of interference. If you have any reason to suspect that interference is taking place, turn off the device and contact your cardiologist for assistance. Note: To maintain compliance with the FCC RF exposure guidelines, if you wear the device on your body, use the Psion Teklogix approved carrying case. Use of non-approved accessories may violate FCC RF exposure guidelines. Emissions Information For Canada This Class B digital apparatus meets all requirements of the Canadian Inter-
ference-Causing Equipment Regulations. When using the 802.11 radio option, to prevent radio interference, this device is intended to be operated indoors and away from windows to provide maximum shielding. Equipment
(or its transmit antenna) that is installed outdoors is subject to licensing. Cet appareil numrique de la classe B respecte toutes les exigences du Rgle-
ment sur le matriel brouilleur du Canada. En cas dutilisation du module radio 802.11, afin dviter toute interfrence radio avec le service autoris, lappareil doit tre utilis lintrieur, tout en tant loign de toute fentre afin de garantir le maximum de protection. Si cet quipement (ou son antenne mettrice) est install lextrieur, il est alors soumis licence. Warning for Australia The user needs to switch off the device when exposed to areas with potentially explosive atmospheres such as petrol stations, chemical storage depots and blasting operations. 6 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide Warning to Users This product is a Class I/Class II laser product according to CDRH 21 CFR 1040.10 and 1040.11 and Class1/Class 2 laser product according to IEC 60825-1:1993+A1:1997+A2:2001 Laser Warnings For your own safety, it is critical that you comply with the following warnings:
Caution!
Do not look into the laser beam or point the beam at people or animals. Caution!
Using controls or adjustments, or performing procedures other than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure. Caution!
The use of optical instruments with this product will increase eye hazard. Do Not Operate In An Explosive Atmosphere Operating Psion Teklogix equipment where explosive gas is present may result in an explosion. Do Not Remove Covers Or Open Enclosures To avoid injury, the equipment covers and enclosures should only be removed by qualified service personnel. Do not operate the equipment without the covers and enclosures properly installed. Caution!
Danger of explosion if a battery is incorrectly handled, charged, disposed of or replaced. Replace only with the same or equivalent type recommended by Psion Teklogix. Dispose of used batteries according to the instructions described in The Battery on page 9. Carefully review all battery safety issues. Vorsicht!
Explosiongefahr bei unsachgemem Austausch der Batterie Ersatz nur durch denselben oder einen vom Hersteller empfohlenen gleichwertigen Typ. Entsorgung gebrauchter Batterien nach Angaben des Herstellers. Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 7 Safety Instructions for the following:
AC Wall Adaptor,
Desktop Docking Stations, and
Tether Cable For your own safety, it is critical that you comply with the following warnings:
Caution!
Before use, read all safety instructions for the Docking Station, the hand-
held and the AC Wall Adaptor. Caution!
To avoid the risk of fire or personal injury, use only the Psion Teklogix recommended AC adaptor. Caution!
Use of an attachment not recommended or sold by Psion Teklogix may result in fire, electric shock, or personal injury. Caution!
To reduce risk of damage to the electric plug and cord when unplugging the charger, pull the plug rather than the cord. Caution!
Make sure the cord is positioned so that it is not stepped on, tripped over, or otherwise subjected to damage or stress. Caution!
Do not operate with a damaged cord or plug. Replace immediately. Caution!
Do not operate if the device has received a sharp blow, been dropped, or otherwise damaged in any way; it should be inspected by qualified service personnel. Caution!
Do not disassemble; repairs must be carried out by Psion Teklogix quali-
fied service personnel. Incorrect reassembly may result in electric shock or fire. 8 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide Caution!
To reduce risk of electric shock, unplug the AC adapter from the outlet before attempting any cleaning. Caution!
An extension cord should not be used unless absolutely necessary. Use of an improper extension cord could result in fire or electric shock. If an extension cord must be used, make sure the plug pins on the extension cord are the same number, size, and shape as those on the adapter, the extension cord is properly wired and in good electrical condition and that the wire size is larger than 16 AWG. Caution!
The AC adaptor is for indoor use only. Do not expose the AC adaptor to rain or snow. 3. The Battery Battery must be fully charged before first use. Warning:
Before charging or using the battery pack, it is critical that the safety information in this section be reviewed and that all warn-
ings are strictly followed. BATTERIES ARE CONSIDERED HAZARDOUS WASTE. For proper disposal, forward all used batteries to one of:
Psion Teklogix S.A. Parc Club Du Golf-Bat 1. 13856 Aix-En-Provence Cedex 3 France Psion Teklogix Inc. 2100 Meadowvale Blvd. 1810 Airport Exchange Blvd. Mississauga, Ontario Canada L5N 7J9 Suite 500 Erlanger, Kentucky USA 41018 Psion Teklogix Corp. Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 9 Warning:
TO PREVENT the battery from leaking acid, generating heat or exploding, adhere to precautions below.
The battery incorporates built-in safety devices. To ensure their proper function, do not disassemble or alter any parts of the battery.
Do not short-circuit the battery by directly connecting any of the exposed terminals with metal objects such as wire. Do not transport or store the battery together with metal objects such as necklaces, hair pins, etc.
Do not dispose of batteries in fire as they may explode or release toxic materials and cause burns.
Do not use or leave the battery near a heat source such as a fire or heater. battery.
Do not immerse the battery in water.
When charging, use the battery charger specifically designed for the
Do not pierce, strike, throw or step on the battery.
Do not directly solder the battery.
Do not connect the battery to an electrical outlet, vehicle
Do not put battery into a microwave oven or pressurized cigarette lighter, etc. container.
Do not use the battery in combination with primary batteries (such as dry-cell batteries) or batteries of different capacities or brands. Immediately remove the battery from the device or battery charger and stop use if the battery gives off an odour, generates heat, becomes discoloured or deformed, or in any way appears abnormal during use.
Do not continue charging the battery if it does not recharge within the specified charge time.
The battery may burst or ignite if the battery leaks. Always ensure that it is away from any exposed flames. If leaking electrolyte sprays into your eyes, rinse them with clean running water, and immediately seek medical attention.
10 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide
Do not store the battery in extremely high temperatures
(e.g., a vehicle, strong direct sunlight, etc.). This may cause the bat-
tery to overheat or ignite, and it may also reduce the performance and service life of the battery.
Do not use in areas where static electricity is greater than what the manufacturer guarantees.
+1 905 813 9900 Ext. 1999 Option 3.
Keep batteries out of reach of children. 4. Support Services & Worldwide Offices Psion Teklogix provides a complete range of product support services to its cus-
tomers worldwide. These services include technical support and product repairs. 4.1 Technical Support For technical support in North America:
Call Toll free: +1 800 387 8898 Option 3, or Direct Dial:
For technical support in EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa), please contact the local office listed in the website below:
http://www.psionteklogix.com/EMEASupport For technical support in Asia, please contact the local office listed in the website below:
http://www.psionteklogix.com Technical Support for Mobile Computing Products is provided via email through the Psion Teklogix customer and partner extranets. To reach the web-
site, go to www.psionteklogix.com, and click on the appropriate Teknet link on the home page. Then click on the Login button or the Register button, depending on whether you have previously registered for Teknet. Once you have logged in, search for the Support Request Form. Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 11
+1 905 813 9900 Ext. 1999 Option 2. 4.2 Product Repairs For repair service in North America:
Call Toll free: +1 800 387 8898 Option 2 or Direct Dial:
For repair service in EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa), please contact the local office listed in the following website:
http://www.psionteklogix.com/EMEASupport For repair service in Asia, please contact the local office listed in the website below:
http://www.psionteklogix.com 4.3 Worldwide Offices COMPANY HEADQUARTERS Psion Teklogix Inc. 2100 Meadowvale Boulevard Mississauga Ontario Canada L5N 7J9 Tel:
Fax:
Email:
CANADIAN SERVICE CENTRE Psion Teklogix Inc. 7170 West Credit Ave., Unit #1 Mississauga, Ontario Canada L5N 7J9 Tel:
+1 800 387 8898 Direct: + 1 905 813 9900
+ 1 905 812 6304 Fax:
Web:
www.psionteklogix.com
+1 905 813 9900
+1 905 812 6300 salescdn@psion.com Option 2 - or -
Ext. 1999 Option 2 12 Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide
+1 859 371 6006
+1 859 371 6422 salesusa@psion.com NORTH AMERICAN HEADQUARTERS AND U.S. SERVICE CENTRE Psion Teklogix Corp. 1810 Airport Exchange Boulevard Suite 500 Erlanger, Kentucky USA 41018 Tel:
Fax:
Email:
INTERNATIONAL SUBSIDIARIES
(see also www.psionteklogix.com/Subsidiaries) Psion Teklogix S.A. La Duranne 135 Rue Rene Descartes BP 421000 13591 Aix-En-Provence Cedex 3; France Tel:
Fax:
E-mail:
+33 4 42 90 88 09
+33 4 42 90 88 88 tekeuro@psion.com Psion Teklogix WORKABOUT PRO Regulatory & Warranty Guide 13
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2008-02-06 | 1852.4 ~ 1907.6 | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | Original Equipment |
2 | 2412 ~ 2462 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | ||
3 | 2402 ~ 2480 | DSS - Part 15 Spread Spectrum Transmitter |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 3 | Effective |
2008-02-06
|
||||
1 2 3 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Psion Inc
|
||||
1 2 3 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0006929947
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
One Motorola Plaza
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Holtsville, New York
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
United States
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 2 3 | Grantee Code |
GM3
|
||||
1 2 3 | Equipment Product Code |
7527BSHC
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Name |
S****** D********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
905 8******** Extension:
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
905 8********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
s******@motorolasolutions.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Firm Name |
Cetecom Inc
|
||||
1 2 3 | Name |
L**** S******
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
411 Dixon Landing Rd
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Milpitas, California 95035
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
United States
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
408-5********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
408-5********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
L******@cetecomusa.com
|
|||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
1 2 3 | Firm Name |
Cetecom Inc
|
||||
1 2 3 | Name |
L******** S********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Physical Address |
411 Dixon Landing Rd
|
||||
1 2 3 |
Milpitas, California 95035
|
|||||
1 2 3 |
United States
|
|||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
408-5********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
408-5********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
L******@cetecomusa.com
|
|||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 2 3 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 2 3 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 2 3 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Equipment Class | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | ||||
1 2 3 | DTS - Digital Transmission System | |||||
1 2 3 | DSS - Part 15 Spread Spectrum Transmitter | |||||
1 2 3 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Handheld Computer | ||||
1 2 3 | HandHeld Computer | |||||
1 2 3 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 2 3 | Purpose / Application is for | Original Equipment | ||||
1 2 3 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | Yes | ||||
1 2 3 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | Grant Comments | Power Output is ERP for Part 22 and EIRP for Part 24. Body-worn operations are restricted to the specific body worn accessories specified in applications under this FCC ID or beltclips, holsters or similar accessories that have no metallic component in the assembly and which provide at least 1.5 cm separation between the device and the users body. End users must be informed of the body worn requirements for satisfying RF Exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values are: Part 22: head: 1.04 W/kg, body: 0.07 W/kg Part 24: head: 0.62 W/kg, body: 0.07 W/kg | ||||
1 2 3 | Output power is conducted. Collocated transmitter operating configurations have been evaluated as described in this filing; other collocation configurations require separate evaluation. SAR compliance for body-worn operating configurations is limited to the specific configurations tested for this filing; body-worn operations are restricted to the specific belt-clips / holsters / accessories tested for this filing. End-users must be informed of the body-worn operating requirements for satisfying RF exposure compliance. The highest reported SAR values for single- and co-transmit configurations under this FCC ID are: Part 15: head: 1.05 W/kg, body: 0.10 W/kg Part 22: head: 1.04 W/kg, body: 0.07 W/kg Part 24: head: 0.62 W/kg, body: 0.07 W/kg | |||||
1 2 3 | Output power is conducted. SAR data for this FCC ID is applicable to demonstrate compliance only for final host product configurations as shown in this filing. The antenna(s) used for this transmitter must not be collocated or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter within a host device except as described in filings under this FCC ID. End users must be provided with operating instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance requirements. | |||||
1 2 3 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 3 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 2 3 | Firm Name |
CETECOM Inc.
|
||||
1 2 3 | Name |
K******** L********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Telephone Number |
408-5********
|
||||
1 2 3 | Fax Number |
408-5********
|
||||
1 2 3 |
k******@cetecom.com
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 22H | 824.2 | 848.8 | 0.533 | 30 Hz | 248KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 22H | 824.2 | 848.8 | 0.271 | 44 Hz | 250KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 3 | 22H | 826.4 | 846.6 | 0.113 | 20 Hz | 4M18F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 4 | 24E | 1850.2 | 1909.8 | 0.217 | 67 Hz | 250KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 5 | 24E | 1850.2 | 1909.8 | 0.172 | 71 Hz | 242KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 6 | 24E | 1852.4 | 1907.6 | 0.112 | 36 Hz | 4M20F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 15C | 2412.00000000 | 2462.00000000 | 0.2000000 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3 | 1 | 15C | 2402.00000000 | 2480.00000000 | 0.0021000 |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC