Murata Electronics North America HN1010 사용자 설명서

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Configuring the Network 
32 
HopNet Family of Products 
M-2410-0010, Rev. - 
Set Alternative Frequency Band 
When set to 1, limits the operating RF channel set to the 2448 to 2473MHz   
frequency band for compliance with French regulatory standards.  When set to 2, sets 
appropriate operation for Spain.  When set to 3, sets appropriate operation for Japan.  
This setting should be set to 0, for FCC-compliant operation in the US (this is the 
default). For Canadian operation, set this parameter to 4. 
Set Hop Duration 
Sets the length of time the transceiver spends on each frequency channel.  A smaller 
value will allow the remote to lock on to the base signal faster at system startup, and 
will generally decrease packet latency.  A larger value increases network capacity, 
due to decreased overhead in channel switching.  The hop duration is specified in 
69.4µs increments.  The default value of 90H corresponds to a duration of 10ms.  The 
maximum value of FEH is 17.627ms.  For best results, do not specify a duration of 
less than 3 ms. This value only needs to be set in the base which broadcasts the 
parameter to all remotes. However, link time can be reduced if this value is also 
programmed into the remotes, which use it as a starting value when scanning for the 
base. 
Set Minimum Data Length  
This sets the minimum threshold number of bytes required to form a packet in 
transparent mode.  The radio will wait until the data transmit delay elapses before 
sending a data packet with less than this number of bytes.  Can be used to keep short, 
intermittent transmissions contiguous. In packet modes, the length parameter in the 
data packet will override this value (See Section 3.1). This value is subject to the 
maximum data length even in packet mode. See Get Maximum Data Length below. 
Get Maximum Data Length (read only) 
This parameter indicates the largest number of bytes that a remote will transmit per 
hop, based on the size of the slot it has been allocated by the base.  In general more 
remotes mean less data can be transmitted per remote.  By reading this parameter and 
dividing by the hop duration, the remote's data rate capacity can be determined. 
Attempting to send protocol mode packets longer than maximum data length will 
result in the packet being discarded without being sent. See Section 2.3.3 on the 
tradeoffs between hop duration and data length.