Murata Electronics North America 910M Manual Do Utilizador

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WIT910 
2.  RADIO OPERATION 
 
2.1.  Synchronization and Registration 
 
As discussed above, frequency hopping radios periodically change the frequency at 
which they transmit.  In order for the other radios in the network to receive the 
transmission, they must be listening to the frequency over which the current transmission 
is being sent.  To do this, all the radios in the net must be synchronized and must be set to 
the same hopping pattern. 
 
In point-to-point or point-to-multipoint arrangements, one radio module is designated as 
the base station.  All other radios are designated remotes.  One of the responsibilities of 
the base station is to transmit a synchronization signal to the remotes to allow them to 
synchronize with the base station.  Since the remotes know the hopping pattern, once they 
are synchronized with the base station, they know which frequency to hop to and when.  
Every time the base station hops to a different frequency, it immediately transmits a 
synchronizing signal. 
 
When a remote is powered on, it rapidly scans the frequency band for the synchronizing 
signal.  Since the base station is transmitting over 54 frequencies and the remote is 
scanning 54 frequencies, it can take several seconds for a remote to synch up with the 
base station. 
 
Once a remote has synchronized with the base station, it must request registration from 
the base station.  The registration process identifies to the base station the remotes from 
which transmissions will be received and not discarded.  Registration also allows tracking 
of remotes entering and leaving the network.  The base station builds a table of serial 
numbers of registered remotes.  To improve efficiency, the 24-bit remote serial number is 
assigned a 6-bit “handle” number.  Two of these are reserved for system use, thus each 
base station can register 62 separate remotes.  This handle is how user applications will 
know the remotes.  Note that if a remote leaves the coverage area and then re-enters, it 
may be assigned a different handle. 
 
To detect if a remote has gone offline or out of range, the registration must be “renewed” 
once every 256 hops.  Registration is completely automatic and requires no user 
application intervention.  When the remote is registered, it will receive several network 
parameters from the base.  This allows the base to automatically update these network 
parameters in the remotes over the air.  Once a parameter has been changed in the base, it 
is automatically changed in the remotes.  The parameters automatically changed are hop 
duration
 and the duty cycle
 
At the beginning of each hop, the base station transmits a synchronizing signal.  After the 
synchronizing signal has been sent, the base will transmit any data in its buffer unless 
data transmit delay has been set.  The data transmit delay parameter allows for the 
transmission of groups of continuous data in transparent mode (protocol mode 
00H
). The 
amount of data that the base station can transmit per hop is determined by the base slot 
© 2000- 2004 Cirronet Inc 
M-0910-0000 Rev -