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April 14, 2007GPS Receiver Chip Performance SurveyGPS component manufacturers are in a race to produce GPS chip receivers at a lower cost and with increased sensitivity, reduced footprint size and reduced power consumption. Driving their efforts is the desire of mobile device manufacturers to integrate GPS into more devices and feed the expansion of location based services. To see where the market is at the moment, specifications from a number of GPS chip manufacturers were surveyed for comparison in the table below. The number of chips available is growing and some manufacturers have more than one chip available (the best were selected). Judging by sensitivity alone is not enough to separate the contenders. The more prominent differences are in position accuracy. SiRF and u-Blox come out in front on position accuracy but, unfortunately TTFF data is not available for u-Blox to separate the two chips overall.
Notes:
U-blox UBX=G5010 GPS Receiver Chipu-blox is a Swiss company with a range of GPS positioning receiver products covering Navigation, Automatic Vehicle Location, Security, Traffic Control, Location Based Services, Timing, Surveying. The UBX-G5010, one of a number of chips/chipsets produced by U-blox, was selected for the survey for its excellent performance specification. It was designed for mobile device applications and has a massively parallel one million correlators. Natrually for a mobile application, its power consumption is ultra-low at 50mW. The chip is Galileo (European GPS satellite constellation under construction) ready. It has what U-blox call and is intended to be used in indoor situations as well as outdoors. Automatic jamming suppression is a valuable inclusion. Infineon PMB 2520 Hammerhead GPS ReceiverThe PMB 2520 (Hammerhead) is a single chip GPS receiver being developed by
QinetiQ’s Q20 HS is an ultra-compact, GPS receiver module with fast acquisition and very low signal strength tracking capability. Its capable of sustained indoors operation without network assistance. QinetiQ’s high sensitivity GPS has been recognized with an award for “best new electronic, communication or internet protocol product” at the annual Security Industry Innovation Awards It has also won the IEEE 2005 Electronics Engineering Innovation Award. Seiko Epson Corporation (”Epson”) developed the single-chip global-positioning system (GPS) module, the S4E19863, with a small footprint and high sensitivity for application in next-generation mobile handsets. The S4E19863 modules features include: Trimble’s Copernicus GPS module is a complete drop-in, ready-to-go GPS receiver which provides position, velocity and time data. It features Trimble’s own TrimCore navigation software for fast startup times and tracking performance in challenging environments such as urban canyons and under foliage. The Copernicus GPS receiver can autonomously acquire GPS satellite signals or accept assisted GPS (A-GPS) data. The module has been designed with a small footprint for next generation mobile GPS device integration. The Texas Instruments (TI) NaviLink 5.0 was only announced in March. TI have designed their new single chip GPS receiver to have a footprint of only 25mm2 which they claim is the worlds smallest. There are no performance figures available yet but, it is capable of autonomous and assisted modes of operation. To quote TI ” it is capable of fast time to first fix (TTFF) in weak signal conditions typical in metropolitan areas and deep indoor environments”. As with other manufacturers, TI is intending its chip to be integrated into mobile handsets (including mobile phones) which are expected to be in greater demand as location based services availability increases. SiRF was early in transferring GPS circuitry onto silicon and the SiRF Star III family has proved a watershed innovation GPS chip architecture by offering impressive performance improvements to the GPS receiver manufacturing industry. They have also been adopted by other major GPS manufacturers including TomTom and Magellan. The SiRF Star III offers faster fix times, higher signal locking, higher tracking sensitivity and lower power requirements.
Find out more about Assisted GPS (A-GPS) and how networking is allowing less powerful receivers to achieve even greater accuracies. Understand how Differential GPS improves GPS receiver accuracy. 7 Comments »RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI Please add your comments to the post topic
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[...] 320 pixels. GPS capability is supplied by the ever popular SiRF Star III GPS Chip. You can compare GPS Chipset capabilities or find out some more on the SiRF Star III GPS chipset on [...]
Pingback by AZUS P526 PDA Phone Includes GPS Capabilities — May 14, 2007 @ 12:22 pm
[...] GPS receiver isn’t specified and its performance don’t match any of the figures from our recent GPS receiver chip performance survey. The TTF (time to first fix) figures show the unit is quick to acquire its position. The position [...]
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[...] of the H610 is a 20-channel SiRFstarIII GPS Receiver Chipset which has the best performance in comparison to its peers including accuracy and the ability to lock onto GPS satellites even in poor signal reception areas [...]
Pingback by GPS Technology Reviews » Mio H610 Handheld GPS Navigation System Review — July 21, 2007 @ 8:41 pm
[...] Atmel ATR0635 (ANTARIS 4) compares well with other GPS receivers even matching the well regarded and widely used SiRF StarIII for tracking and acquisition sensitivity. The unit should operate quite well even in weak GPS [...]
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[...] GPS receiver chip has a claimed 70% cost reduction compared to conventional dedicated GPS receiver chip products. Cost reduction comes from the lack of duplication of computing power of the host CPU and [...]
Pingback by ACLYS GPS Receiver Chip 70% Cost Reduction Breakthrough — December 7, 2007 @ 2:44 pm
I am looking for a provider of small gps tracking devises that are small enough to fit into a watch or wrist band. Do you know of any such product or a supplier of small gps units? Many thanks for a response.
Comment by chris lehto — March 12, 2008 @ 1:14 am
I am looking for a chip to put into furniture which can be traced if it is stolen and also as a quick and easy asset register can you assist me in either a product or where to get additional information
Tkankyou
Peter
Comment by peter moore — April 21, 2008 @ 8:49 pm