FreeCalypso > hg > fc-rfcal-tools
view doc/VCXO-vs-VCTCXO @ 76:5c3574f8c8c1
fc-rfcal-txband: reading of basis & targets setting files implemented
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Sat, 15 Jul 2017 20:08:55 +0000 |
parents | 65577bb967f7 |
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Some TI-based GSM mobile station devices use VCTCXOs (voltage-controlled, temperature-compensated crystal oscillators), while others use "plain" VCXOs without the TC part. The Leonardo reference design for the Calypso+Iota+Rita chipset, adopted first by Openmoko and then by FreeCalypso, uses a "plain" VCXO, and the Rita RF chip itself was designed with non-TC VCXOs in mind, as it includes the active part of the XO on-chip, with the external VCXO circuit becoming purely passive. The same Rita chip does support the option of disabling its internal active XO part and using an external VCTCXO; this approach is used in the Pirelli DP-L10 GSM+WiFi dual mode phone - but it is no longer Leonardo, and not properly supported by our available TCS211 reference firmware. However, it appears that Rita was TI's first RF chip to include the on-chip active part for a non-TC VCXO, whereas Clara (D-Sample) and earlier RF chips always required the VCXO or the VCTCXO to be external. Furthermore, it appears that TI's original approach in the days of Sara RF (before Clara) was to use VCTCXOs mandatorily, then later they improved their AFC (automatic frequency control) algorithm to work with the cheaper non-TC VCXOs, and eventually the non-TC VCXO approach became standard. It also appears that the requirements for VC(TC)XO calibration changed with the transition from VCTCXOs to "plain" VCXOs: of the two TI calibration documents we have (see TI-docs), the Sara document seems to assume a VCTCXO, whereas LoCosto's DCXO is apparently more like the Leonardo VCXO. TI's Layer 1 sources we have include a C preprocessor symbol called VCXO_ALGO, defined to 1 in TCS211, and it is my (Mychaela's) guess that this preprocessor symbol enables the new code developed for non-TC VCXOs. The dac_center, dac_min and dac_max fields in the afcparams table (T_AFC_PARAMS) exist only when VCXO_ALGO is nonzero, and these numbers are calibrated per unit on Openmoko devices. Without VCXO_ALGO the afcparams table contains only Psi constants, and it is my guess that in the days of Sara VCTCXOs these Psi constants were calculated theoretically and hard-coded, rather than calibrated per unit, hence the lack of corresponding calibration instructions in the Sara rf_calibration.pdf document. Only the "EEPROM" DAC value set with rfpw 10 needed to be calibrated back then, apparently. It is not particularly clear to me whether or not the non-TC VCXO used with VCXO_ALGO really needs to be calibrated on a per-unit basis, or if it would be sufficient to calibrate it on a per-design basis and put these per-design calibrated values in the firmware image. My own experience indicates that the frequency put out by the non-TC VCXO varies quite significantly with temperature, thus even if the factory calibration is done in a temperature- controlled chamber, it is not clear how much this calibration helps in subsequent end user operation when the phone can be used in a very cold environment or a very hot one, and must work flawlessly nonetheless. The truth may very well be that TI supplied their chipset customers with their standard production calibration software that includes the VCXO calibration step before Rx and Tx calibrations, and it was easier for the device manufacturers to just run this production calibration software as-is than to understand the meaning of various numbers in the afcparams table and come up with some good-for-all values. TCS211 firmware does not work without VCXO calibration on Openmoko's modem or on our semi-clone thereof (FCDEV3B) because the hard-coded values of the Psi constants (which Openmoko couldn't change because they were shackled by binary-only libs) are too far from the correct values for the VCXO featured in this design, but the calibrated Psi values differ very little from one unit to the next. We no longer have the binary-only problem that Openmoko faced, but our current approach is to replicate Om's factory per-unit calibration procedures pretty closely, including the VCXO calibration.