|
From: | Nick Othieno |
Subject: | Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] Decimation Rate with a fraction part |
Date: | Sat, 5 Mar 2011 00:20:58 -0500 |
On Fri, Mar 04, 2011 at 08:51:28AM -0500, Nick Othieno wrote:Hi Nick,
> Thanks guys. The ideas looks theoretically sound, but for some reason the grc
> setup I have created does not seem to like the idea of very large interpolation
> and decimation values. It does not print out any errors, it just hangs.
don't use decimations/interpolations that large, the appropriate filters
are impossible to get working.
Rather, have a look at gr_pfb_arb_resampler_ccf. You need to rationally
resample to an approximate sampling rate and let the block do the rest
by clever algorithms.
Even if you can reach a sampling rate rationally, I usually try and
cascade it to get where I want (and I think that's how it's usually
done).
>From 16e6 to 16.3676e6 is, as Ed already mentioned, 40919/40000.
GR standard tools won't give you any good anti-aliasing filters for
this, but you could go in several steps, such as
29/20 × 17/20 × 83/100.
However, working that out already takes longer than setting up
gr_pfb_arb_resampler_ccf, or, even easier pfb_arb_resampler_ccf.py, so
I'd recommend just using that.
MB
> _______________________________________________
>
> I have attached a copy of my grc setup.
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 3, 2011 at 3:39 PM, Ed Criscuolo <address@hidden>
> wrote:
>
>
> On 3/3/11 3:04 PM, Nick Othieno wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I would like to get an output of 16.3676 Ms/s. Is it then possible to
> set a decimation values of 6.109631223? I am wondering whether
> decimation values have to be whole numbers, or whether decimation
> values
> with fraction parts are allowed.
>
>
> Decimation numbers must be integers.
>
> What you need to do is set the USRP to acquire at some value close to
> what you need, say 16 Ms/s.
>
> Then use a rational resampler with the proper numbers for interpolation
> and decimation to get the desired rate. For instance, at 16 Ms/sec,
> set interpolation to 163676 and decimation to 160000. In this case, both
> are exactly divisible by 4, so it could even be 40919 & 40000.
>
> @(^.^)@ Ed
>
>
> Discuss-gnuradio mailing list
> address@hidden
> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
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