R
Richard H.
Guest
blargg27@gmail.com wrote:
the receivers (which requires some hefty horsepower to decode &
triangulate the signals).
* Use a simple transmitter fob on the mobile object.
* Have the object transmit occasionally (as frequently as you desire).
* Have N towers listen for the signal (however many it takes to cover
the site)
* Towers timestamp the signal with very high (nS?) accuracy. Distance
from each tower is calculated based on propagation delay.
* Calculate (x,y) from the 3 closest towers, or (x,y,z) from the closest 4
Sounds a lot like cell tower triangulation, eh?
Options:
* Device transmits very infrequently when stationary
* More frequently when accelerometer detects movement
Using such a system, the trick would be keeping the time sync'd very
accurately between the towers. (Separate GPS receivers, or calibrated
inter-tower cabling.) To really nail the (x,y) accuracy, the field
could be calibrated by walking around with a transmitter to correct for
multipath effects.
This approach lets you keep the mobile units very cheap and put the
power-sucking number-crunching in the towers. If the mobile fobs need
to know their location data, address it to them on a return channel from
one of the bases.
Incidentally, at least one asset tracking product works very similarly,
but the (x,y) resolution is something like 10m. Their fobs run for
years on a coin cell. (And no, I can't find their card anywhere here...)
Cheers,
Richard
Explore beyond the GPS model. Who says the mobile devices need to beIt would incorporate 4 GPS like transmitters and a number of receiver
units. This would allow me to read the receiver unit's relative
position in area surrounded by these transmitters.
the receivers (which requires some hefty horsepower to decode &
triangulate the signals).
* Use a simple transmitter fob on the mobile object.
* Have the object transmit occasionally (as frequently as you desire).
* Have N towers listen for the signal (however many it takes to cover
the site)
* Towers timestamp the signal with very high (nS?) accuracy. Distance
from each tower is calculated based on propagation delay.
* Calculate (x,y) from the 3 closest towers, or (x,y,z) from the closest 4
Sounds a lot like cell tower triangulation, eh?
Options:
* Device transmits very infrequently when stationary
* More frequently when accelerometer detects movement
Using such a system, the trick would be keeping the time sync'd very
accurately between the towers. (Separate GPS receivers, or calibrated
inter-tower cabling.) To really nail the (x,y) accuracy, the field
could be calibrated by walking around with a transmitter to correct for
multipath effects.
This approach lets you keep the mobile units very cheap and put the
power-sucking number-crunching in the towers. If the mobile fobs need
to know their location data, address it to them on a return channel from
one of the bases.
Incidentally, at least one asset tracking product works very similarly,
but the (x,y) resolution is something like 10m. Their fobs run for
years on a coin cell. (And no, I can't find their card anywhere here...)
Cheers,
Richard