Gps jammer work anniversary gif - gps jammer radius network

Gps jammer work anniversary gif - gps jammer radius network

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Off-the-Shelf Antennas for Controlled-Reception-Pattern Antenna Arrays By Yu-Hsuan Chen, Sherman Lo, Dennis M. Akos, David S. De Lorenzo, and Per Enge INNOVATION INSIGHTS by Richard Langley THE ANTENNA IS A CRITICAL COMPONENT OF ANY GNSS RECEIVING EQUIPMENT. It must be carefully designed for the frequencies and structures of the signals to be acquired and tracked. Important antenna properties include polarization, frequency coverage, phase-center stability, multipath suppression, the antenna’s impact on receiver sensitivity, reception or gain pattern, and interference handling. While all of these affect an antenna’s performance, let’s just look at the last two here. The gain pattern of an antenna is the spatial variation of the gain, or ratio of the power delivered by the antenna for a signal arriving from a particular direction compared to that delivered by a hypothetical isotropic reference antenna. Typically, for GNSS antennas, the reference antenna is also circularly polarized and the gain is then expressed in dBic units. An antenna may have a gain pattern with a narrow central lobe or beam if it is used for communications between two fixed locations or if the antenna can be physically steered to point in the direction of a particular transmitter. GNSS signals, however, arrive from many directions simultaneously, and so most GNSS receiving antennas tend to be omni-directional in azimuth with a gain roll-off from the antenna boresight to the horizon. While such an antenna is satisfactory for many applications, it is susceptible to accidental or deliberate interference from signals arriving from directions other than those of GNSS signals. Interference effects could be minimized if the gain pattern could be adjusted to null-out the interfering signals or to peak the gain in the directions of all legitimate signals. Such a controlled-reception-pattern antenna (CRPA) can be constructed using an array of antenna elements, each one being a patch antenna, say, with the signals from the elements combined before feeding them to the receiver. The gain pattern of the array can then be manipulated by electronically adjusting the phase relationship between the elements before the signals are combined. However, an alternative approach is to feed the signals from each element to separate banks of tracking channels in the receiver and form a beam-steering vector based on the double-difference carrier-phase measurements from pairs of elements that is subsequently used to weight the signals from the elements before they are processed to obtain a position solution. In this month’s column, we learn how commercial off-the-shelf antennas and a software-defined receiver can be used to design and test such CRPA arrays. “Innovation” features discussions about advances in GPS technology, its applications, and the fundamentals of GPS positioning. The column is coordinated by Richard Langley, Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New Brunswick. To contact him with topic ideas, email him at lang @ unb.ca. Signals from global navigation satellite systems are relatively weak and thus vulnerable to deliberate or unintentional interference. An electronically steered antenna array system provides an effective approach to mitigate interference by controlling the reception pattern and steering the system’s beams or nulls. As a result, so-called controlled-reception-pattern-antenna (CRPA) arrays have been deployed by organizations such as the U.S. Department of Defense, which seeks high levels of interference rejection. Our efforts have focused on developing a commercially viable CRPA system using commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) components to support the needs of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) alternative position navigation and timing (APNT) efforts. In 2010, we implemented a seven-element, two-bit-resolution, single-beam and real-time CRPA software receiver. In 2011, the receiver was upgraded to support all-in-view, 16-bit-resolution with four elements. Even though we can implement these CRPA software receivers in real time, the performance of anti-interference is highly dependent on the antenna array layout and characteristics of the antenna elements. Our beamforming approach allows us to use several COTS antennas as an array rather than a custom-designed and fully calibrated antenna. The use of COTS antennas is important, as the goal of our effort is to develop a CRPA for commercial endeavors — specifically for robust timing for the national airspace. Hence, it is important to study the geometry layout of the individual antennas of the array to assess the layouts and to determine how antenna performance affects the array’s use. In our work, we have developed a procedure for calculating the electrical layouts of an antenna array by differential carrier-phase positioning. When compared to the physical layout, the results of electrical layouts can be used to determine the mutual coupling effect of each combination. Using the electrical layout, the resultant gain patterns can be calculated and used to see the beamwidth and the side-lobe issue. This is important as these factors have significant effects on anti-interference performance. This study focuses on understanding the performance effects of geometry and developing a method for describing the best geometry. We adopted three models of COTS antenna and two possible layouts for a four-element array. Then, signal collection hardware consisting of four Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP) software-defined radios and one host personal computer was assembled to collect array data sets for each layout/antenna combination. Our developed CRPA software receiver was used to process all data sets and output carrier-phase measurements. In this article, we will present the pattern analysis for the two selected layouts and describe how we collected the experimental data. We’ll then show the results of calculating the electrical spacing for the layouts are compare them to the physical layouts. Lastly, we’ll show the resulting patterns, discuss the antenna mutual coupling effects, and give our conclusions. Antenna Array Pattern Analysis Pattern is defined as the directional strength of a radio-frequency signal viewed from the antenna. The pattern of an antenna array is the product of the isotropic array factor and the isolated element pattern. We assume that the pattern of each element is identical and only consider the isotropic array factor. FIGURE 1 shows the coordination of an antenna array. The first element is set as a reference position. The x-axis is the east direction, the y-axis is the north direction, and the z-axis is the up direction. The baseline vector of the ith antenna is given by and  is the unit vector to the satellite. Figure 1. Antenna array geometry and direction of satellite. Array elements are identified as E#1, E#2, E#3, and E#4. The isotropic array factor is given by    (1) where λ is wavelength, and Ai is a complex constant. Currently, we only implement a four-element-array CRPA software receiver in real time. Hence, we analyze two kinds of layout of half-wavelength four-element arrays: a symmetrical Y array and a square array. Each antenna is separated from its nearest neighbor by a half wavelength. FIGURE 2 shows photos of the two layouts. FIGURE 3 shows the physical layouts. Figure 2. Photos of antenna arrays (left: Y array; right: square array). Figure 3A. Physical layout of antenna arrays (Y array). Figure 3B. Physical layout of antenna arrays (square array). The antenna patterns towards an elevation angle of 90 degrees, computed using equation 1 and the design layouts, are shown in FIGURE 4. One of the key characteristics of a pattern is the beamwidth, which is defined as the angle with 3-dB loss. FIGURE 5 shows the patterns in elevation angle where the beamwidth of the Y layout is 74 degrees and 86 degrees for the square layout. A narrow beamwidth will benefit anti-interference performance particularly if the interference is close to the direction of a target satellite. Figure 4. Patterns of antenna arrays (left: Y array; right: square array). Figure 5. Pattern beamwidths of Y and square arrays (3 dB beamwidth shown). Specifications of COTS Antennas Typically, the COTS antenna selection is determined by high gain and great out-of-band rejection. TABLE 1 shows the specifications of the three antenna models used in this article. These antennas are all patch antennas. The antennas are equipped with surface-acoustic-wave filters for rejecting out-of-band signals. A three-stage low noise amplifier with over 30 dB gain is also embedded in each antenna. Table 1. Specifications of COTS antennas used. Signal Collection Hardware and Experimental Setup The hardware used to collect the antenna array datasets is shown in FIGURE 6 with block-diagram representation in FIGURE 7. The hardware includes a four-element antenna array, four USRP2 software radio systems and one host computer. The signal received from the COTS antenna passes to a USRP2 board equipped with a 800–2300 MHz DBSRX2 programmable mixing and down-conversion daughterboard. The individual USRP2 boards are synchronized by a 10-MHz external common clock generator and a pulse-per-second (PPS) signal. The USRP2s are controlled by the host computer running the Ubuntu distribution of Linux. The open-source GNU Radio software-defined radio block is used to configure USRP2s and collect datasets. All USRP2s are configured to collect the L1 (1575.42 MHz) signal. The signals are converted to near zero intermediate frequency (IF) and digitized to 14-bit complex outputs (I and Q). Figure 6. Photo of the signal collection hardware. Figure 7. Block diagram of the signal collection hardware. The sampling rate is set as 4 MHz. The host computer uses two solid state drives for storing data sets. For our study, a 64-megabytes per second data transfer rate is needed. The fast solid state drives are especially useful when using high bandwidth signals such as L5, which will require an even higher data streaming rate (80 megabytes per second per channel). To compare the physical and electrical layouts of the antenna arrays, we set up the signal collection hardware to record six data sets for the two layouts and the three antenna models as shown in TABLE 2. All of the data sets were five minutes long to obtain enough carrier-phase measurements for positioning. Table 2. Experimental setups. Logging Carrier-Phase Measurements To calculate the precise spacing between the antenna elements, hundreds of seconds of carrier-phase measurements from each element are needed. The collected data sets were provided by our in-house-developed CRPA software receiver. The receiver was developed using Visual Studio under Windows. Most of source code is programmed using C++. Assembly language is used to program the functions with high computational complexity such as correlation operations. The software architecture of the receiver is depicted in FIGURE 8. This architecture exploits four sets of 12 tracking channels in parallel to process each IF signal from an antenna element. Each channel is dedicated to tracking the signal of a single satellite. The tracking channels output carrier-phase measurements to build the steering vectors for each satellite. The Minimum Variance Distortionless Response (MVDR) algorithm was adopted for adaptively calculating the weights for beamforming. Here, there are 12 weight sets, one for each satellite in a tracking channel, for the desired directions of satellites. Figure 8. Block diagram of the software architecture. Using the pre-correlation beamforming approach, the weights are multiplied with IF data and summed over all elements to form 12 composite signals. These signals are then processed by composite tracking channels. Finally, positioning is performed if pseudoranges and navigation messages are obtained from these channels. FIGURE 9 is the graphical user interface (GUI) of the CRPA software receiver. It consists of the channel status of all channels, carrier-phase differences, positioning results, an east-north (EN) plot, a sky plot, a carrier-to-noise-density (C/N0) plot and the gain patterns of the array for each tracked satellite. In the figure, the CRPA software receiver is tracking 10 satellites and its positioning history is shown in the EN plot. The beamforming channels have about 6 dB more gain in C/N0 than the channels of a single element. In each pattern, the direction with highest gain corresponds to the direction of the satellite. While the CRPA software receiver is running, the carrier-phase measurements of all elements and the azimuth and elevation angle of the satellites are logged every 100 milliseconds. Each data set in Table 2 was processed by the software receiver to log the data. Figure 9. Screenshot of the controlled-reception-pattern-antenna software-receiver graphical user interface. Electrical Layout of Antenna Array – Procedure The procedure of calculating the electrical layout of an antenna array is depicted in FIGURE 10. The single-difference integrated carrier phase (ICP) between the signals of an element, i, and a reference element, j, is represented as:    (2) where rkij is differential range toward the kth satellite between the ith and jth antenna elements (a function of the baseline vector between the ith and jth elements), δLij is the cable-length difference between the ith and jth antenna elements, Nkij is the integer associated with Φkij , εkij and  is the phase error. The double-difference ICP between the kth satellite and reference satellite l is represented as:    (3) The cable-length difference term is subtracted in the double difference. Since the distances between the antenna elements are close to one wavelength, equation (3) can be written as:    (4) where  is the unit vector to satellite k, pij is the baseline vector between the ith and jth elements. By combining all the double-difference measurements of the ijth pair of elements, the observations equation can be represented as:       (5) From the positioning results of composite channels, the azimuth and elevation angle of satellites are used to manipulate matrix G. To solve equation (5), the LAMBDA method was adopted to give the integer vector N. Then, pij  is solved by substituting N into equation (5). Finally, the cable-length differences are obtained by substituting the solutions of N and pij into equation (2). This approach averages the array pattern across all satellite measurements observed during the calibration period. Figure 10. Procedure for calculating antenna-array electrical spacing. Electrical Layout of Antenna Array – Results Using the procedure in the previous section, all electrical layouts of the antenna array were calculated and are shown in FIGURES 11 and 12. We aligned the vectors from element #1 to element #2 for all layouts. TABLE 3 lists the total differences between the physical and electrical layouts. For the same model of antenna, the Y layout has less difference than the square layout. And, in terms of antenna model, antenna #1 has the least difference for both Y and square layouts. We could conclude that the mutual coupling effect of the Y layout is less than that of the square layout, and that antenna #1 has the smallest mutual coupling effect among all three models of antenna for these particular elements and observations utilized. Figure 11. Results of electrical layout using three models of antenna compared to the physical layout for the Y array. Figure 12. Results of electrical layout using three models of antenna compared to physical layout for the square array. Table 3. Total differences between physical and electrical layouts. To compare the patterns of all calculated electrical layouts, we selected two specific directions: an elevation angle of 90 degrees and a target satellite, WAAS GEO PRN138, which was available for all data sets. The results are shown in FIGURES 13 and 14, respectively. From Figure 13, the beamwidth of the Y layout is narrower than that of the square layout for all antenna models. When compared to Figure 5, this result confirms the validity of our analysis approach. But, in Figure 14, a strong sidelobe appears at azimuth -60º in the pattern of Y layout for antenna #2. If there is some interference located in this direction, the anti-interference performance of the array will be limited. This is due to a high mutual coupling effect of antenna #2 and only can be seen after calculating the electrical layout. Figure 13. Patterns of three models of antenna and two layouts toward an elevation angle of 90 degrees. Figure 14. Patterns of three models of antenna and two layouts toward the WAAS GEO satellite PRN138. Conclusions The results of our electrical layout experiment show that the Y layout has a smaller difference with respect to the physical layout than the square layout. That implies that the elements of the Y layout have less mutual coupling. For the antenna selection, arrays based on antenna model #1 showed the least difference between electrical and physical layout. And its pattern does not have a high grating lobe in a direction other than to the target satellite. The hardware and methods used in this article can serve as a testing tool for any antenna array. Specifically, our methodology, which can be used to collect data, compare physical and electrical layouts, and assess resultant antenna gain patterns, allows us to compare the performances of different options and select the best antenna and layout combination. Results can be used to model mutual coupling and the overall effect of layout and antenna type on array gain pattern and overall CRPA capabilities. This procedure is especially important when using COTS antennas to assemble an antenna array and as we increase the number of antenna elements and the geometry possibilities of the array. Acknowledgments The authors gratefully acknowledge the work of Dr. Jiwon Seo in building the signal collection hardware. The authors also gratefully acknowledge the Federal Aviation Administration Cooperative Research and Development Agreement 08-G-007 for supporting this research. This article is based on the paper “A Study of Geometry and Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) Antennas for Controlled Reception Pattern Antenna (CRPA) Arrays” presented at ION GNSS 2012, the 25th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, held in Nashville, Tennessee, September 17–21, 2012. Manufacturers The antennas used to construct the arrays are Wi-Sys Communications Inc., now PCTEL, Inc. models WS3978 and WS3997 and PCTEL, Inc. model 3978D-HR. The equipment used to collect data sets includes Ettus Research LLC model USRP2 software-defined radios and associated DBSRX2 daughterboards. Yu-Hsuan Chen is a postdoctoral scholar in the GNSS Research Laboratory at Stanford University, Stanford, California. Sherman Lo is a senior research engineer at the Stanford GNSS Research Laboratory. Dennis M. Akos is an associate professor with the Aerospace Engineering Science Department in the University of Colorado at Boulder with visiting appointments at Luleå Technical University, Sweden, and Stanford University. David S. De Lorenzo is a principal research engineer at Polaris Wireless, Mountain View, California, and a consulting research associate to the Stanford GNSS Research Laboratory. Per Enge is a professor of aeronautics and astronautics at Stanford University, where he is the Kleiner-Perkins Professor in the School of Engineering. He directs the GNSS Research Laboratory. FURTHER READING • Authors’ Publications “A Study of Geometry and Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) Antennas for Controlled Reception Pattern Antenna (CRPA) Arrays” by Y.-H. Chen in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2012, the 25th International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Nashville, Tennessee, September 17–21, 2012, pp. 907–914 (ION Student Paper Award winner). “A Real-Time Capable Software-Defined Receiver Using GPU for Adaptive Anti-Jam GPS Sensors” by J. Seo, Y.-H. Chen, D.S. De Lorenzo, S. Lo, P. Enge, D. Akos, and J. Lee in Sensors, Vol. 11, No. 9, 2011, pp. 8966–8991, doi: 10.3390/s110908966. “Real-Time Software Receiver for GPS Controlled Reception Pattern Array Processing” by Y.-H. Chen, D.S. De Lorenzo, J. Seo, S. Lo, J.-C. Juang, P. Enge, and D.M. Akos in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2010, the 23rd International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Portland, Oregon, September 21–24, 2010, pp. 1932–1941. “A GNSS Software Receiver Approach for the Processing of Intermittent Data” by Y.-H. Chen and J.-C. Juang in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2007, the 20th International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Fort Worth, Texas, September 25–28, 2007, pp. 2772–2777. • Controlled-Reception-Pattern Antenna Arrays “Anti-Jam Protection by Antenna: Conception, Realization, Evaluation of a Seven-Element GNSS CRPA” by F. Leveau, S. Boucher, E. Goron, and H. Lattard in GPS World, Vol. 24, No. 2, February 2013, pp. 30–33. “Development of Robust Safety-of-Life Navigation Receivers” by M.V.T. Heckler, M. Cuntz, A. Konovaltsev, L.A. Greda, A. Dreher, and M. Meurer in IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Vol. 59, No. 4, April 2011, pp. 998–1005, doi: 10.1109/TMTT.2010.2103090. Phased Array Antennas, 2nd Edition, by R. C. Hansen, published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey, 2009. • Antenna Principles “Selecting the Right GNSS Antenna” by G. Ryley in GPS World, Vol. 24, No. 2, February 2013, pp. 40–41 (in PDF of 2013 Antenna Survey.) “GNSS Antennas: An Introduction to Bandwidth, Gain Pattern, Polarization, and All That” by G.J.K. Moernaut and D. Orban in GPS World, Vol. 20, No. 2, February 2009, pp. 42–48. “A Primer on GPS Antennas” by R.B. Langley in GPS World, Vol. 9, No. 7, July 1998, pp. 50-54. • Software-Defined Radios for GNSS “A USRP2-based Reconfigurable Multi-constellation Multi-frequency GNSS Software Receiver Front End” by S. Peng and Y. Morton in GPS Solutions, Vol. 17, No. 1, January 2013, pp. 89-102. “Software GNSS Receiver: An Answer for Precise Positioning Research” by T. Pany, N. Falk, B. Riedl, T. Hartmann, G. Stangl, and C. Stöber in GPS World, Vol. 23, No. 9, September 2012, pp. 60–66. “Simulating GPS Signals: It Doesn’t Have to Be Expensive” by A. Brown, J. Redd, and M.-A. Hutton in GPS World, Vol. 23, No. 5, May 2012, pp. 44–50. Digital Satellite Navigation and Geophysics: A Practical Guide with GNSS Signal Simulator and Receiver Laboratory by I.G. Petrovski and T. Tsujii with foreword by R.B. Langley, published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K., 2012. “A Real-Time Software Receiver for the GPS and Galileo L1 Signals” by B.M. Ledvina, M.L. Psiaki, T.E. Humphreys, S.P. Powell, and P.M. Kintner, Jr. in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2006, the 19th International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Fort Worth, Texas, September 26–29, 2006, pp. 2321–2333.

gps jammer work anniversary gif

Gateway liteon pa-1121-08 ac adapter 19vdc 6.3a used -(+) 2.5x5..band scan with automatic jamming (max.black & decker vpx0310 class 2 battery charger used 7.4vdc cut w,foreen industries ltd. 28-d09-100 ac adapter 9v dc 100ma used 2.similar to our other devices out of our range of cellular phone jammers,ibm 02k3882 ac adapter 16v dc 5.5a car charger power supply.in-li yl-12-12 ac adapter 12vac 12va used ~(~) 2pin din female p.a piezo sensor is used for touch sensing.nexxtech 2731411 reverse voltage converter foriegn 40w 240v ac,creative tesa2g-1501700d ac dc adapter 14v 1.7a power supply,sony ac-e455b ac adapter 4.5vdc 500ma used -(+) 1.4x4x9mm 90° ro.panasonic cf-aa1639 m17 15.6vdc 3.86a used works 1x4x6x9.3mm - -,the circuit shown here gives an early warning if the brake of the vehicle fails.panasonic pv-a19-k ac adapter 6vdc 1.8a used battery charger dig.video digitial camera travel battery charger,394903-001 ac adapter 19v 7.1a power supply,sony adp-8ar a ac adapter 5vdc 1500ma used ite power supply.mastercraft 5104-18-2(uc) 23v 600ma power supply,liteon pa-1900-33 ac adapter 12vdc 7.5a -(+)- 5x7.5mm 100-240vac,powmax ky-05048s-29 battery charger 29vdc 1.5a 3pin female ac ad,d41w120500-m2/1 ac adapter 12vdc 500ma used power supply 120v,dve dsa-31s fus 5050 ac adapter+5v dc 0.5a new -(+) 1.4x3.4x9.,anoma aspr0515-0808r ac adapter 5vdc 0.8a 15vdc 0.75a 5pin molex,ibm 02k6661 ac adapter 16vdc 4.5a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 100-240vac used,when the temperature rises more than a threshold value this system automatically switches on the fan.here is the diy project showing speed control of the dc motor system using pwm through a pc.linearity lad6019ab5 ac adapter 12vdc 5a used 2.5 x 5.4 x 10.2 m.circuit-test ad-1280 ac adapter 12v dc 800ma new 9pin db9 female.6 different bands (with 2 additinal bands in option)modular protection,bomb threats or when military action is underway,beigixing 36vdc 1.6a electric scooter dirt bike razor charger at,usb a charger ac adapter 5v 1a wallmount us plug home power supp.350702002co ac adapter 7.5v dc 200ma used 2.5x5.5x11mm straight,netgear sal018f1na ac adapter 12vdc 1.5a used -(+) 2x5.5x9mm rou,dve dsa-30w-05 us 050200 ac adapter+5v dc 4.0a used -(+) 1.3x3,canon pa-v2 ac adapter 7v 1700ma 20w class 2 power supply.simple mobile jammer circuit diagram,x10 wireless xm13a ac adapter 12vdc 80ma used remote controlled,the company specializes in counter-ied electronic warfare.comos comera power ajl-905 ac adapter 9vdc 500ma used -(+) 2x5.5.vswr over protectionconnections,lac-cp19v 120w ac adapter 19v 6.3a replacement power supply comp,liteon pa-1151-08 ac adapter 19v 7.9a used 3.3 x 5.5 x 12.9mm,long-range portable protection.thus it was possible to note how fast and by how much jamming was established.fairway ve20-120 ac adapter 12vdc 1.66a used 1.7x4mm straight ro.

Merkury f550 1 hour sony f550 rapid lithium ion battery charger.eleker ac car adapter phone charger 4-10vdc used 11-26v,tatung tps-048 ac adapter 12vdc 4a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm 100-240vac ite,this article shows the circuits for converting small voltage to higher voltage that is 6v dc to 12v but with a lower current rating,delta adp-10jb ac dc adapter 3.3v 2a 7v 0.3a 15555550 4pin power.amigo ams4-1501600fu ac adapter 15vdc 1.6a -(+) 1.7x4.7mm 100-24.ibm 85g6704 ac adapter 16v dc 2.2a power supply 4pin 85g6705 for.intertek bhy481351000u ac adapter 13.5vdc 1000ma used -(+) 2.3x5,btc adp-305 a1 ac adapter 5vdc 6a power supply,intermec 074246 5v 3a ite power supply 851-089-001,if you understand the above circuit,replacement ac adapter 19v dc 4.74a desktop power supply same as,delta adp-15nh a power supply 30vdc 0.5a 21g0325 for lexmark 442,d-link ad-12s05 ac adapter 5vdc 2.5a -(+) 2x5.5mm 90° 120vac pow.philips tc21m-1402 ac adapter 5-59vdc 35w 25w used db9 connecto,this project shows the starting of an induction motor using scr firing and triggering,griffin p2275 charger 5vdc 2.1a from 12vdc new dual usb car adap,metro lionville fw 7218m/12 ac adapter 12vdc 1a -(+) used 2x5.5m,oem ads18b-w 220082 ac adapter 22vdc 818ma new -(+)- 3x6.5mm ite,solutions can also be found for this,canon cb-5l battery charger 18.4vdc 1.2a ds8101 for camecorder c,i adaptor ac adapter 24vdc 1.9a 2 century cia2/g3 i.t.e power su,sony vgp-ac19v19 ac adapter 19.5vdc 3.9a used -(+) 4x6x9.5mm 90,replacement af1805-a ac adapter 5vdc 2.5a power supply 3 pin din,although industrial noise is random and unpredictable.simple mobile jammer circuit diagram cell phone jammer circuit explanation,li shin lse9802a2060 ac adapter 20vdc 3a 60w max -(+)- used,eng 3a-154wp05 ac adapter 5vdc 2.6a -(+) used 2 x 5.4 x 9.5mm st.apple a1021 ac adapter 24vdc 2.65a desktop power supply power bo.uniross x-press 150 aab03000-b-1 european battery charger for aa,iona ad-1214-cs ac adapter 12vdc 140ma used 90° class 2 power su,a frequency counter is proposed which uses two counters and two timers and a timer ic to produce clock signals,samsung apn-1105abww ac adapter 5vdc 2.2a used -(+) 1x4x8mm roun.craftsman 974062-002 dual fast charger 14.4v cordless drill batt,dell adp-50sb ac adapter 19vdc 2.64a 2pin laptop power supply.nikon mh-18 quick charger 8.4vdc 0.9a used battery power charger,technology private limited - offering jammer free device,this project shows the controlling of bldc motor using a microcontroller,deer ad1505c ac adapter 5vdc 2.4a ac adapter plugin power supply,altec lansing s012bu0500250 ac adapter 5vdc 2500ma -(+) 2x5.5mm,nec adp52 ac adapter 19vdc 2.4a 3pin new 100-240vac genuine pow.the paper shown here explains a tripping mechanism for a three-phase power system,sony rfu-90uc rfu adapter 5v can use with sony ccd-f33 camcorder.ibm pscv540101a ac adapter 12v 4.5v used 4.4 x 5.8 x 10.3mm roun,1 w output powertotal output power,ibm 2684292 ac adapter 15v dc 2.7a used 3x5.5x9.3mm straight.

Audiovox cnr505 ac adapter 7vdc 700ma used 1 x 2.4 x 9.5mm.proxim 481210003co ac adapter 12vdc 1a -(+) 2x5.5mm 90° 120vac w.cybiko ac adapter 5v dc 300ma used usb connector class 2 power u,tyco 97433 rc car 6v nicd battery charger works with most 6.0v r,kensington k33404us ac adapter 16v 5.62a 19vdc 4.74a 90w power,l.t.e gfp121u-0913 ac adapter 9vdc 1.3a -(+) used 2x5.5mm.ault mw116ka1249f02 ac adapter 12vdc 6.67a 4pin (: :) straight.navtel car dc adapter 10vdc 750ma power supply for testing times.hi capacity ac-b20h ac adapter 15-24vdc 5a 9w used 3x6.5mm lapto.dc90300a ac adapter dc 9v 300ma 6wclass 2 power transformer.pa-1700-02 replacement ac adapter 18.5v dc 3.5a laptop power sup.hipro hp-ol060d03 ac adapter 12vdc 5a used -(+)- 2.5x5.5power su.philips 4203-030-40060 ac adapter 2.3vdc 100ma used class 2 tran,sony pcga-ac19v1 ac adapter 19.5 3a used -(+) 4.4x6.5mm 90° 100-.the data acquired is displayed on the pc,about radar busters this site is family owned and founded by ",tech std-2427p ac adapter 24vdc 2.7a used -(+) 2.5x5.5x9.5mm rou.lenovo 42t4430 ac adapter 20v 4.5a 90w pa-190053i used 5.6 x 7.9.delta iadp-10sb hp ipaq ac adapter 5vdc 2a digital camera pda,110 – 220 v ac / 5 v dcradius,this project shows automatic change over switch that switches dc power automatically to battery or ac to dc converter if there is a failure,changzhou linke lk-ac-120050 ac adapter 12vac 500ma used ~(~) 3.,this paper uses 8 stages cockcroft –walton multiplier for generating high voltage.hh-stc001a 5vdc 1.1a used travel charger power supply 90-250vac,finecom azs5439 pw125 ac adapter 9v dc 4a -(+) 2.5x5.5mm replace,philips 4222 029 00030 ac adapter 4.4vdc 0.85va used shaver powe,it should be noted that operating or even owing a cell phone jammer is illegal in most municipalities and specifically so in the united states,lishin lse0202c2090 ac adapter 20v dc 4.5a power supply.sony ericson cst-60 i.t.e power supply cellphone k700 k750 w300,this project shows the system for checking the phase of the supply.f10723-a ac adapter 24vdc 3a used -(+) 2x5.5mm rounnd barrel.the integrated working status indicator gives full information about each band module.compaq series 2872a ac adapter 18.75v 3.15a 41w? 246960-001,conair 9a200u-28 ac adapter 9vac 200ma class 2 transformer powe.panasonic ag-b3a video ac adapter 12vdc 1.2a power supply,information technology s008cm0500100 ac adapter 5vdc 1000ma used,asus pa-1650-02 ac adapter 19vdc 3.42a 65w used -(+)- 2.5x5.4mm.whether in town or in a rural environment.samsung aa-e7 ac dc adapter 8.4v 1.5a power supply for camcorder.li shin lse9901a2070 ac adapter 20v dc 3.25a 65w max used,5% to 90%the pki 6200 protects private information and supports cell phone restrictions,meanwell gs220a24-r7b ac adapter 24vdc 9.2a 221w 4pin +(::)-10mm.atlinks 5-2633 ac adapter 5v 400ma used 2x5.5x8.4mm round barrel,craftsman 982245-001 dual fast charger 16.8v cordless drill batt,gemini dcu090050 ac adapter 9vdc 500ma used -(+)- 2.5x5.4mm stra,dell pa-1600-06d2 ac adapter 19v dc 3.16a 60w -(+)- used 3x5mm.

Mainly for door and gate control.teamgreat t94b027u ac adapter 3.3vdc 3a -(+) 2.5x5.4mm 90 degree,cs-6002 used ac grill motor 120vac 4w e199757 214624 usa canada.mobile phone jammer market size 2021 by growth potential,just mobile 3 socket charger max 6.5a usb 1a 5v new in pack univ.hitachi pc-ap4800 ac adapter 19vdc 2.37a used -(+)- 1.9 x 2.7 x,casio ad-5ul ac adapter 9vdc 850ma used +(-) 2x5.5x9.7mm 90°righ,radioshack ni-cd ni-mh 1 hr battery charger used 5.6vdc 900ma 23.tc-60a ac adapter 9vdc 1.3a -(+) 1.3x3.5mm 100-240vac used direc,sony pcga-ac19v3 ac adapter 19.5vdc 4.7a 90w power supply vgp-ac.fisher-price na060x010u ac adapter 6vdc 100ma used 1.3x3.3mm.delta adp-90cd db ac adapter 19vdc 4.74a used -(+)- 2x5.5x11mm,tela-41-120400u ac dc adapter 12v 400ma power supply for camera,.

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