TEK NET

The Henderson Amateur Radio Club is pleased to present our Tek Net every Sunday evening, starting at 8pm local time (0300 UTC).

The audio portion of the Tek Net will be found on the Henderson Amateur Radio Club Repeater Network (RF).  The audio may also be accessed via Echolink (W7HEN-R node 740644) and Allstar (node 44045).

The audio will refer to this page, so that the listener can more fully understand the concepts as they are presented.

All are welcome!

June 4, 2023

‘Today’s Automotive Radars and the frequencies that are in our vehicles”

You may be surprised at some of the frequencies that reside in our vehicles, Tonight I will expose them all.

The developement of Imaging Radar has become a key sensor for Advanced Driver Assistance Systems often called ADAS.

**Note- the following data pertains to USA and other countries.

If you decide to leave the TekNet early, please go to the Summary at the end for a special message from me.

I was a bit taken back to find out that today’s vehicles have so many sensors and devices functioning using a 10Base-T1S form of communications.

Some of these are twisted wireline communications and some are wireless or a form of vehicle wifi.

What Drives the Need for 10BASE-T1S?

As the concept of zonal-based architectures evolved, it became evident that Ethernet connectivity all the way to edge sensors and actuators would be required to fully leverage the advantages of this new architecture.

The result was a call for interest from the IEEE to provide a solution to this problem.

Some of the key requirements included:

  • Faster communication than existing technologies

  • Replacement of legacy in-vehicle networking technologies like FlexRay

  • An alternative to 100BASE-T1 for ECUs where 100BASE-T1 is not cost and energy efficient

  • The ability to support connectivity for simple and redundant sensor networks

As you can see today’s vehicles have gotten to be a massive amount of information handling that the vehicles ECU (Electronic Control Module) has to process and respond to, with actual control functions in the vehicle.

Like any good Tek Net session, I want to cover the actual frequencies that are being used.

It might be fun to see what some of these signals look like using some of the SDR dongles that can operate at these high frequencies.

What are some of the things requiring radar?

Adaptive Cruise Control          Emergency Braking          Pedestrian Detection          Collision Avoidance             Traffic Sign Recognition          Cross Traffic Alert            Parking Assist                    Rear Collision Warning      Blind Spot Detection             360 degree Surround View

By Category:

Vehicle Connectivity…

Vehicle Radio Frequency ID (RFID)–   125 khz|134 khz|250 khz|375 khz|500 khz|625 khz|750 khz|875 khz |950 Mhz

Near Field Communications – 13.560 Mhz

Electronic Toll Collection – 755.500 Mhz|764.500 Mhz

5G Cellular service- 410 Mhz – 7.125 Ghz |  24.25 Ghz – 52.6 Ghz

Bluetooth – 2.402 Ghz – 2.4835 Ghz

Built-in Universal Garage Door opener – 300 Mhz – 400Mhz

Emeregency call (eCall) – 2G to 5G   340Mhz to 7.125 Ghz

Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) – 900 Mhz|2.4 Ghz|3.6 Ghz|4.9/5 Ghz|5.9 Ghz|60 Ghz

Cellular Vehicle-to-everything communications ( C-V2X) – 5.9 Ghz

Vehicle-to-everything Communications ( V2X) – 5.9 Ghz

Global Navigation Systems (GNSS)…

USA GNSS (GPS) 1176 Mhz thru 1575 Mhz

 

Infotainment…

AM radio – LF-148 Khz- 284 Khz |MF-530 Khz – 1705 Khz |HF-2.3 Mhz- 26.1 Mhz

FM radio Band I – 47 Mhz – 87 Mhz| Band II – 88 Mhz – 105 Mhz| Band III – 174 Mhz – 216 Mhz

Digital audio broadcasting (DAB/DAB+) – 174 Mhz – 230 Mhz

Digital video broadcasting (DVB) – VHF band 3 – 174 Mhz – 230 Mhz | UHF band 470 Mhz – 850 Mhz

Sirius XM – 2.3 Ghz

Vehicle Information & communications system (VICS) – VICS (FM) 70 Mhz – 90 Mhz | VICS (ISM) – 5.8 Ghz

Integrated services digital broadcasting terrestial (ISDBT) – 470 Mhz – 770 Mhz

Advanced Driver Assist Systems (ADAS)…

Short range radar (Legacy)- 21.65 GHz – 26.65 Ghz

Short range radar – 77 Ghz – 87 Ghz

Ultra short range radar – 134 Ghz – 141 Ghz

Long range radar – 76Ghz – 77 Ghz

 Ultrasonic ( parking assist & side collision prevention) – 48 Khz

Vehicle Body Electronics…

Remote Keyless entry (RKE) – 315.00 Mhz – 415 Mhz

Telestart & Remote controlled heating (RCH) – 863 Mhz- 868 Mhz

Tire Pressure monitoring System (TPMS) – 315.0 Mhz – 433.92 Mhz

Gesture Control & passenger monitoring – Interior radar 57 Ghz- 66 Ghz

Vehicle Electrical Drive train…

Wireless electrical vehicle charging system (WEVCS) – 81.39 Khz – 90 Khz

In SUMMARY…

Besides finding that all these frequencies seem pretty cool from a technelogical stand point, I guess what I really want everyone to take away from tonight’s session is that we as amateurs are the minority when it comes to trying to protect our frequency spectrum, we must stand together!

As you can see the auto industry has already claimed some of our frequencies for their own use.

We may not see these signals because they are so very low in RF level, but the fact that the Auto Industry Lobbyists are taking our spectrum from us is what we need to be aware of.

Get involved, I have for the past 12 years send a $15.00 monthly donation (auto-debit) to the ARRL Spectrum Defense Fund, they have represent the amateurs frequency allocations and fight these lobbyists when they come up with something new.

At times that’s not enough and we still end up losing something….

The information for tonight’s Tek Net is from several ROHDE & SCHWARZ webinars.

THANK YOU to all the participants on tonight’s TEK NET.

Please send your comments on tonight’s Tek Net and any suggestions for topics you would like to see in the future to wb6amt@cox.net or text to 702-372-9891.

73 until next week.

DE WB6AMT Earl