Emulator Adapters
-
product
Carbon Monoxide Detector Adapter
COA1
UEi Test & Measurement Instruments
The COA1 Carbon Monoxide Adapter plugs into compatible iOS® or Android™ mobile device to measure carbon monoxide levels.
-
product
Passive XMC-to-PCI Express Adapter
6065
The Technobox, Inc. P/N 6065 is designed to adapt a single-wide XMC card to a 8X PCI Express slot. The 6065 supports P15 only and allows access to PN4 signal via the adapter's DIN connector. The A and C rows of a 96-pin DIN connector connect with the 64-pin user I/O connector (J4/P4) on the mezzanine card, permitting internal connection of rear I/O.
-
product
10G Ethernet Emulator
VirtualNetTM XG
VirtualNet-10G is a high-performance Network Emulator that replicates real world Ethernet network effects such as latency and errors on user traffic in a controlled environment. The VirtualNet-10G emulator uses customized ICs to support full line rate performance at all frame sizes and impairment settings. The emulator can be transparently installed in-line as shown in the diagram below. VirtualNet-10G emulator has an intuitive and easy to use GUI interface and a very powerful TCL based CLI to aid in configuration and testing.
-
product
Car-to-X Signal Strength Emulator
Qosmotec Software Solutions GmbH
QPER-C2X is a special adaptation of the signal strength emulator QPER, designed for mobile and Vehicular Ad-hoc Networks (MANet and VANet). Every radio devices in such an infrastructure-less network acts as a sender, receiver, and forwarder (router). Therefore, the ports of the QPER-C2X hardware are fully connected with each other by dynamically controllable attenuators. The system is fully designed for frequencies up to 6 GHz, since wireless communication for Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) is based on the WLAN standard IEE 802.11p from 5.850 MHz to 5.925 MHz. The connected ITS stations can be either on-board units, as they are built into cars, or road side units that are used by road infrastructure (traffic lights, road work area delimiters, velocity signs). For tests in the lab, radio modules of such ITS stations are each kept in a shielding box that prevents any unwanted radiation over the air.



