BlueVox2 Headset Portland OR

This article offers a look at the BlueVox2 Headset, a product which features noise cancellation and dual-microphone channels.

Local Companies

ABHT Structural Engineers
503-243-6682
1640 NW Johnson St.
Portland, OR
Sherpa Design Inc.
503-771-3570
6700 N. New York Avenue
Portland, AK
Prime Design Engineering LLC
503-544-6606
18145 sw Jeremy street
Beaverton, OR
Tetra Tech Kcm-Portland
(503) 684-9097
7080 SW Fir Loop
Portland, OR
Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade & Douglas Inc
(503) 274-8772
400 SW 6th Ave Ste 802
Portland, OR
Dhi Inc
(503) 827-5900
319 SW Washington St
Portland, OR
Power Engineers
(503) 244-9321
9320 SW Barbur Blvd
Portland, OR
Wiss Janney Elstner Associates
(503) 227-1277
Portland, OR
J H I Engineering
(503) 223-7799
3420 SW MacAdam Ave
Portland, OR
Cooper Zietz Engineers Inc
(503) 253-5429
421 SW 6th Ave Ste 1210
Portland, OR

provided by: EDN

In the world of Bluetooth-headset design, every cent of the BOM (bill of materials) counts. With that fact in mind, CSR has introduced single-chip devices with BOM figures of $5 and $6. The BlueVox2 headset costs $5, and the extra $1 adds DSP for active noise cancellation to remove ambient sounds from the microphone channel. The company?s Kalimba block adds the DSP function, with either single-microphone operation or dual-microphone channels; the second microphone is for ambient noise and adds just a few cents to the cost. The DSP code is in ROM, also lowering costs.

The chip operates to Bluetooth 2.1 EDR (enhanced data rate) and implements the company?s AuriStream codec for improved voice quality and lower power when both ends of the link can use it or autonegotiates to fall back to a standard codec if not. Power management, including battery charging, is on-chip; the Bluetooth core is CSR?s Bluecore5 block, and the control processor is an XAP2+ + RISC core from Cambridge Consultants (www.cambridgeconsultants.com). A reference design is available; it includes not only complete layout and component information, but also a built and working example. Power demand is 11 to 14 mA at 3.7V, depending on the codec in use. Transmitter power is 8 dBm, and receiver sensitivity is 290 dBm. These figures provide greater link robustness and avoid cross-body signal-loss dropouts, according to the company. The non-DSP version has similar RF performance and power requirements of 6.5 to 8.5 mA.

ECSR, www.csr.com.



author: by Graham Prophet

EDN. Copyright © 2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Featured Local Company

ABHT Structural Engineers

503-243-6682
1640 NW Johnson St.
Portland, OR

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