Atmel adds automotive-qualified single-chip GPS receiver ICs

Dec. 4, 2008
Atmel (www.atmel.com) has introduced two automotive-grade (AEC-Q100-qualified) GPS devices, ATR0630P1 and ATR0635P1, based on Atmel's ATR0630 and ATR0635 GPS receiver devices, millions of which have been shipped since 2005 according to the company.

Atmel has introduced two automotive-grade (AEC-Q100-qualified) GPS devices, ATR0630P1 and ATR0635P1, based on Atmel's ATR0630 and ATR0635 GPS receiver devices, millions of which have been shipped since 2005 according to the company.

The 7 mm x 10 mm devices, in 96-pin BGA packages, can be used for in-vehicle navigation systems (IVNS), telematics, fleet management, dynamic car insurance fee systems (e.g., pay-as-drive), and after-market navigation products. Samples are available now. Pricing starts at $13.00 for the ATR0630P1 and $15.00 for the ATR0635P1 in 10k quantities.

Atmel said that compared with the ATR0630 and ATR0635, the new P1 versions have a 45% smaller footprint, a simpler board layout, and minimal external component count. They also benefit from reduced costs in purchasing, stocking, and mounting. The ATR0635P1's -158 dBm sensitivity allows weak-signal acquisition and tracking in urban canyons – a feature especially beneficial when a dashboard antenna is used.

The P1 versions are pin-to-pin and functionally compatible with the standard versions, so customers can use existing designs. An evaluation kit is available that includes ultra-small footprint sample designs.

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