Microwave Journal
www.microwavejournal.com/articles/24031-x-com-systems-introduces-iqc5000b-rf-signal-recording-and-playback-system

X-COM Systems introduces IQC5000B RF signal recording and playback system

March 19, 2015

X-COM Systems LLC, a subsidiary of Bird Technologies, introduced the IQC5000B RF record and playback system designed for applications such as electronic warfare, interference analysis, surveillance, and spectrum monitoring and management. In the industry’s smallest form factor, the IQC5000B has the widest instantaneous bandwidth, 4 Tbytes of removable, high-speed solid-state data storage, and other features tailored for the most demanding applications.

The IQC5000B builds on the success of its “A” predecessor, with higher performance and more features in the same small size, at the same cost. Its design reflects the need to record signals with greater bandwidths than ever before, including IEEE 802.11ac Wi-Fi, satellite communication channels, and many radars. Each of the IQC5000B’s two recording channels has an instantaneous bandwidth of 165 MHz that when combined produce a record bandwidth of 330 MHz. These signal bandwidths can be recorded at any input frequency from HF through millimeter wavelengths.

The system has twice the internal signal storage than the IQC5000A, with two high-speed, easily-removable 2-Tbyte solid-state drives configured in RAID 0 for 4 Tbytes of combined capacity. Together they allow the IQC5000B to store 83 minutes of continuous recording at the system’s full bandwidth. External SSD storage of up to 15 Tbytes can be added to allow recording times of up to 5 hours.

As the IQC5000B will often be used in secure classified environments, its SSDs can be removed and a declassification procedure performed, leaving the system entirely free of data and restoring it to factory defaults, effectively making it useless when falling into the wrong hands.

The IQC5000B employs state-of-the-art signal analyzers from Keysight Technologies, Rohde & Schwarz, or Tektronix to act as its “front end”. As these analyzers output pristine I and Q waveforms without errors or instrument-generated artifacts, the information stored on the IQC5000B is virtually identical to the original captured analog waveforms.

Applications will often dictate that the IQC5000B reconstitute the original waveforms in analog I and Q format for two simultaneous channels of playback at the original or any frequency within the capabilities of a high-performance vector signal generator. The system is capable of providing a single frequency output at 2.4 GHz as well.

The signals recorded by the IQC5000B can contain markers that include time of day and sample number, and as the instrument has GPS capability it can also mark the latitude, longitude, and elevation when the recording was made, as well as the time the signal was recorded to within 1 µs in accordance with IRIG standard B-122.

Another extremely valuable feature of the IQC500B is its triggering capabilities, which allow the instrument to start and stop recording based on specific events such as the leading and trailing edges of a pulse and other factors. This lets it record only those events of interest, which significantly reduces the file size making it much easier to analyze in MATLAB as well as vector signal analysis software such as Keysight Technologies’ 89600 and Tektronix SignalVu-PC.

The IQC5000B is controlled using X-COM’s simple but comprehensive software resident on a Windows PC. Signal files are offloaded to the computer via eight lanes of PCI 2.0 at greater than 600 Mbytes/s. It can also be used with X-COM’s high-performance SigAnalyst Workstation that employs dual Intel Xeon 15-core processors, 64 Gbytes of RAM, and 80 Tbytes of hard drive storage, and includes X-COM’s Spectro-X signal analysis and RF Editor file manipulation software.

The IQC5000B measures 12 x 3.5 x 10.5 in., weighs 8.5 lb., is available in rugged portable or standard rack enclosures, and be specified in several versions with varying capabilities as well as with many other options.

Visit www.xcomsystems.com for more information.