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· MPN: GPS-28137

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Easily add high-precision GNSS to your Raspberry Pi or favorite single-board computer with the SparkFun GNSS Flex pHAT. This carrier board is the heart o...

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Easily add high-precision GNSS to your Raspberry Pi or favorite single-board computer with the SparkFun GNSS Flex pHAT. This carrier board is the heart of our SparkPNT Flex ecosystem, providing a solder-free, plug-and-play solution for connecting our powerful GNSS Flex modules. It's the most straightforward way to create a compact, modular, and powerful navigation system for your project.

The Ultimate GNSS Carrier for Your SBC

Designed for maximum flexibility, the GNSS Flex pHAT serves as the bridge between your SBC and your chosen GNSS module.

  • Broad SBC Compatibility: The 40-pin header is designed for a direct connection to a Raspberry Pi, NVIDIA Jetson Nano, Google Coral, or other compatible single-board computers.
  • Solder-Free Installation: With pre-soldered headers, there's no soldering required. Simply stack the pHAT on your SBC, attach a module, and you're ready to go.
  • Modular Flex Headers: The standardized 2x10-pin male headers enable easy attachment, swapping, or upgrading of your GNSS Flex module at any time.
  • Full Interface Access: The pHAT breaks out all potential interfaces from the attached module, including up to four UARTs, I²C, USB, and critical timing signals. 

Choose Your GNSS Module

Please note that this is a carrier board only and does not include a GNSS module. This allows you to select the perfect engine for your application's needs, from meter-level positioning for urban environments to all-band RTK with heading for autonomous navigation. Explore our comprehensive lineup of SparkPNT GNSS Flex Modules to complete your setup.

This product may require an external antenna for operation, depending on the GNSS Receiver. Users have a few options for connecting an external GNSS antenna to their GNSS receiver.

  • The GNSS Flex Module has one to two U.FL connectors for an external antenna.
  • For a sturdier connection, an SMA connector is available on this SparkFun GNSS Flex pHAT that is bridged to a U.FL connector. Users simply need to jumper the U.FL connectors on both the SparkPNT GNSS Flex Module and SparkFun GNSS Flex pHAT with a short U.FL cable.

This pHAT also requires a Raspberry Pi (or similar single-board computer). Users can find Raspberry Pi and NVIDIA single-board computers in our catalog. By default, we use the Raspberry Pi's primary serial bus (i.e. TX: GPIO14/Pin 8; RX: GPIO15/Pin 9) to communicate with the GNSS receiver of the SparkPNT GNSS Flex module. However, users can also utilize any of the other interfaces.


Features & Specs

 

  • 40-pin socket for Raspberry Pi header (or similar SBC)
  • 40-pin header for GNSS Flex modules
    • Two 2x20-pin, 2mm-pitch male headers
      • Power
        • 3.3V
        • Backup power
        • USB bus detect (not a power source)
      • USB data
      • UART (x4)
      • SD card
      • I2C bus
      • PPS signal (x2)
      • LED indicators (x2)
      • Event indicators (x2)
  • USB-C connector
    • Interfaces directly with GNSS Flex Module
  • Antenna bridge
    • U.FL connector
    • SMA connector
  • µSD card socket
  • Qwiic connector
  • Indicator LEDs
    • PWR (Red)
    • PPS (Yellow)
    • RTK (White)
    • PVT (Blue)
  • Twenty-four jumpers
    • Raspberry Pi GPIO isolation (x16)
    • LED power isolation (x4)
    • I2C pull-up resistors (x4)

Jargon buster

Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.

GNSS
GNSS stands for Global Navigation Satellite System, covering positioning systems such as GPS and similar satellite networks. It matters here because high-precision GNSS modules can output lots of serial position data that this product can send wirelessly to a computer or phone.
GPIO
General-purpose input/output pins are microcontroller pins you can set in software to read signals, switch devices on and off, or connect to peripherals. The number of GPIO pins matters because it limits how many buttons, LEDs, sensors, and other parts you can wire directly to the board.
Headers
Rows of metal pins used to plug a module into a breadboard or connect it with jumper wires. Pre-soldered headers make the module easier to use straight away without needing to solder the pins yourself.
LED
A light-emitting diode is a small electronic component that lights up when current flows through it in the correct direction. In this kit, LEDs create the flashing effect, so polarity and correct soldering matter for the project to work.
NVIDIA Jetson Nano
A compact NVIDIA computing module used for camera, robotics and machine-learning projects at the edge. Compatibility with Jetson Nano tells you this carrier board can host that module, but the module itself is not included.
pHAT
A smaller add-on board format for Raspberry Pi, similar in idea to a HAT but usually not full-sized. It matters because pHAT compatibility can affect how neatly a board stacks or fits into a Raspberry Pi project.
PVT
Position, velocity and time data reported by a GNSS receiver. Knowing the PVT update rate helps you judge how often the board can provide basic navigation information to your project.
Qwiic
Qwiic is a plug-in connector system for I2C devices that uses small 4-pin cables, so you can connect compatible sensors without soldering. It matters because your controller or adapter also needs Qwiic, or you will need a cable or breakout to wire it up.
RTK
Real-Time Kinematic positioning is a GNSS technique that uses correction data from a base station to greatly improve location accuracy. It matters if you need centimetre-level positioning for robotics, mapping, surveying, or tracking rather than ordinary metre-level GPS accuracy.
single-board computer
A complete computer built onto one circuit board, usually including the processor, memory, ports, and connectors. This matters because accessories like heatsinks must match the board’s layout and mounting holes to fit properly.
SMA
A threaded coaxial connector commonly used for antennas. It matters because you need antennas with matching SMA connectors, or suitable adapters, for the LTE and GNSS antenna ports.
u.FL
u.FL is a tiny snap-on antenna connector often used on compact wireless boards. A board with u.FL usually needs an external antenna, which matters if the product will be inside an enclosure or needs better antenna placement.
UART
UART is a simple serial connection that sends data over separate transmit and receive wires, often labelled TX and RX. It matters because this module is designed to replace a wired UART cable with a wireless link while keeping the same serial data format.
USB-C
A modern reversible USB connector used for power and data connections. On this product it matters because it can connect directly to a computer as well as to a microcontroller project.

SparkFun GNSS Flex pHAT Schematic

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SparkFun GNSS Flex pHAT Board Dimensions

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Supplier page — sparkfun.com

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Related Tutorials

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