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Waveshare SIM7600G-H 4G Hat (B) for Raspberry Pi Supports LTE Cat-4 4G/3G/2G GNSS Positioning Global Band

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  • Conectado a través de pin pogo o conector microUSB pin pogo dedicado para Raspberry Pi Zero/Zero W conector microUSB para otras placas Raspberry Pi o PC
  • Incorpora el módulo 4G de banda global SIM7600G-H, compatible con red 2G/3G/4G con soporte global. Conector USB HUB para otras placas Raspberry Pi o PC, proporcionando extensión USB y acceso a red 4G
  • Soporta llamadas telefónicas, SMS, TCP, UDP, DTMF, HTTP, FTP, etc. Soporta GPS, BeiDou, Glonass, LBS estación base posicionamiento
  • Ranura para tarjeta SIM, soporta tarjeta SIM de 1,8 V/3 V. Toma de audio integrada y decodificador de audio para hacer llamadas telefónicas
  • 2 indicadores LED, fácil de controlar el estado de funcionamiento. Control a través de comandos AT (3GPP TS 27.007, 27.005 y conjunto de comandos V.25TER)



Descripción del producto

SIM7600G-H 4G HAT (B)

Características de un vistazo

Conectado a través de pogo pin o conector MicroUSBPogo dedicado para Raspberry Pi Zero/Zero W Conector MicroUSB para otras tarjetas Raspberry Pi o PC Incorpora módulo 4G SIM7600G-H, compatible con red 2G/3G/4G con soporte global. Conector HUB USB para otras tarjetas Raspberry Pi o PC, proporcionando extensión USB y acceso a red 4G. Soporta marcado, llamadas telefónicas, SMS, TCC. P, UDP, DTT. MF, HTTP, FTP, etc. Soporta GPS, BeiDou, Glonass, posición de la estación base LBS ranura para tarjeta SIM, soporta tarjeta SIM de 1,8 V/3 V Toma de audio y decodificador de audio para hacer llamadas telefónicas2x indicadores LED, fácil de monitorear el estado de operaciónControl a través de comandos AT (3GPP TS 27.007, 27.0005, 2.05, 2 y V.05 y conjunto de comandos V.05TER. )Soporta herramienta de aplicación SIM Kit: SAT Clase 3, GSM 11.14 Versión 99, USATViene con recursos de desarrollo y manual (ejemplos para Raspberry Pi)

SIM7600G-H 4G HAT (B)
SIM7600G-H 4G HAT (B)

Apto para Raspberry Pi / PC

SIM7600G-H 4G HAT (B)

Pogo Pin dedicado para conectar con Raspberry Pi Zero/Zero W sin cable USB adicional Conector MicroUSB de uso general para otras placas Raspberry Pi o PC

Soporte Global Band 4G, 3G, 2G

Soporte Global Band 4G, 3G, 2G

Enlace ascendente de hasta 50 Mbps y enlace descendente de 150 Mbps para red 4G *

Función HUB USB

Chip HUB USB integrado con USB 2.0/1.1, que proporciona 2 conectores USB-A y 1 almohadilla de soldadura USB

Compatible con GPS, BeiDou, Glonass, LBS Posicionamiento de la estación base

Hacer llamadas telefónicas o enviar SMS por comandos AT, con conector de audio integrado

Contenido de la tabla y las dimensiones del esquema

Qué está a bordo

Marc
Revisado en Bélgica el 24 de marzo de 2024
Le module GPS/4G basé sur la puce SIM7600G (Waveshare) fonctionne très bien de manière générale. Facile à installer, le support et les exemples de code sont très utiles et bien expliqués.Je n'ai pas donné 5 étoiles pour 2 raisons:- Les câbles d'antenne ne tiennent pas assez fermement sur le socket et peuvent donc se déconnecter assez facilement.- Le montage sur Pi Zero se fait au travers des pins de contact qui viennent se poser directement sur les connecteurs GPIO. Le contact n'est pas toujours franc. J'ai essayé 2 modules différents sur 2 PI Zero différents et le problème est le même. Je pensais d'abord à un défaut du module que j'ai remplacé mais malheureusement le nouveau module présente les mêmes faiblesses. Donc un conseil, mieux vaut utiliser la connectique USB et éviter l'utilisation en mode HAT.
ElectroBoogie
Comentado en Canadá el 15 de septiembre de 2024
Great little board, very impressive feature set and offers a ton of value for remote communication for your project, industrial or commercial applications etc... Wiki is pretty good with a detailed walk through on connecting it to windows, raspbian, or Jetson setups. I like that it's all accessible via UART, commands are given to help it also makes the board incredibly versatile for nearly any platform. They have also included tons of documents, examples and support links to help make it as easy as possible.I tested with a windows pc to just get a feel for the device's function, after the driver install everything came up on the various com ports for all the devices on the board. GPS picked up pretty quickly feeding NEMA data to the AT serial. Sim card was a dummy but it was picking up the network. No doubt it would run fine as a modem or to send or receive calls and text with this setup as all the drivers were present and happy.Moving on to Linux, had no problem in testing with a Raspberry Pi 3B plugged in via USB. The wiki guide was again excellent at setting up the serial terminal via minicom and i was chatting with the AT commands terminal no problem. I did have some issues with the python scripts but they were all there i just need to spend more time understanding where it was getting lost. I did find a helpful hint if you are encountering resource busy responses is to disable the modem manager.While i don't have a final project idea yet this is a really fantastic board backed up with some pretty solid documentation direct from the chip manufacturer and with a quick start by wave share. They have always been impressive in their documentation and this more complex board is no exception.I do wish there were just straight pin headers for UART connections, i don't quite get why they went with 3 USB connections on the board. But i do see how it could be nice to break them out for a pi zero application. Also, a bit of a limitation that you are locked into the AT commands console for connection to the devices, while its super easy to use you can't quite get into the trenches with the chip either.Overall, the wiki and guide get you up and running and generally familiar with the device. If you can get over the serial commands interface i think you could get a nice little addition to your project or paired with at pi zero and ultra compact solution.
Dave
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 21 de abril de 2024
Not sure why companies think that they can just toss a bunch of components over the fence and think makers will figure it out. We will, eventually, but don't expect a good review if that's the case. I'm on my third Pi trying to get this to work. Amazon says "Frequently bought together," and shows the Pi Zero W 2. Guess what, that's the only zero (to date) this won't work with. I tried a Pi Zero W (v1) and the supposed serial port /dev/tty/USB02 doesn't show up, and none of the others work either. But don't worry, as the instruction clearly state, "you can connect it to the 4G HAT through the thimble." So, once you figure what that means, post what you did here in a review so everyone else knows too. Oh, and even though this is a HAT, the instructions they do have, are for a PC running Windows. Good Luck and Happy Thimble!Update: Nope. It's a $90 piece of toast. On a scale from 1 to 5, I'm giving this a "THIMBLE". Waveshare, if you want to make this right, send me one that works and I'll re-review it.
JimT
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 23 de agosto de 2023
I did not know that there were phone modules that worked with 4G LTE networks, but here it is! This is made to mount underneath a Raspberry Pi Zero computer, and has the same footprint as that circuit board. It comes with a pair of PCB antennas for LTE, and a GPS amplified antenna on a 10' cable. It comes with an audio jack you can plug a headset into, allowing making regular voice calls with it easy without any other components, as well as using as a data modem. I didn't want to use a Pi Zero module, so my plan is to operate this from a Pi Pico board, but for my initial tests I just connected the micro USB jack on this module to a USB port on a Dell Latitude running Linux, and also running Windows 10. The phone worked on both operating systems, connecting using Minicom in Linux and PuTTY in Windows. Waveshare's website and Wiki were very helpful, and I was able to initiate and answer voice calls, send and receive SMS text messages, and connect to the Internet through the USB port, again with both Windows 10 and Linux. WIndows required a driver, but Waveshare tells you where to download that, and Ubuntu Linux found the device without needing a driver. I was also able to do voice and text on a MacBook, but there was no driver for the LTE modem option that I could find for macos. I tried this module with both a Verizon SIM card and a Mint Mobile card, which uses the T-Mobile network. Both worked just fine. Now I get to do the fun part, which is connecting a touch screen 2.8" LCD to the Pi Pico and making a decent user interface for it, and putting it in a custom case. Most fun project in a long time.OH! One thing you will want to know: the module uses what look like u.fl or IPEX connectors for the main antenna, the "diversity" antenna, and the GPS antenna. But these are actually IPEX-4 connectors, which are smaller and will not work with antennas that just say they have "IPEX" connectors, which in most cases means IPEX-1. The trick I discovered was that if you look for 5G antennas, these use IPEX-4 connectors, and they will cover the 4G LTE bands just fine. This is not a problem if you use the included antennas, since they already have the right connectors on them, and you can use one of the included IPEX-4 to SMA adapters to plug in any amplified GPS antenna that uses SMA.Honestly, I'm pretty sure Waveshare didn't really mean for this to be used in a phone - it's more for putting into computer projects that need a wireless Internet connection, but I think I can make the best phone since my Ericsson 388. Like I said, I got a Mint Mobile SIM card, which was because I occasionally need to stream video where there is no WiFi, and also wanted to have unlimited voice and text, which this did, but there are also decent plans from Boost Mobile (on AT&T or T-Mobile) and a number of data-only SIM cards that are really cheap if you just want to use it for low-bandwidth data on a wireless project, so have fun!
R L
Comentado en Australia el 2 de diciembre de 2021
Product received and tested on Raspberry Pi Zero W, working perfectly. Highly recommend ☆☆☆☆☆
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