[Pafgbt] PAF beamformer size and cost

Rick Fisher rfisher at nrao.edu
Thu Feb 4 09:04:55 EST 2010


Brian,

My apologies if this message appeared out of order in everyone's mail box. 
It was my mistake in setting up email addresses.

Your numbers are an excellent baseline.  Let me compose a few questions 
about precisely what capablities this provides and throw them out later 
today.  Input from astronomers will be really helpful at that point.

Regards,
Rick

On Wed, 3 Feb 2010, Brian Jeffs wrote:

> Rick,
>
> We have a rough architecture and cost estimate for a 40 channel 
> correlator/beamformer capable of 40 channels (19 dual pol antennas plus 
> reference or RFI auxiliary) over 250 MHz BW.  We worked this out with CASOER 
> head Dan Werthimer and his crack correlator/beamformer developer Jason 
> Manley.  It will require 20 ROACH boards, 20 iADC boards, 1 20-port 10 Gbit 
> ethernet switch, and some lesser associated parts.
>
> Our recent ROACH order was $2750 each, iADC: $1300 each, enclosures: $750 
> each, XiLinx chip: free or $3000,  ethernet switch: $12000.
>
> You can use your existing data acquisition array of PCs as the stream-to-disk 
> farm, but will need to buy 10 Gbit cards and hardware RAID controllers.
>
> The total (which will be a bit low) assuming no free XiLinx parts and not 
> including  is:  $168,000.
>
> Of course this does not include development manpower costs.
>
> Brian
>
>
> On Feb 3, 2010, at 3:05 PM, Rick Fisher wrote:
>
>> This is an incomplete question, but maybe we can beat it into something
>> answerable:  Do we know enough about existing applications on CASPER
>> hardware to make a conservative estimate of what it would cost to build a
>> PAF beamformer with a given set of specs?  I'm looking for at least two
>> estimates.  What is a realistic set of specs for the first science PAF
>> beamformer, and what would the dream machine that would make a big
>> scientific impact cost?  You're welcome to define the specs that go with
>> either of these two questions or I'll start defining them by thinking "out
>> loud".  The first science beamformer will guide the initial system design,
>> and the dream machine will help get a handle on longer range expectations.
>> 
>> Cheers,
>> Rick
>> 
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