We’ve seen several industrial products powered by Raspberry Pi 3 board or CM3 module recently, with the likes of Industrial Shields Panel PC, TECHBASE ModBerry, or Pi/104 PC/104 compliant carrier board among others.
We can now add another industrial computer based on Raspberry Pi CM3 module with Compulab IOT-GATE-RPi IoT gateway, with dual Ethernet port, support for 3G/LTE modems, a rugged case, and working in a wide temperature range of -40°C to 80°C.
Compulab IOT-GATE-RPi specifications:
- SoC – Broadcom BCM2837 quad-core Cortex-A53 @ 1.2GHz with VideoCore IV GPU
- System Memory – 1GB LPDDR2
- Storage – 4 to 64GB of soldered eMMC flash, micro SD socket
- Connectivity
- 2x 100Mbps Ethernet
- WiFi 802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.1 BLE
- 3G / LTE cellular modem via mini-PCie module)
- Video Output – HDMI 1.3, up to 1920×1080
- Audio – 3.5mm stereo line out jack, HDMI audio
- USB – 4x USB2.0 host port
- Serial
- 1x RS232 port, ultra-mini serial connector
- 1x RS485, RJ11 connector with EB-RPI-FCSD HAT board
- CAN – 1x CAN bus, RJ11 connector with EB-RPI-FCSD HAT board
- Expansion
- RPI HAT expansion interface
- 6x DIO, 5V tolerant, 100-mil header implemented with EB-RPI-FCSD HAT board
- Misc – RTC Real time clock with back-up battery
- Input voltage Unregulated 10V to 36V DC input
- Dimensions – 112 x 84 x 25 mm (Aluminum housing)
- Weight – 450 grams
- Temperature Range – Commercial: 0° to 60° C; extended: -20° to 60° C; industrial: -40° to 80° C
- Shock, vibration, dust and humidity resistance
The gateway uses passive cooling, so no fan is needed, it supports both VESA and DIN rail mounts, and hardware protection against unintentional DC plug pull out and unauthorized boot from external storage.
The gateway runs Raspberry Pi 3 OS images such as Debian Linux (Raspbian), Ubuntu Core and Windows 10 IoT Core, and is compatible with IoT frameworks like Microsoft Azure IoT or AWS Greengrass.
Compulab IOT-GATE-RPi will start selling next month with price starting at $110 for volume orders. Visit the product page for further information.
Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.
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Where are they getting 4 USB host ports from? The CM3 datasheet says it only has 1.
@bob
Maybe the CM3 has 4 USB2 host ports? Finally RPi USB problems have been solved.
@bob
They must be using a USB hub chip with 4x USB, 2x Ethernet.
Edit: I can’t find any dual Ethernet USB hub chip, so likely a two chip solution.
@Jean-Luc Aufranc (CNXSoft) Most probably it’s the usual LAN9514 here providing 1 x Fast Ethernet and 4 downstream USB2 ports (to be compatible with RPi 3 ‘netboot’ features and OS images that rely on its existence — Win 10 IoT — and/or use defauilts that use the SoC’s serial number to pre-populate device tree with a unique MAC address) combined with another internal USB hub (there’s USB2 on the mPCIe port too) combined with another USB-Ethernet adapter like RTL8152. All 7 USB ports have to fight for bandwidth on the single USB2 upstream connection to the SoC and this is… Read more »
@tkaiser
CM3’s I/O is indeed quite limited. However the Ethernet bandwidth consideration has been taken into account.
The device has been tested to achieve 100Mbit throughput on both Ethernet ports during simultaneous operation.