SOURCE: MaxLinear
September 06, 2007 09:00 ET
MaxLinear Announces First Global TV Standards CMOS Tuner IC With the Performance of Can Tuner
MxL5007 Offers Smallest Form Factor, Lowest Power, Lowest Cost, and Highest Integration Level of Any Cable and Terrestrial Silicon Tuner
CARLSBAD, CA--(Marketwire - September 6, 2007) - MaxLinear, Inc., a fabless semiconductor IC
company at the forefront of developing CMOS-based broadband radio frequency
(RF) ICs for consumer markets, today announced the MxL5007, a TV tuner IC
that meets all global digital and analog cable and terrestrial TV
standards. The MxL5007 incorporates key CMOS circuit design and radio
architecture technology breakthroughs which enable "can" tuner equivalent
performance in digital/analog televisions, terrestrial and cable set top
box (STB) applications, and portable TV applications.
The device is the latest in MaxLinear's MxL5000 family of tuner ICs. It is
based on the company's proprietary digital CMOS implementation, which not
only exceeds the performance of exotic SiGe BiCMOS process-based tuner
solutions, but also has the low cost, low power consumption and heat
dissipation that is only achievable using CMOS technology. MxL5007 comes in
a 5mm x 5mm 32-pin QFN package and consumes 300mW of power, which is
three-to-six times lower than competing products.
The MxL5007 even exceeds the exacting requirements of ATSC A/74 Receiver
Performance Guidelines. Until now, the stringent ATSC A/74 requirements
could only be met by traditional can tuners or higher power SiGe-BiCMOS
tuners using expensive external tracking and/or SAW filters. Exceeding the
A/74 requirements without the use of external tracking and SAW filters is a
key accomplishment of the MxL5007.
"Achieving a tuner, especially in CMOS, with this level of performance and
integration has been an elusive goal for the industry," said Ted Alexander
of Mission Ventures. "We've seen the precedent of CMOS becoming dominant in
other applications, but the RF challenges of the broadband tuner are much
greater. We are very excited about what this means for MaxLinear's market
position in the global tuner market."
With this level of performance, module manufacturers can reduce size, power
and cost of their modules for even high-end products like digital
televisions. The MxL5007 also provides the performance and features
necessary for on-board implementations in digital/analog television, set
top box and personal video recorder (PVR) applications, along with the
small size necessary for delivering live television in cars and in portable
devices such as PCs, DVD players, PDAs and digital media players. The
MxL5007's support of global TV standards allows manufacturers to easily
ship products to different world markets by mating MaxLinear's global TV
tuner with the appropriate standard specific demodulator, or by using a
multi-standard demodulator.
"With the MxL5007, manufacturers can now move to a lower cost, lower power
silicon solution without sacrificing any of the performance benefits
associated with traditional can tuners," said Kishore Seendripu,
MaxLinear's CEO. "MaxLinear's CMOS radio IC technology is well proven in PC
TV, mobile TV, and DVB-T STB markets using our older generation 5003/5005
tuner ICs. The MxL5007 utilizes an enhancement to this proven CMOS radio
technology to address multiple TV standards and applications. The choice of
digital CMOS process and novel radio architecture for tuners makes ASPs
near $1 a realistic prospect in the future. CMOS process technology, lowest
BOM, and manufacturing costs make MxL5007 the ideal solution for all
television applications, including tuner modules. Modified versions of
MxL5007 will target specific standards to offer even lower cost solutions
for customers."
The MxL5007 can receive an input signal spanning a continuous frequency
band from 44MHz to 1002MHz from a 75-ohm antenna or cable. It supports
every major cable and terrestrial digital and analog TV standard, including
ATSC, DVB-T, DVB-H, ISDB-T 13-segment, DVB-C, DMB-T(H), 64/256 QAM for US
cable applications, analog cable, DOCSIS 3.0, NTSC, PAL and SECAM. The
MxL5007 has an integrated low noise amplifier (LNA), on chip tracking & PLL
loop filters, automatic gain control, LO generation, and channel
selectivity functions for simplified and low cost board-level design. By
eliminating the need for external SAW filters, external tracking filters,
PLL loop filters, and external loop through circuitry, and by requiring no
factory calibration or adjustments the MxL5007 greatly reduces BOM and
manufacturing costs for end customers. Additionally, MxL5007 has a flexible
output intermediate frequency (IF) ranging from 4 to 44 MHz to support many
demodulators and has an integrated on-chip loop through function that
vastly simplifies STBs requiring RF out and multi-tuner applications such
as PVRs and televisions supporting picture-in-picture or similar
functionality.
Availability
MaxLinear will demonstrate the MxL5007 by appointment during IBC2007
(Amsterdam, Sept. 7-11), with engineering samples and evaluation kits
available in Q4 2007, and production quantities expected in Q2 2008.
About MaxLinear, Inc.
MaxLinear, Inc. is a rapidly growing fabless IC company focusing on highly
integrated analog products that incorporate proprietary mixed-signal and
radio frequency signal processing techniques in CMOS. The company's
technology is ideally suited for a broad range of high-volume consumer
electronics applications with the strictest requirements for both power and
performance, including personal computers, laptop computers, televisions,
and mobile devices. MaxLinear is the first to deliver on the promise of an
easy-to-use silicon solution to enable TV on any device. The company is
located in Carlsbad, CA with a sales office in Seoul, South Korea. More
information is at www.maxlinear.com.
MaxLinear and the MaxLinear logo are trademarks of MaxLinear, Inc. Other
trademarks appearing herein are the property of their respective owners.