CorelixRF | RF Systems Solutions
Wideband Transmit Chain Solutions | Direct Manufacturer | CorelixRF

Direct RF Manufacturer

Wideband RF Transmit Chain Solutions

CorelixRF is a direct RF manufacturer providing project-based wideband transmit chain solutions built around SDR source modules, RF power amplifiers, and matched antenna architectures for OEM integration, system development, and deployment-oriented RF projects.

Factory-coordinated source, amplification, and antenna paths for faster evaluation and clearer system integration.

Direct RF Manufacturer SDR + PA + Antenna Coordination Multi-Band Configurable Architecture OEM / Project Integration Support
系统级 RF transmit chain 工程场景图

Who This Wideband RF Transmit Chain Solution Is For

Built for engineers, integrators, and project teams that need a matched RF transmission path instead of isolated components from multiple suppliers.

OEM System Integrators

Need matched source, PA, and antenna stages configured for specific platform enclosures and thermal limits.

RF Engineering Teams

Need a clearer architecture for evaluation, bench testing, and validation of the entire transmission path.

SDR-Based Developers

Need flexible frequency generation paired with reliable, deployable RF power and output paths.

Project Buyers

Need a single supplier that can coordinate key RF building blocks, reducing sourcing and integration risk.

These project types often require more than individual RF components. They require a clearer definition of the full transmission path before hardware selection and system integration can move forward efficiently.

Common Problems vs. Factory-Coordinated Solutions

Many RF projects do not slow down because of one module. They slow down because the chain is not coordinated early enough. Here is how CorelixRF structures the solution around real integration needs.

Common Project Problems

Frequency Mismatch

Source, PA, and antenna may not be well aligned in real use despite paper specs.

Interface Inconsistency

Control methods and monitoring logic may differ drastically across suppliers.

Unclear Output Strategy

Omnidirectional and directional paths are often not defined early enough.

Thermal and Mechanical Gaps

Installation, cooling, and enclosure planning are delayed until components arrive.

No Single Coordination Point

When integration issues arise, responsibility is split across multiple vendors.

The CorelixRF Solution Structure

Defined Frequency Blocks

Reduce frequency mismatch during early evaluation and avoid re-selection cycles.

Matched Architecture Thinking

Improve consistency between source, amplifier, and antenna selection.

System-Level Discussion

Surface thermal, power, interface, and mounting constraints earlier in the project.

Single-Supplier Coordination

Reduce communication overhead and shorten integration and decision timelines.

工程选型/模块协调/技术评审场景图

System Architecture

What a Wideband RF Transmit Chain Solution Includes

A wideband transmit chain is not a single product. It is a coordinated RF transmission path. It starts with the signal source, continues through power amplification, and ends in a matched output stage. Successful deployment depends on how well these layers are matched in frequency, interfaces, and integration conditions.

LAYER 01

Digital Source Layer

The source layer defines operating frequency, signal behavior, and control flexibility across the chain. In projects that require wideband or multi-band transmission capability, source flexibility affects every downstream decision.

LAYER 02

RF Power Amplification Layer

The amplifier layer raises the signal to the required transmission level through band-matched RF power modules. This layer strongly affects usable power, deployment limits, and matching with the output stage.

LAYER 03

Antenna Output Layer

The antenna stage determines how RF energy is delivered into the field. The choice between omnidirectional and directional output fundamentally changes the entire deployment strategy and effective coverage.

LAYER 04

System Integration Layer

This layer includes control coordination, power input, thermal planning, mounting, monitoring, and general system compatibility. It determines whether the configuration remains theoretical or becomes practical.

WIDEBAND TRANSMIT CHAIN — SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE SDR Digital Source 100–6000 MHz Dual CH · 200 MHz BW RS422 · SMA Out RF Power Amplifier DDS PA Module 50–200 W Output RS485 · Protection Antenna Output Matched Stage Omni or Directional Up to 250 W OUTPUT ARCHITECTURE Omnidirectional 360° coverage · Wideband or band-specific 400–6000 MHz / 250 W available Directional Focused beam · Higher EIRP Horn / Yagi / Panel options MONITORING & CONTROL RS422 Source Ctrl RS485 PA Monitor OTP / VSWR / OVP Enable / Disable

Standard Frequency and Power Platforms

CorelixRF structures transmit chain solutions around available RF power blocks rather than presenting the system as one universal all-band unit. This gives project teams a more realistic starting point for evaluation. These standard frequency and power blocks are used as practical starting points for evaluation. They do not represent the full limit of available project configurations.

Current standard examples include sub-band and band-specific PA modules ranging from 50 W to 200 W.

Frequency Range Module Type Output Power Monitoring Typical Application
500–700 MHz DDS RF PA Module 200 W RS485 Sub-band transmission chain
1000–1300 MHz DDS RF PA Module 200 W RS485 Mid-band RF output system
2400–2485 MHz DDS RF PA Module 150 W RS485 2.4 GHz omnidirectional chain
5150–5350 MHz DDS RF PA Module 50 W RS485 Compact 5.2 GHz chain
5725–5875 MHz DDS RF PA Module 150 W RS485 5.8 GHz omnidirectional chain

Additional band, power, interface, and output combinations can be reviewed based on project-specific requirements.

SDR Source Capability for Multi-Band RF Transmission

Flexible signal generation is the foundation of a configurable transmit chain.

CorelixRF’s SDR source layer provides the frequency flexibility needed for project-based RF transmission paths. A source module covering 100 MHz to 6000 MHz with dual independent outputs creates a practical foundation for systems that require adjustable center frequency, configurable output behavior, and coordination with different RF amplifier stages.

In transmit chain design, source flexibility is valuable not because it solves everything alone, but because it makes wider system matching possible across multiple downstream PA options. In many projects, source flexibility directly affects how the rest of the transmit chain is structured and evaluated.

100–6000 MHz Frequency
Dual Independent Outputs
RS422 Interface Control
Multi-Band Planning
SDR source + interface / signal control 场景图

How to Choose the Right Output Architecture

Omnidirectional and directional output paths solve different deployment problems.

Omnidirectional Output

Use an omnidirectional architecture when the project requires horizontal area coverage across surrounding directions. This type of output is often more suitable for platform-mounted, vehicle-mounted, or site-level configurations where broad coverage matters more than concentrated energy. This is typically the preferred starting point when surrounding coverage is more important than maximizing output in a single direction.

全向天线真实部署或工程展示图
ANT θ

Directional Output

Use a directional architecture when the system needs to focus RF energy toward a defined area, sector, or path. This approach is more suitable when higher effective output (EIRP) in one direction is more important than broad, all-around coverage. This is typically the better choice when the project requires focused energy delivery and higher effective output along a defined path.

定向天线或定向输出系统图

Quick Decision Guide:

  • Choose omnidirectional for surrounding coverage.
  • Choose directional for focused output.
  • Choose band-specific antennas for tighter matching.
  • Choose wideband antennas when architecture flexibility matters more.

Example RF Transmit Chain Configurations

Typical ways source, amplification, and output stages can be combined into practical paths.

These examples are reference paths rather than fixed product bundles. Final configurations should be reviewed based on target frequency, required output power, output architecture, and integration constraints.

2.4 GHz Omnidirectional Chain

SDR SRC 2.4G / 150W FRP OMNI

A frequency-matched path built around a 2.4 GHz amplifier stage and a corresponding omnidirectional antenna. Suitable when broad horizontal coverage is required at this band.

5.8 GHz Omnidirectional Chain

SDR SRC 5.8G / 150W FRP OMNI

A band-aligned output path using a 5.8 GHz amplifier stage and matched omnidirectional output. Suitable for projects that prioritize consistent frequency matching.

5.2 GHz Compact Chain

SDR SRC 5.2G / 50W MATCHED

A more compact high-band path where lower output power and smaller system size are more important than maximum transmission level.

Wideband Output Architecture

SDR SRC BAND PA WIDEBANDOMNI

A wider-output concept in which the source and antenna support broader frequency coverage, while the RF amplifier stage is selected according to the target band.

What CorelixRF Can Customize for Your RF Transmit Chain Project

Standard platforms are the starting point, not the limit.

For many transmit chain projects, standard modules provide a useful evaluation baseline, but final project needs often require adjustment. CorelixRF can review customization needs across multiple layers of the chain, including frequency band, output power, interface method, antenna type, connector style, integration structure, and other practical requirements related to the final system path.

Standard platforms can be used as engineering baselines, while project adjustments can be reviewed at the frequency, power, connector, interface, and mechanical integration level.

Frequency Band
Output Power
Source Configuration
Control Interface
Connector Type
Antenna Style
Mechanical Form Factor
Integration Requirements
Power & Thermal
OEM Integration Review
项目型定制开发 / 模块变化 / 工程迭代图

Factory Capabilities

Engineering, Testing and Manufacturing Control

A transmit chain should be supported by real engineering coordination, not only by product descriptions. CorelixRF structures project discussion around frequency path definition, module compatibility, output architecture, and integration feasibility.

RF测试台 / 功率测试 / 频谱测试场景

RF Evaluation & Testing

Used to review output behavior, interface control, and protection awareness before project deployment.

  • Engineering Review Before Recommendation
  • Unit-level test data available
  • Interface documentation provided
  • Module-Level RF Testing Awareness
工厂装配或模块生产图

Manufacturing & Assembly

Supports consistent implementation of module structure, interface layout, and integration readiness.

  • Single-Source Production Coordination
  • Manufacturing consistency controls
  • OEM integration review
  • Thermal & Mechanical Hardware Assembly
包装与交付准备图

Delivery & Support

Helps project teams move from evaluation samples to clearer production and shipment coordination.

  • Production and Delivery Readiness
  • Sample evaluation support
  • Standardized deployment readiness
  • Single-Source Communication Across the Chain

Why Buyers Prefer a Factory-Coordinated RF Transmit Chain

Less coordination risk, clearer matching logic, and a more practical path to deployment.

Separate Sourcing

Theoretical Flexibility, Practical Delays

More compatibility checks required More communication overhead Longer evaluation cycle Unclear ownership of integration issues
VS

Factory-Coordinated Solution

Clearer Path from Evaluation to Deployment

Clearer frequency matching logic More consistent architecture planning Easier communication during evaluation Simpler path from inquiry to recommendation

Application Scenarios for Wideband RF Transmit Chain Projects

A structured transmit chain architecture is useful across engineering, OEM, and deployment-oriented RF projects.

平台化全向输出应用图 定向输出 / focused path 场景图

SDR-Based RF Development Platforms

Suitable for projects where signal flexibility, testing convenience, and architecture visibility are important during development.

Multi-Band Transmission Systems

Useful when the platform needs to support more than one target band across a coordinated system structure.

Omnidirectional Output Platforms

Suitable for deployments where broad surrounding coverage is more important than directional concentration.

Directional RF Output Paths

Suitable when the goal is to focus RF energy toward a defined area or transmission direction.

OEM Integration Projects

Useful for customers who need RF transmission building blocks that can be reviewed as part of a larger subsystem.

Validation and Evaluation Setups

Suitable for project teams that need a more practical way to assess source, amplifier, and output combinations before deployment.

Next Steps

Explore the Product Building Blocks Behind This Solution

Move from system-level planning to product-level evaluation. If you already know which part of the chain you want to evaluate first, explore the relevant product category directly.

RF Power Amplifier Modules

View Modules

SDR Source Modules

View SDR Units

Wideband Omnidirectional Antennas

View Omni Antennas

Directional Antenna Solutions

View Directional

Custom RF Integration Support

Discuss Integration

All RF Solution Pages

Explore Solutions

Frequently Asked Questions About RF Transmit Chain Configuration

Answers to the questions buyers and engineering teams usually ask before evaluation.

Is this a single full-band output system?

No. The source can cover a wide frequency range, but the amplifier and antenna path are typically configured by band for practical matching.

Can CorelixRF recommend a matched configuration for my target band?

Yes. Share the target band, output requirement, and preferred output architecture, and a practical configuration path can be proposed.

Can you supply only part of the transmit chain?

Yes. Customers may evaluate the source layer, amplifier stage, antenna stage, or a combined path depending on project needs.

How do I choose between omnidirectional and directional output?

Choose omnidirectional when broad surrounding coverage is required. Choose directional when output should be concentrated toward a defined area or path.

Can frequency, power, or interfaces be customized?

Project-based customization can be reviewed depending on the target band, required power level, interface needs, and integration requirements.

Do the modules include monitoring and protection?

Yes. The source and amplifier stages can include practical control, monitoring, and protection features depending on the selected configuration.

What information should I provide for a recommendation?

Target frequency, required output power, preferred output type, number of channels, and any integration constraints are the most useful starting points.

Can CorelixRF provide test data or interface details before evaluation?

Yes. Technical documentation, interface protocols, and typical performance data can be shared to support initial engineering reviews.

Can the transmit chain be integrated into customer enclosures or OEM platforms?

Yes. Form factor, thermal management, and connector layouts can be coordinated to match specific OEM and system-level enclosure requirements.

How do you recommend the right amplifier and antenna combination for a target band?

Recommendation is based on aligning the required EIRP, acceptable thermal limits, and deployment environment to ensure the PA block and antenna pattern work efficiently together.

Request a Wideband RF Transmit Chain Recommendation

Share your target band, output requirement, and deployment preference to receive a practical factory-based recommendation. The clearer the project inputs, the easier it is to identify a suitable source, amplifier, and antenna combination.

In most cases, recommendation starts with target frequency, required output power, preferred output pattern, and any enclosure, interface, or thermal constraints.

ALL INQUIRIES ARE TREATED AS CONFIDENTIAL. WE DO NOT SHARE YOUR INFORMATION WITH THIRD PARTIES.