GNSS, inertial measurement and sensor fusion on one Click board

GNSS RTK 2 is a multi-band GNSS sensor plus integrated inertial measurement unit and sensor fusion for industrial applications, build in Mikroe’s 57 x 25mm Click board format.

Mikroe GNSS_RTK_2_Click_board annotated

Based on Ublox’ ZED-F9R professional-grade GNSS positioning module, it can receive signals from GPS, Glonass, Galileo and BeiDou “plus SBAS and QZSS satellites can be received concurrently”, according to Mikroe. “Built-in algorithms fuse the IMU data, GNSS measurements, wheel ticks, correction data and a vehicle dynamics model to provide optimal positioning accuracy where GNSS alone would fail” – wooded countryside, multi-path environments and cities, for example, it added.

An unpopulated UART header is available to support RTCM or SPARTN-formatted navigation corrections using internet or satellite data.


Host MCU communication is over a 115,200bit/s UART interface, although SPI and I2C are jumper-selectable if users “want to configure the module and write the library by themselves”, said Mikroe.


Another jumper allows the receiver to start in safe-boot mode, with GNSS disabled.

The 12 Mbit/s USB interface is another alternative to the UART, and can be used as a power supply in stand-alone applications – the board requires 5V.

In case of supply failure, a battery in the on-board holder can back-up the real-time clock and some of the boerd’s ram for a later hot or warm start.

Pins re-purposed from the usual mikroBUS format provide indication when bytes are ready to be transmitted, remote reset and offer a 1Hz reference – plus on-board LEDs indicate various status conditions.

Antenna connection is through an SMA connector.

The GNSS RTK 2 Click product page can be found here

Steve Bush

Steve Bush is the long-standing technology editor for Electronics Weekly, covering electronics developments for more than 25 years. He has a particular interest in the Power and Embedded areas of the industry. He also writes for the Engineer In Wonderland blog, covering 3D printing, CNC machines and miscellaneous other engineering matters.

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