• Join
  • Sign In with my.TI Login
Texas Instruments
  • Products
  • Applications
  • Tools & Software
  • Support & Community
  • Sample & Buy
  • About TI
Sample & Purchase Cart Sample & Purchase Cart
  • Search
  • Advanced
TI E2E™ Community
  • Support Forums
  • Blogs
  • Groups
  • Videos
  • 简体中文
  • More ...
TI Home » TI E2E Community » Support Forums » Digital Signal Processors (DSP) » C6000 Multicore DSP » Keystone Multicore Forum (C66, 66A, AM5) » Bit Rate Coprocessor and Turbo Coder/Encoder Coprocessor
Share
C6000 Multicore DSP
  • Forums
  • Announcements
Options
  • Subscribe via RSS
Training Available
TI provides self-paced online training that introduces the primary components of the KeyStone II family of SoC devices.

  • KeyStone II SoC Overview >
  • KeyStone II Software Overview >
  • KeyStone II ARM Cortex-A15 Corepac Overview >
  • More Information >
  • Check out
    Multicore Mix blog
    • $core_v2_blog.Current.Name

      OpenMP - All aboard!

      Posted 17 hours ago
      by Debbie Greenstreet
      With so many end products today relying on multicore DSPs for...
    • $core_v2_blog.Current.Name

      A look back: Two years of Multicore Mix

      Posted 1 day ago
      by Lauren Reed1
      A big thank you to everyone who participated in our contest last...
    • $core_v2_blog.Current.Name

      It’s our second anniversary, but you get the present!

      Posted 8 days ago
      by Lindsey Bare
      It’s hard to believe it’s already been two years...

    Forums

    Bit Rate Coprocessor and Turbo Coder/Encoder Coprocessor

    This question is answered
    PPC
    Posted by PPC
    on Mar 23 2012 08:07 AM
    Prodigy195 points

    Hi,

    I am reading the BCP User Guide, and I have noticed that it uses the TCP3d for decoding turbo codes, but the TCP3e is not used in the encoding process. Is there any reason to do that? Is the internal Enconder of the BCP faster than the TCP3e?

    Thank you in advanced.

    C6670 BCP TCP3E TCP3D
    Report Abuse
    • Reply
    You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
    All Replies
    • JohnH
      Posted by JohnH
      on Mar 23 2012 15:26 PM
      Verified Answer
      Verified by PPC
      Prodigy185 points

      The encoder in the BCP is much faster than the TCP3e and it also allows the encoding to be handled automatically as part of the whole processing flow in the BCP.  The TCP3e was actually removed in future devices that include the BCP since it is not needed.

      Regards,

      John

       

      Report Abuse
      • Reply
      You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
    TI E2E™ Community
    • Support Forums
    • Blogs
    • Videos
    • Groups
    • Site Support & Feedback
    • Settings
    TI E2E™ Community Groups
    • TI University Program
    • Make the Switch
    • Microcontroller Projects
    • Motor Drive & Control
    Other Communities
    • Deyisupport
    • Designsomething.org
    • beagleboard.org
    • TI on Element 14
    • TI on TechXchangeSM
    Other Technical & Support Resources
    • WEBENCH® Design Center
    • Product Information Centers
    • Technical Documents
    • TI Design Network
    • TI Technical Articles
    • TI Training

    All content and materials on this site are provided "as is". TI and its respective suppliers and providers of content make no representations about the suitability of these materials for any purpose and disclaim all warranties and conditions with regard to these materials, including but not limited to all implied warranties and conditions of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, title and non-infringement of any third party intellectual property right. TI and its respective suppliers and providers of content make no representations about the suitability of these materials for any purpose and disclaim all warranties and conditions with respect to these materials. No license, either express or implied, by estoppel or otherwise, is granted by TI. Use of the information on this site may require a license from a third party, or a license from TI.

    Content on this site may contain or be subject to specific guidelines or limitations on use. All postings and use of the content on this site are subject to the Terms of Use of the site; third parties using this content agree to abide by any limitations or guidelines and to comply with the Terms of Use of this site. TI, its suppliers and providers of content reserve the right to make corrections, deletions, modifications, enhancements, improvements and other changes to the content and materials, its products, programs and services at any time or to move or discontinue any content, products, programs, or services without notice.

    Follow Us Texas Instruments on Facebook Texas Instruments on Twitter Texas Instruments on LinkedIn Texas Instruments on Google+
    TI Worldwide | Contact Us | my.TI Login | Site Map | Corporate Citizenship | mobile m.ti.com (Mobile Version)

    TI is a global semiconductor design and manufacturing company. Innovate with 100,000+ analog ICs and
    embedded processors, along with software, tools and the industry’s largest sales/support staff.

    © Copyright 1995-2013 Texas Instruments Incorporated. All rights reserved.
    Trademarks | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use