Ovu412000/00 With Asus Antenna
File Name: ovu412000-00.exe Version: 2.2.7 Driver Date: 07 April 2014 File Size: 13,216 KB.
| Type | 90MB0QY1-M0EAY0 |
|---|---|
| Release date | April 19, 2017 |
| Introductory price | about US$59.99 |
| Operating system | TinkerOS (a Debian Linux derivative), Armbian (Debian or Ubuntu derivative), Android |
| System-on-chip used | Rockchip RK3288 |
| CPU | 1.8 GHz 32-bit quad-coreARM Cortex-A17 |
| Memory | 2GB Dual Channel DDR3 |
| Storage | MicroSDHC UHS-1 slot |
| Graphics | ARM Mali-T764 GPU - Supports 1080 & 4K |
| Website | ASUS specifications page |
The ASUS Tinker Board is a single board computer launched by ASUS in early 2017. Its physical size and GPIO pinout are designed to be compatible with the second-generation and later Raspberry Pi models. The first released board features 4K video, 2GB of onboard RAM, gigabit Ethernet and a Rockchip RK3288 processor running at 1.8 GHz.[1]
- Jul 15, 2018 Thank you ovu412000 00 much everyone for your replies! Yes, my password is: Do you already have an account? Selecting Cable instead of Antenna gets me ovu412000 00 extra analogue channel which had a weaker signal, but no digital channels.
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Specifications[edit]
| Model | Tinker Board | Tinker Board S |
|---|---|---|
| Release Date | April 2017 | January 2018 |
| SoC | Rockchip RK3288 | |
| Architecture | ARMv7-A(32-bit) | |
| CPU | Quad core 1.8 GHz ARM Cortex-A17 (up to 2.6GHZ turbo clock speed) (32-bit) | |
| GPU | 600 MHz Mali-T760 MP4 GPU | |
| RAM | 2GB dual channelLPDDR3 | |
| Storage | removable MicroSD slot ( supporting SD 3.0 ) | 16GB eMMC + removable MicroSD slot ( supporting SD 3.0 ) |
| Video output | full size HDMI 1.4, MIPI-DSI (compatible with the Raspberry Pi 7' display and others) | full size HDMI 1.4 (CEC support added), MIPI-DSI (compatible with the Raspberry Pi 7' display and others) |
| Video input | MIPI-CSI camera | |
| Audio | RTL ALC4040 HD CODEC, Play: 24bit/192kHz, Record: 24bit/96kHz 3.5 mm audio jack ( supporting line out and microphone in ) | RTL ALC4040 HD CODEC, Play: 24bit/192kHz, Record: 24bit/96kHz 3.5 mm audio jack ( supporting line out and microphone in, Plug-in Detection and Auto-Switch ) |
| Other IO | 40-pin header with:
1 x 2-pin contact pin :
| 40-pin header with:
1 x 2-pin contact pin :
1 x 2-pin Power-on Header |
| USB | 4 x USB 2.0 ports | |
| Networking | Gigabit LAN ( not shared with USB bus ) | |
| Wireless | Bluetooth V4.0 + EDR, 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi, with IPEX antenna header | |
| Power | Micro-USB; due to Micro-USB power delivery limitations, powering over GPIO is suggested [2][3] | |
| Form Factor | 3.37 inch x 2.125 inch ( 8.55 cm x 5.4 cm ) | |
| Weight | 55g | |
| Operating Systems |
| |
| Notes | The specifications provided by Asus[5] | |

Ovu412000/00 With Asus Antenna Guide
History[edit]
ASUS's intent to release a single board computer was leaked shortly after CES 2017[6] on SlideShare.[7] ASUS originally planned for a late February 2017 release, but a UK vendor broke the embargo and began advertising and selling boards starting on 13 February 2017, before ASUS's marketing department was ready.[8] ASUS subsequently pulled the release; the Amazon sales page was changed to show a 13 March 2017 release date, but was later removed entirely.[9] However, as of 24 March 2017, the Tinker Board again became available on Amazon. ASUS assured reviewer websites that the board is now in full production.[10]
Benchmarks[edit]
Tests so far have shown that the Tinker Board has roughly twice the processing power of the Raspberry Pi Model 3 when the Pi 3 runs in 32-bit mode.[11] Because the Pi 3 has not released a 64-bit operating system yet, no comparisons are available against a Pi 3 running in 64-bit mode.
Recent[when?] benchmark testing found that while the WLAN performance is poor at only around 30Mbit/s, the gigabit ethernet delivers a full 950Mbit/s throughput.[10] RAM access tested using the mbw benchmark is 25% faster than the Pi 3. SD card (microSD) access is about twice as fast at 37MiB/s for buffered reads (compared to typically around 18MiB/s for the Pi 3[12]) due to the Tinker Board's SDIO 3.0 interface, while cached reads can fly at up to 770MiB/s.[10]
References[edit]
- ^https://www.asus.com/uk/Single-board-Computer/TINKER-BOARD/
- ^https://forum.armbian.com/index.php?/topic/3327-asus-tinkerboard/&page=10&tab=comments#comment-32047
- ^https://forum.armbian.com/index.php?/announcement/1-1-check-power-supply-check-sd-card-and-check-other-people-experiences/
- ^'LibreELEC (Leia) v8.95.2 BETA'.
- ^http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/Linux/Tinker_Board_2GB/FAQ_Tinkerboard.pdf[permanent dead link]
- ^'A Motherboard Manufacturer's Take On A Raspberry Pi Competitor'.
- ^'ASUS Tinker Board'.
- ^'Review: The Asus Tinker Board (Updated)'.
- ^'In the lab: Asus' Tinker Board SBC'.
- ^ abc'Tinker Board im Test: Hardware Top, Software Flop (link in German)'.
- ^'ASUS Tinker Board is a Raspberry Pi 3 Alternative based on Rockchip RK3288 Processor'.
- ^'Raspberry Pi microSD card performance comparison - 2015'.