Support

Getting Started with Your GNSS Receiver

From unboxing to your first position fix in minutes. Follow these steps to set up your Eview GNSS receiver correctly the first time.

1
Check what’s in the box
2
Connect the antenna & power
3
Install drivers & open software
4
Confirm your first GNSS fix
📡

Eview GNSS receivers are designed for rapid deployment.
Most users achieve a first fix within 5 minutes of setup.

HomeSupport › Getting Started

Step-by-Step Setup Guide

Follow these steps in order. Each step takes 1–3 minutes. If you encounter an issue, see the troubleshooting tips at each stage or contact our support team.

1

Check the Box Contents

Before powering on your unit, confirm you have received all items. Your package should include the receiver unit, a USB cable, and a quick-start card. Antennas and mounting hardware may be included depending on your order configuration.

  • GNSS receiver or OEM board
  • USB-A to USB-C or micro-USB cable
  • Quick-start reference card
  • Antenna (if ordered with receiver kit)
  • Mounting bracket or enclosure (if applicable)
  • Packing slip / invoice
Missing something? Email tina.ng@gnss-solutions.com with your order number and we’ll arrange delivery of any missing items.
2

Connect the GNSS Antenna

Your receiver requires an external GNSS antenna to acquire satellite signals. The antenna connector is typically a TNC or SMA female port on the unit housing (or a U.FL connector on OEM boards).

  • Use an active multi-band antenna (L1/L2/L5 or L1/L2 as applicable)
  • Place the antenna with a clear view of the sky — no obstructions above 10°
  • Avoid placing near metallic surfaces that could cause multipath reflections
  • For OEM boards, connect via U.FL-to-SMA pigtail cable
  • Ensure the antenna cable is routed away from power lines and motors
  • Tighten connectors finger-tight — do not over-torque
Antenna not included? Eview supplies compatible multi-frequency survey and machine-control antennas. Contact us for antenna recommendations for your application.
3

Power the Receiver

Eview GNSS receivers can be powered via USB (5 V) or an external DC supply (7–36 V depending on model). For initial setup and testing, USB power from a laptop or powered hub is the simplest option.

  • Connect USB cable to receiver and to a laptop or powered USB hub
  • A power LED or status LED will illuminate on the receiver housing
  • For field deployment, use the specified DC input voltage for your model
  • Never exceed the maximum input voltage — see product datasheet
LED status: A solid or slowly blinking green LED typically indicates the receiver is powered and initialising. Refer to your product’s quick-start card for model-specific LED behaviour.
4

Install USB Drivers (Windows)

On Windows, your receiver will appear as a USB-to-Serial COM port. Most receivers use a CP210x or FTDI USB chip which requires a driver on first use. macOS and Linux typically detect these chipsets automatically.

  • Connect the receiver to your Windows PC via USB
  • Open Device Manager — look for “Ports (COM & LPT)”
  • If a yellow warning icon appears, the driver needs installation
  • Download the CP210x driver from Silicon Labs, or FTDI driver from ftdichip.com
  • After installation, note the COM port number assigned (e.g., COM4)
  • On macOS, the device appears as /dev/tty.usbserial-xxxxx
Device Manager → Ports (COM & LPT) → CP210x USB to UART Bridge
Still not recognised? Try a different USB cable (some cables are charge-only and do not carry data). Also try a different USB port directly on the computer rather than through a hub.
5

Open the Configuration Software

Eview receivers based on Septentrio mosaic modules can be accessed via RxTools or the built-in web interface. Unicore-based receivers (UM980, UM982 series) can be configured using UNICORE Message Analyst or any serial terminal.

🛰 RxTools (mosaic-X5 / mosaic-H)

Septentrio’s RxTools provides a full GUI for configuring mosaic receivers, monitoring signal quality, and logging raw data.

Download RxTools →

📊 UNICORE Message Analyst (UM980 / UM982)

UMA is the official Windows application for configuring and monitoring Unicore GNSS receivers. Connect via COM port at 115200 baud.

Download UMA →

💻 Serial Terminal

Any serial terminal (CoolTerm, PuTTY, TeraTerm) works for command input and NMEA monitoring. Set baud rate to 115200, 8N1.

Download CoolTerm →
Default baud rate for all Eview receivers is 115200 bps, 8 data bits, no parity, 1 stop bit (8N1). No hardware handshaking required.
6

Confirm Your First GNSS Fix

Once the receiver is powered with an antenna connected and sky view available, it will begin acquiring satellite signals. Cold start time-to-first-fix (TTFF) is typically under 60 seconds in open sky.

🔵

Single-Point Fix

3D position with 4+ satellites. Accuracy ~1–3 m. Sufficient for basic applications.

🟠

SBAS Fix

Differential correction via WAAS/EGNOS. Accuracy ~0.5–1 m. No external connection required.

🟢

RTK Fixed

Centimetre-level accuracy. Requires NTRIP or base station corrections. Best performance.

Check the fix type in your software. Look for a green indicator or “RTK Fixed” / “3D Fix” status. If the receiver stays in “No Fix” after 5 minutes in open sky, verify the antenna connection and cable integrity.

Need Help Getting Set Up?

Our technical team is available to assist with hardware setup, driver issues, software configuration, and first-fix troubleshooting.