Datasheet - Gk7102
Seamlessly boots from external SPI NOR or SPI NAND Flash memories (commonly 16 MiB sizes) via dedicated serial interfaces. 2. Advanced Image Signal Processor (ISP) Features
One day, a developer named Elias found a dusty camera in a clearance bin. Inside, he discovered the GK7102, paired with an and an H42 CMOS sensor . Referring to the datasheet, Elias realized this chip was a master of efficiency. It ran on an embedded Linux operating system and spoke the language of H.264 video compression , squeezing high-quality video into tiny data streams. gk7102 datasheet
| Issue | Datasheet Section to Revisit | | :--- | :--- | | Chip gets hot ( >85°C) | Check VDD_CORE voltage; should be 1.2V, not 1.35V | | No image from sensor | Validate PCLK and VSYNC timing (Section 7.2) | | Boot fails from SPI | Verify BOOT0=0, BOOT1=0 and CS pin pull-up | | Ethernet link drops | Add 2.2nF caps to TX+/TX- lines (Section 9.4.1) | Seamlessly boots from external SPI NOR or SPI
: ARM1176 core running at 600 MHz with 16KB I-Cache and 16KB D-Cache. Inside, he discovered the GK7102, paired with an
The is a highly integrated, cost-efficient, and low-power System-on-Chip (SoC) engineered by Goke Microelectronics specifically for High-Definition (HD) IP security cameras, smart video doorbells, and wireless consumer surveillance products . Optimized to deliver stable performance in constrained hardware setups, the processor supports multi-stream encoding and pairs seamlessly with multiple CMOS image sensors to form the core of entry-level security architectures.
The Goke GK7102 balances processing efficiency and component consolidation to minimize the overall Printed Circuit Board (PCB) footprint and total bill of materials (BOM) cost.
: Leverages an integrated internal Codec block providing direct, single-ended pins for mic installations and 8-ohm audio amplification circuits.