The Ultimate GPS module you know and love has a glow-up to let it be easily used with any computer, not just microcontrollers! With the built in USB-to-Serial converter, you can now plug-n-play the Ultimate GPS into your computer, laptop, embedded Linux computer, and more.
 Power and transport data over any micro USB cable, with handy on-board indicator LEDs that let you know fix status and whether data is being received & transmitted.
 Adafruit believe this is the Ultimate USB GPS module, so they named it that. It's got everything you want and more:
 
 -165 dBm sensitivity, 10 Hz updates, 66 channels
 Plug and Play USB with CP2104 USB-to-Serial converter built in.
 PPS output on RI (Ring Indicator) serial control pin
 USB Micro B connector + two mounting holes
 Only 25mA current draw
 RTC battery-compatible
 Built-in datalogging
 Internal patch antenna + u.FL connector for external active antenna
 Fix status LED + UART activity LEDs
 
 The breakout is built around the MTK3339 chipset, a no-nonsense, high-quality GPS module that can track up to 22 satellites on 66 channels, has an excellent high-sensitivity receiver (-165 dBm tracking!), and a built in antenna. It can do up to 10 location updates a second for high speed, high sensitivity logging or tracking. Power usage is incredibly low, only ~25 mA during navigation.Adafruit added all the extra goodies you could ever want: 4-pin USB breakout for direct-soldering or connection to a USB host, two yellow receive/transmit LEDs let you know when data is being transmitted to or from the GPS module serial interface, a footprint for optional CR1220 coin cell to keep the RTC running and allow warm starts and a tiny bright red LED. The LED blinks at about 1Hz while it's searching for satellites and blinks once every 15 seconds when a fix is found to conserve power. If you want to have an LED on all the time, you get the FIX signal out on a pin so you can put an external LED on.Two features that really stand out about version 3 MTK3339-based module is the external antenna functionality and the the built in data-logging capability. The module has a standard ceramic patch antenna that gives it -165 dBm sensitivity, but when you want to have a bigger antenna, you can snap on any 3V active GPS antenna via the uFL connector. The module will automatically detect the active antenna and switch over! Most GPS antennas use SMA connectors so you may want to pick up one of our uFL to SMA adapters.Comes with one fully assembled and tested module and a CR1220 coin cell holder. A CR1220 coin cell is not included
 For use with a computer, use any GPS software or serial monitor software, at 9600 baud default serial rate. You will immediately get data on the serial port once its plugged in. If you want to parse data within Python 3, Adafruit have example code for the CircuitPython library that uses pyserial
 
 TECHNICAL DETAILS
 
 Satellites: 22 tracking, 66 searching
 Patch Antenna Size: 15mm x 15mm x 4mm
 Update rate: 1 to 10 Hz
 Position Accuracy: < 3 meters (all GPS technology has about 3m accuracy)
 Velocity Accuracy: 0.1 meters/s
 Warm/cold start: 34 seconds
 Acquisition sensitivity: -145 dBm
 Tracking sensitivity: -165 dBm
 Maximum Velocity: 515m/s
 Vin range: 3.0-5.5VDC
 MTK3339 Operating current: 25mA tracking, 20 mA current draw during navigation
 Output: NMEA 0183, 9600 baud default, 3V logic level out, 5V-safe input
 DGPS/WAAS/EGNOS supported
 FCC E911 compliance and AGPS support (Offline mode : EPO valid up to 14 days )
 Up to 210 PRN channels
 Jammer detection and reduction
 Multi-path detection and compensation
 
 Breakout board details:
 
 Weight (not including coin cell or holder): 8.5g
 Dimensions (not including coin cell or holder): 25.5mm x 35mm x 6.5mm / 1.0" x 1.35" x 0.25"
 
 Datasheets, schematics, GitHub links, Fritzing and more available in the product tutorial
 Product Dimensions: 40.0mm x 25.4mm x 6.8mm / 1.6" x 1.0" x 0.3"
 Product Weight: 8.1g / 0.3oz
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 Adafruit Ultimate GPS - One GPS to rule them all and in the darkness find them!