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Glen \Wiley\ Wilson
 
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On Tue, 17 May 2005 18:30:19 -0400, krj
wrote:

Phil,
What you need is a Seatalk to NMEA converter. The Raymarine ST60 output
is seatalk NOT NMEA. If you use the Raymarine navigation software
package then it will decode the seatalk data stream from the ST60
directly without the converter.
krj.

Phil Stanton wrote:
Can anyone help
I have a Raymarine ST60 Multi and want to get NMEA data (Wind & Depth) into
the 9 pin serial port on my laptop. If the laptop is not connected to
anything at all (including power supplies) this works fine. If I connect it
to the boats 12v supply via a cigarette type laptop power supply, or an
inverter using the normal laptop power lead I get nothing.
Equally if I connect the USB port via a Serial to USB lead to the GPS and
AIS input I immediately loose the NMEA input.
I have been told I need to use an optocoupler (optical isolator) and have
bought a 4N25 chip.
Can anyone suggest what the problem is and / or give me a circuit diagram of
how to use this optocoupler

many thanks

Phil


Presumably he already has that covered, since he says it works fine
until he hooks up power. PC serial port signals are ground
referenced. NMEA (RS422) is differential. I am way over my head
here, but I'd guess hooking boat 12v power to the laptop is connecting
one of the RS422 signal lines to boat ground, which could easily cause
your problem. It's not necessarily just an isolation problem, though.
RS422 and RS232 are not guaranteed to work together, isolated or
otherwise. Take a look he

http://www.bb-elec.com/bb-elec/liter...83v2c_4502.pdf

for a packaged solution. It sounds as if a quality multiplexor would
solve your problem as well.

__________________________________________________ __________
Glen "Wiley" Wilson usenet1 SPAMNIX at world wide wiley dot com
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Take a look at cpRepeater, my NMEA data integrator, repeater, and
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