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Larry
 
Posts: n/a
Default Raytheon Chartplotter 320

"David Lapp" wrote in
:

Seatalk daisy chain


All the wires in a Seatalk are in parallel, not "daisy chained"....

If the wires aren't crossed up, the 320 is faulty. Being in parallel, if
you disconnect any one Seatalk instrument, all the other Seatalk
instruments still talk to each other. The only data missing is data the
unplugged instrument was providing.

If the cable to the 320 were cross wired, however, it would not effect the
network until you connected it to the 320, where, say, the 320 were
grounding the data line, or the data line were hooked to +12V. Either way,
it would be "bad" for the other instruments trying to pull it up or down,
but not totally destructive as they all have series resistance to limit the
loading on a shorted Seatalk.

How many Seatalk instruments are all connected in parallel, anyway? There
IS a limit to how many simultaneous instruments seatalk can drive, but I
don't remember what it is....maybe 16? It's not data I use daily...sorry.

Pull the 320 cable off the Seatalk net. Verify each wire actually connects
to the 320 pin you think it should with an ohmmeter. Then, plug it into
the 320 (still disconnected from the network and hanging free). Boot the
320. Check that there is +12V on the +12V wire, ground on the ground wire
and you should be able to see the meter go crazy from the data from the
data wire to the ground wire. This will verify the connection before
hooking it to the seatalk net....