On Jul 4, 6:57 am, Jack Erbes wrote:
GeoffSchultz wrote:
At my nav station I have a bus bar with jumpers...snip
Connecting multiple equipments to a single RS-232 output can drop or
overload the signal levels and affect the quality and performance some
or all of the connections. I think that can generally start happening
with more than two or maybe three three devices connected. That might
be the root cause of your problem here.
In a more professional installation, a signal multiplexer would normally
be used for what you are doing. Using one of those will usually add
some more features too, like allowing more than one talker to share NMEA
data with multiple listeners. And some will allow data exchange with
proprietary flavors of RS-232 (like Raymarine's SeaTalk) and have
Bluetooth and other more modern whizzbang features.
If you are crafty, you can make your own:
http://www.vimms.org/multiplex/docu.html
Or you can buy one of the good ones intended for marine use:
http://www.shipmodul.com/en/index.html
http://www.nolandengineering.com/
http://brookhouseonline.com/nmeamux_ext.htm
Jack
--
Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA - jackerbes at adelphia dot net
(also receiving email at jacker at midmaine.com)
Thanks for the pointers to multiplexors. I have 3 devices connected
to the 4800 bps NMEA output and I don't seem to have any problems with
data reliability or noise. It's when I connect the 38400 AIS data
that I get the problem. I don't have time to analyze my options right
now as I'm in the process of storing the boat for hurricane season,
but when I get home I'll re-think my solution and perhaps get
something that bridges to the SeaTalk bus so that I can get full
access to that data.
-- Geoff