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NMEA charges the fee to the manufacturer. It will, of course, be
passed on to the consumer. It's really a Plug and Pray. Ethernet based approaches are becoming popular. Doug s/v Callista "Gordon" wrote in message . .. I don't understand. Who charges the fee? It's basically plug and play. Gordon "Peter Bennett" wrote in message news.com... On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 01:08:48 GMT, "Gordon" wrote: The newest standard for marine interface is NMEA 2000. When new gear comes out, with NMEA 2000, will it communicate with NMEA 0183? I'm looking at new electronics, do I wait? Gordon NMEA-2000 isn't new - it was introduced in 2000 (hence the name). It is not compatible with NMEA-0183, as 2000 uses CAN-Bus which is a bidirectional multi-point bus (vaguely similar in operation to SeaTalk, but incompatible with that, too). There is apparently a considerable licence fee to use NMEA-2000, so you may see manufacturers going to their own proprietary busses, rather than using NMEA-2000. -- Peter Bennett, VE7CEI peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca new newsgroup users info : http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq GPS and NMEA info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter Vancouver Power Squadron: http://vancouver.powersquadron.ca |
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