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Geoff Schultz wrote:
larry wrote in news:Xns9A35D2BBAFB1noonehomecom@ 208.49.80.253: By the way, Seatalk isn't rocket science. Connect Seatalk data wire (Yellow) to an RS-232C data in pin (pin 3 on the 25pin/pin 2 on the 9 pin) and hook Seatalk ground to computer data ground pin (7 on the 25, 5 on the 9). (I use little mini clips and made a snooping test cable.) Boot good old Hyperterm. Save you a dumb terminal ASCII.ht connection to make it easier to come back. Mine's on my laptop. Plug Seatalk Hyperterm and look at the data, yourself, as it streams by. At some point, after it has filled the buffer, pull the plug and look down through the data for noise and crazy bits. Seatalk isn't encrypted... To further correct Larry's statement, SeaTalk is encrypted in the sense that it's a binary protocol. Datagrams are between 3 and 18 bytes in length and are totally binary (the messages don't contain any ASCII characters like you'd see in a NMEA sentence). Thus Hyperterm won't do you any good unless a version that display hex bytes and knows how/when to terminate a datagram. -- Geoff www.GeoffSchultz.org I've built that interface circuit and it does work. Hyperterm definately wont do the job. Larry must be confusing Seatalk with NMEA. -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL: 'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed, All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy. |
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