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Thanks.
We tried that, only the radar/only the radio= no NMEA to either. (There are separate wires to the radio and the Furuno cable for the radio: they are both connected to the same DB9.) "Wout B" wrote in message ... "William G. Andersen" wrote in message news:1ni5e.55$lz2.38@fed1read07... What would you check in this situation? I have a handheld GPS mounted on my instrument panel; the Garmin NMEA cable molded fitting is connected to the GPS. The other end of the wire has a DB9 connector, because it's intended for connection to a computer. To a mating DB9 connector, I have the bare end of my Furuno radar NMEA cable and a pair of wires to deliver NMEA to my radio. This has not been changed for many months - the GPS provides NMEA data to both radar and radio. I occasionally connect a different GPS to the radio and radar by connecting a Garmin NMEA cable with DB9 connector to the DB9 connector of the radio and radar. The last couple of times out, there hasn't been any NMEA indication on the radar or radio, regardless of which GPS and GPS cable I connected to the radio/radar DB9. Today we checked and found continuity in the radio/radar cable and also in the GPS cable - they both read OK. The DB9 connectors on the GPS cables are molded and I use dielectric grease on them (only the 2 and 5 pins are used). We opened the DB9 connector that feeds both the radar and radio and couldn't find a short. We put it back together and thought we'd try again in a few days. I verified the obvious like the GPSs are set to NMEA, turned on, and had located our position and that the radar and radio were turned on and set to receive NMEA. I've decided to replace the DB9 connector on the cable to the radio.radar even though we didn't see anything wrong because that's the cheapest thing to replace and I don't know what else it could be. What would you check? If one of the input ports of radio or radar is faulty or shorted out, you may lose the signal to both. Disconnect the radio, check if you now get a signal in the radar. Then disconnect the radar and check the radio. If still no luck, if you can get access to a laptop with serial port, check with Hyperterminal (4800bps, no parity, no flow control). Cheers, Wout |
#2
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William G. Andersen wrote:
Thanks. We tried that, only the radar/only the radio= no NMEA to either. (There are separate wires to the radio and the Furuno cable for the radio: they are both connected to the same DB9.) "Wout B" wrote in message ... "William G. Andersen" wrote in message news:1ni5e.55$lz2.38@fed1read07... What would you check in this situation? I have a handheld GPS mounted on my instrument panel; the Garmin NMEA cable molded fitting is connected to the GPS. The other end of the wire has a DB9 connector, because it's intended for connection to a computer. To a mating DB9 connector, I have the bare end of my Furuno radar NMEA cable and a pair of wires to deliver NMEA to my radio. This has not been changed for many months - the GPS provides NMEA data to both radar and radio. I occasionally connect a different GPS to the radio and radar by connecting a Garmin NMEA cable with DB9 connector to the DB9 connector of the radio and radar. The last couple of times out, there hasn't been any NMEA indication on the radar or radio, regardless of which GPS and GPS cable I connected to the radio/radar DB9. Today we checked and found continuity in the radio/radar cable and also in the GPS cable - they both read OK. The DB9 connectors on the GPS cables are molded and I use dielectric grease on them (only the 2 and 5 pins are used). We opened the DB9 connector that feeds both the radar and radio and couldn't find a short. We put it back together and thought we'd try again in a few days. I verified the obvious like the GPSs are set to NMEA, turned on, and had located our position and that the radar and radio were turned on and set to receive NMEA. I've decided to replace the DB9 connector on the cable to the radio.radar even though we didn't see anything wrong because that's the cheapest thing to replace and I don't know what else it could be. What would you check? If one of the input ports of radio or radar is faulty or shorted out, you may lose the signal to both. Disconnect the radio, check if you now get a signal in the radar. Then disconnect the radar and check the radio. If still no luck, if you can get access to a laptop with serial port, check with Hyperterminal (4800bps, no parity, no flow control). Cheers, Wout It would seem that the fault lies with the GPS, either in the moulded plug or within the body of the GPS. Have you any means of checking the baud rate? Connect it to a laptop as suggested and use Hyperterminal to check for data flow. Digital Photo-charts for all UK areas. Remove 'nospam' to reply. |
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