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On Fri, 29 Jul 2005 12:36:59 -0400, Jon Gauthier
wrote: Another question - and I know this has been hashed before but a search didn't turn up the answer: In a network with NMEA equipment from different manufacturers in which some equipment has a real, separate NMEA (-) lead and other equipment that takes the cheap route and uses DC ground for the signal return, is it best to just leave the NMEA (-) leads floating, or run them to DC ground? I do have a DC ground bus bar for all my nav equipment (including VHF but no SSB) that ties back to the main DC ground bus using a #6AWG cable. According to my stereo's AM band, the system seems electrically quiet For a differential talker going to a single-ended listener, I'd leave the talker's (-) lead unconnected. For a single-ended talker going to a differential listener, the listener's (-) lead _must_ be grounded. Theoretically, it should be grounded at the talker's ground terminal, but for practical purposes, any point on the vessel's DC ground should work. -- Peter Bennett VE7CEI email: peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca GPS and NMEA info and programs: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter/index.html Newsgroup new user info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq |
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