2020-04-28, 08:36 AM
(This post was last modified: 2020-04-28, 08:50 AM by glowntiger.)
Hi,
sorry for the late response.
For NMEA0183:
The LED indicates incoming data. For outgoing Data there is no LED because normaly you now when you send something… ;-)
The availible serial interfaces are shown in the MCS app after Installation and reboot:
you can use them directly as /dev/ttySC1 and so on... but its recommend to use the openplotter serial app. After installation of the MCS App and a system restart you find the interfaces directly in the APP:
You must proof the recieving device of the NMEA0183 if it understand real NMEA0183 (RS422). Some older devices uses different physical interfaces for NMEA0183. The MCS Board can listen to almost every NMEA0183, but can only send real RS422 NMEA0183 Data!
The Serial interface can handle as a normal uart interface!
At the Moment i work on different further tutorials and an info site were all data are stored for a quick overview… ;-)
BTW: I have edit the first site with important links. Hope it helps… ;-)
sorry for the late response.
For NMEA0183:
The LED indicates incoming data. For outgoing Data there is no LED because normaly you now when you send something… ;-)
The availible serial interfaces are shown in the MCS app after Installation and reboot:
you can use them directly as /dev/ttySC1 and so on... but its recommend to use the openplotter serial app. After installation of the MCS App and a system restart you find the interfaces directly in the APP:
You must proof the recieving device of the NMEA0183 if it understand real NMEA0183 (RS422). Some older devices uses different physical interfaces for NMEA0183. The MCS Board can listen to almost every NMEA0183, but can only send real RS422 NMEA0183 Data!
The Serial interface can handle as a normal uart interface!
At the Moment i work on different further tutorials and an info site were all data are stored for a quick overview… ;-)
BTW: I have edit the first site with important links. Hope it helps… ;-)