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#1
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Hi,
A customer has asked me to help him connect his PowerFLARM Core to his Borgelt B50 and Naviter Oudie. He had ordered a K6 Mux - which would definitely work, but I wonder if a simpler and less expensive cable solution would also work well. I have the required Goddard PBvB50 cable in stock. The B50 manual states that it communicates at 4800 baud by default and can be configured using a jumper to communicate at 9600 baud. The PowerFLARM and Oudie can also be configured to communicate at 9600 baud. The big question and the reason for this post is that I'm concerned as to whether all the GPS and FLARM and B50 vario data can get through every update at 9600 baud. Most FLARM systems use 19200 baud or higher to make sure all the data gets through. Does anyone know whether or not this approach would work? The goal is to minimize the customer's cost while providing a reliable system. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. |
#2
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On Monday, 11 May 2015 17:18:12 UTC+1, Paul Remde wrote:
Hi, A customer has asked me to help him connect his PowerFLARM Core to his Borgelt B50 and Naviter Oudie. He had ordered a K6 Mux - which would definitely work, but I wonder if a simpler and less expensive cable solution would also work well. I have the required Goddard PBvB50 cable in stock. The B50 manual states that it communicates at 4800 baud by default and can be configured using a jumper to communicate at 9600 baud. The PowerFLARM and Oudie can also be configured to communicate at 9600 baud. The big question and the reason for this post is that I'm concerned as to whether all the GPS and FLARM and B50 vario data can get through every update at 9600 baud. Most FLARM systems use 19200 baud or higher to make sure all the data gets through. Does anyone know whether or not this approach would work? The goal is to minimize the customer's cost while providing a reliable system. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. My experience says it won't work with the FLARM feeding through B50 - there isn't enough time to get the data through at 9600. I managed to get a B50 working with a plain GPS by configuring the GPS to output the minimum number of NMEA sentences as the default GPS setting sent too much data and it got garbled. With FLARM data as well there would just be too much. Roger |
#3
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2015. május 11., hétfÅ‘ 18:18:12 UTC+2 idÅ‘pontban Paul Remde a következÅ‘t Ã*rta:
Hi, A customer has asked me to help him connect his PowerFLARM Core to his Borgelt B50 and Naviter Oudie. He had ordered a K6 Mux - which would definitely work, but I wonder if a simpler and less expensive cable solution would also work well. I have the required Goddard PBvB50 cable in stock. The B50 manual states that it communicates at 4800 baud by default and can be configured using a jumper to communicate at 9600 baud. The PowerFLARM and Oudie can also be configured to communicate at 9600 baud. The big question and the reason for this post is that I'm concerned as to whether all the GPS and FLARM and B50 vario data can get through every update at 9600 baud. Most FLARM systems use 19200 baud or higher to make sure all the data gets through. Does anyone know whether or not this approach would work? The goal is to minimize the customer's cost while providing a reliable system. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. Hello, maybe you should try to disable some NMEA sentences, using MUX. Why do you need both GPS and FLARM for GPS data, FLARM is enough. I am doing the same with B800_GPS-FLARM-Vertica-MUX, just using FLARM GPS data for Vertica. |
#4
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Hi Roger,
Thank you for your feedback. I appreciate it. I also received a reply from Mike Borgelt stating simply and correctly that FLARM states that 19200 baud is required. Therefore, I have put together a K6 Mux system for the customer. It receives the B50 data at 4800 baud and the FLARM data at 19200 baud and sends everything to the Oudie at 19200 baud. The customer will receive a "plug-n-play" system. The K6 Mux is a great product. I was just trying to look at all possibilities in an effort to minimize cost for the customer. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "Roger S" wrote in message ... On Monday, 11 May 2015 17:18:12 UTC+1, Paul Remde wrote: Hi, A customer has asked me to help him connect his PowerFLARM Core to his Borgelt B50 and Naviter Oudie. He had ordered a K6 Mux - which would definitely work, but I wonder if a simpler and less expensive cable solution would also work well. I have the required Goddard PBvB50 cable in stock. The B50 manual states that it communicates at 4800 baud by default and can be configured using a jumper to communicate at 9600 baud. The PowerFLARM and Oudie can also be configured to communicate at 9600 baud. The big question and the reason for this post is that I'm concerned as to whether all the GPS and FLARM and B50 vario data can get through every update at 9600 baud. Most FLARM systems use 19200 baud or higher to make sure all the data gets through. Does anyone know whether or not this approach would work? The goal is to minimize the customer's cost while providing a reliable system. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. My experience says it won't work with the FLARM feeding through B50 - there isn't enough time to get the data through at 9600. I managed to get a B50 working with a plain GPS by configuring the GPS to output the minimum number of NMEA sentences as the default GPS setting sent too much data and it got garbled. With FLARM data as well there would just be too much. Roger |
#5
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On 11/05/2015 18:17, Paul Remde wrote:
The big question and the reason for this post is that I'm concerned as to whether all the GPS and FLARM and B50 vario data can get through every update at 9600 baud. Most FLARM systems use 19200 baud or higher to make sure all the data gets through. Does anyone know whether or not this approach would work? I have a B500 + Clasic Flarm talking to a Dell Streak running XCSoar via a IOIO card. The B500 runs at 4800 and the Flarm at 19200. If you set Flarm baud rate any slower than 19200, the sending of traffic alert sentences get disabled by Flarm. Which probably defeats the object of the exercise. |
#6
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On Wednesday, May 13, 2015 at 3:16:01 PM UTC-4, Ian wrote:
...If you set Flarm baud rate any slower than 19200, the sending of traffic alert sentences get disabled by Flarm. Which probably defeats the object of the exercise. Per the manual: With FLARM baud rate 19200: - traffic alerts are suppressed - collision warnings are NOT suppressed |
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