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Piet Barber  wrote: 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
		
	
	
	So... has anybody successfully gotten the LX-Nano to be the GPS source for the SN-10? I've made my own RJ-45 cables to connect the two, but the SN-10 refuses to acknowledge that there's a GPS attached. My volkslogger blew up last spring, and we've not been able to make any use of the SN-10, outside of the speed to fly function which still works. I feel like kind of a pioneer here, except a lot less smart. I wired the Nano to the SN-10 with the wiring instructions on page 12 of the Nano handbook. Set the baud rate on both ends to 19200 (also tried 4800), NMEA. No soup. Anybody got any ideas? I have some bad feeling that it could be because of these reasons that I haven't yet successfully eliminated as possibilities, (ranked by most likely to least likely): 1) I'm not actually wiring it up in the way that I think I'm wiring it up 2) there's something subtle and different in the NMEA sentence structure between the Nano and the SN-10 that won't be fixed by wiring. 3) the SN-10 is busted somehow. 4) The USB-to-serial cable that comes with the Nano is busted somehow. If there is anybody out there who has successfully paired these two devices before, I'd really like to know -- that way I can eliminate possibility #2 above. Page 12 of the manual is not wiring instructions it's just pinouts of the nano power/converter cable. So how exactly have you wired these together? You should be connecting the nano RS-232 level transmit to the SN-10 receive and the nano RS-232 level receive to the SN-10 transmit and connecting the nano ground to the SN-10. Leave everything else disconnected. Is that the cable you built? It is not uncommon to mis-crimp telco/modular connectors where the pins might be pushed down but not make proper contact with the wire, especially for new users or cheaper crimp tools. Can you see the pin/blade going through the wire. Use a multimeter to continuity check between the pins on each modular connector. You have disabled Bluetooth on the nano, right? Do you have a computer with a serial port or a USB to serial adapter you know works? Of so you can wire up a cable between that and the Nano converter cable, and use a terminal emulator on the computer to see if the nano is working properly. Darryl  | 
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