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John,
Dave Nadler's site explains this is detail, and Paul Remde (Cumulus Soaring) has good advice also, including suggesting to visit Dave's site: "Connecting to PCs that Don't Have RS-232 Serial Connectors Most flight computers and flight recorders connect to PCs using RS-232 communications. However, most new PCs do not have RS-232 serial connectors. These are usually DB-9m (9-pin male) connectors. There are several ways to work around that issue. My recommendation is to use an RS-232 serial port PCMCIA Card. You can see an example he Socket Serial I/O PC Card Another solution is to use a USB to serial converter. However, many of these units to do work as well as one would expect. David Nadler has compiled a very nice list of devices that have been tested and work well. You can see his page he http://www.nadler.com/sn10/SN10_USB_Serial_Notes.html" Paul, hope it's okay to paste your info here as a plug. ~Bruce |
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On Feb 20, 7:23 pm, Barny wrote:
John, Dave Nadler's site explains this is detail, and Paul Remde (Cumulus Soaring) has good advice also, including suggesting to visit Dave's site: "Connecting to PCs that Don't Have RS-232 Serial Connectors Most flight computers and flight recorders connect to PCs using RS-232 communications. However, most new PCs do not have RS-232 serial connectors. These are usually DB-9m (9-pin male) connectors. There are several ways to work around that issue. My recommendation is to use an RS-232 serial port PCMCIA Card. You can see an example he Socket Serial I/O PC Card Another solution is to use a USB to serial converter. However, many of these units to do work as well as one would expect. David Nadler has compiled a very nice list of devices that have been tested and work well. You can see his page hehttp://www.nadler.com/sn10/SN10_USB_Serial_Notes.html" Paul, hope it's okay to paste your info here as a plug. ~Bruce In my business, I have a few industrial instruments that use RS-232 for communications. My experience with USB converters has been very mixed. The Belkin has worked best, but I find conflicts. Some instruments that use USB actually have a built-in RS-232 converter and this has led to conflicts with other converters, including the Belkin. Even modern versions of Windows don't always handle these conflicts very well. In frustration with converter conflicts, I acquired a refurbished IBM T30 laptop, which is one of the last to still have an RS-232 port, but still runs Windows XP and has built-in wifi. This has never let me down with any connected instrument (including the SN10 and Volkslogger). The USB converters can work quite well, but don't expect it to be as easy as a dedicated RS-232 or even a PC card converter. Mike |
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