AngusMcDoon
Well-Known Member
Who said connecting signal and ground ? Do that and kiss item goodbye.
That is also untrue. If you have a battery powered talker, for example a handheld GPS, connected to your boat system powered listener, like a VHF radio, you could connect either side of the signal to boat ground and it would still work because...
1) there is no common ground between the 2 device
2) the receiver circuit of a NMEA0183 device is required to be opto-isolated.
However, the standard says don't, for signal quality reasons. They don't specifically mention it for the fun of it. There are devices that require you to do just that though. I can feed a differential NMEA0183 signal into my handheld Garmin GPS for route upload and I have to connect the NMEA0183 B line straight to the device's ground pin, but being an isolated system with no common ground, it all works safely.
Every RS232 or RS422 line driver I have ever used has short circuit protection. I've never known one be killed by shorting a signal line to ground. Manufacturers specify short circuit survivability as part of their design acceptance tests, for example...
https://www.ti.com/lit/an/slla070d/slla070d.pdf?ts=1592336672365&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2F
When you connect up your RS232 .... NMEA ..... whatever GPS Puck etc. - the power -ve provides that 'ground' necessary to have not only power circuit - but also the data signal circuit.
That's only true for NMEA0183 devices that use the now very old early standard versions that were deprecated in about 1986. My Garmin GPS45 from that era is like that, as are cheap GPS pucks now (but they are not compliant with any version of NMEA0183, they just pump out a NMEA0183-like message). The later NMEA0183 standard versions specify differential signalling based on RS422 with compulsory opto-isolation, and that's what pretty much all marine kit has used for decades. The receiver circuit in this kit (and in my YAPP designs) will accept either old style single ended or new style differential NMEA0183 through an opto-isolator. You can call the RS422/NMEA0183 v2.3 and later signal return line ground if you like, but in a differential comms line terminology, you will be wrong.
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