nmea multiplexer

bedouin

Well-known member
Joined
16 May 2001
Messages
32,604
Visit site
You mean the use of the laptop?

The most complex part of multiplexing signals is the intelligent discarding of repeat information in order to fit the merged sentence stream into the output. I think that is pushing the capabilities of a low-end microcontroller.

With a laptop involved you could mux the 4800 NMEAs into a 19200 (or higher) stream into the PC (you can do with with a single PIC) , use the processing power of the PC to manipulate the data, then stream it out of the PC at 4800
 

tome

New member
Joined
28 Mar 2002
Messages
8,201
Location
kprick
www.google.co.uk
[ QUOTE ]
you can do with with a single PIC

[/ QUOTE ]

Thanks for the informative, sure it will help many overcome their problems
 

bedouin

Well-known member
Joined
16 May 2001
Messages
32,604
Visit site
[ QUOTE ]

Thanks for the informative, sure it will help many overcome their problems

[/ QUOTE ]
Don't mention it /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif

I'm afraid it's one of those cases where if you don't understand the answer as given then you probably don't have the skills necessary to do it D-I-Y.

If someone is genuinely interested in the approach then I'd be happy to expore the issues in more depth - but somehow I don't thint that includes you Tome /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
 

BlueChip

Active member
Joined
24 Aug 2004
Messages
4,849
Location
Bucks/Plymouth
Visit site
Re: Raymarine recommend these...

I used the Brookhouse nmea / seatalk mux unit and had problems with the Seatalk - NMEA conversion. The NMEA mux worked ok I bought it direct and it cost loads of additional money for carriage and import charges
Found their support less than helpful and never got to the bottom of the problem - they denied it existed in spite of logged data proof
Sold it on eBay in the end
Raymarine mux units come up on eBay regularly for about £60
 
Top