Open CPN

single

Well-Known Member
Joined
19 May 2012
Messages
3,499
Location
Cardiff Bay
Visit site
My old laptop has open cpn and various charts installed.I have never tried using it until now.It all looks good but i don't think it is getting data from my magellan 315 gps.baud rate etc are set right but it only gives options mentioning garmin so is my magellan not compatable or am i doing something else wrong like wrong serial to usb cable?
 
My old laptop has open cpn and various charts installed.I have never tried using it until now.It all looks good but i don't think it is getting data from my magellan 315 gps.baud rate etc are set right but it only gives options mentioning garmin so is my magellan not compatable or am i doing something else wrong like wrong serial to usb cable?

I think Garmin have a proprietary protocol, which has more information than NMEA, which is an open format. You should be able to use the Magellan with NMEA. Some help here:

http://opencpn.org/ocpn/setting_up_gps
 
Thanks for link, looks like a driver issue.

Shouldn't need a driver. I don't know much about the 315, but it's capable of delivering NMEA 0183. The PC (Linux or Windows ?) should just read the COM<n> Port (windows) or tty<n> (Linux). OpenCPN won;t know what GPS you're using.

Most likely a Baud/parity/flow control issue.

Some info here
 
Shouldn't need a driver. I don't know much about the 315, but it's capable of delivering NMEA 0183. The PC (Linux or Windows ?) should just read the COM<n> Port (windows) or tty<n> (Linux). OpenCPN won;t know what GPS you're using.

Most likely a Baud/parity/flow control issue.

Some info here

My BU-353 USB GPS dongle has a driver which I downloaded from

http://www.usglobalsat.com/s-24-support-drivers.aspx

Perhaps it would have operated without the driver but I didn't try?

Richard
 
It might be worth your while installing a (free) application called XPORT... XPORT is a port manager (among other things it allows you to assign a COM port manually) for GPS devices, but it will also allow you to try different Baud rates from within the application, while also testing if XPORT can see your GPS... might be worth a play?
 
It might be worth your while installing a (free) application called XPORT... XPORT is a port manager (among other things it allows you to assign a COM port manually) for GPS devices, but it will also allow you to try different Baud rates from within the application, while also testing if XPORT can see your GPS... might be worth a play?

An alternative, more GPS-specific, is share-ware GPSU which you can find indirectly via GPSU User Yahoo Group. (No commercial interest of mine but I've been a user for years.)

Mike.
 
Cannot offer techie advice but just to say that we had OpenCPN on our laptop and downloaded all the US charts (raster and vector - all free) for the East Coast USA and plugged in our GPS via a USB connection. Brilliant ... except that the raster charts for part of the Thousand Islands and the St Lawrence are not North up but sort of North East up - suddenly found ourselves apparently sailing across an island.
 
Top