Black Sheep
Well-Known Member
I have a wind direction/speed sensor. I believe it's the NASA unit, and I believe it's supposed to spit out NMEA. I would like to wire it up, and squirt the NMEA at an Arduino board for a project.
My problem is that I don't know what each wire does. I could just experiment, but I don't want to blow anything up by pushing 12v the wrong way up a delicate signal wire!
The sensor has a 5 terminal DIN socket on its lead. The extension wire has a 5 terminal DIN plug at one end. The other end has five wires:
- thin red
- thin black
- thin blue
- thin white
- thick black
It looks as though the thick black is connected to the braid of the cable.
My first thought was that thin red & thin black were power; thick black signal ground? And white & blue NMEA out. But a multimeter between thin red & thin black shows no circuit. Between thin red and thick black, I'm getting about 400 ohms. So it looks as though that's the power supply?
Which two wires (black/blue/white) do I use for NMEA?
I've looked online but haven't found anything useful, so hoping someone on here can tell me for sure!
My problem is that I don't know what each wire does. I could just experiment, but I don't want to blow anything up by pushing 12v the wrong way up a delicate signal wire!
The sensor has a 5 terminal DIN socket on its lead. The extension wire has a 5 terminal DIN plug at one end. The other end has five wires:
- thin red
- thin black
- thin blue
- thin white
- thick black
It looks as though the thick black is connected to the braid of the cable.
My first thought was that thin red & thin black were power; thick black signal ground? And white & blue NMEA out. But a multimeter between thin red & thin black shows no circuit. Between thin red and thick black, I'm getting about 400 ohms. So it looks as though that's the power supply?
Which two wires (black/blue/white) do I use for NMEA?
I've looked online but haven't found anything useful, so hoping someone on here can tell me for sure!