[geeks] GPS antenna connector question

Dan Duncan dand at pcisys.net
Tue Jul 12 16:04:42 CDT 2005


> On Tue, Jul 12, 2005 at 02:50:14PM -0600, Dan Duncan wrote:
> > Mine is similar to yours and so old it only speaks TAIP, but ntp
> > still supports it.

On Tue, 12 Jul 2005, Bill Bradford wrote:
> Which model?  I can run a DOS program (available from Trimble's FTP
> site) and switch mine between TAIP and NMEA.

I'll have to check when I get home.  Mine was designed to be installed
in fleet vehicles.  It ONLY does TAIP and would have come with a single
board computer (286 or 386) with two serial ports.  One went to the GPS
and the other went to a radio modem.  The only software I ever used for
the GPS functions was a DOS app written by Trimble.  I still have it
on a 286 laptop somewhere.  It doesn't have maps per se, but it will
generate a chart showing where you have been since the app was started.
It only receives a couple of parallel channels (if that) and almost
never gives me an altitude lock, but even one channel is good enough
for ntp.

> Yesterday I had the Deluo USB GPS and the Trimble hooked to my Windows
> box at the same time - one on a virtual COM3, the other on the physical
> COM1.  I had two different GPS monitor programs running, one for each
> GPS. 8-)

I've thought about upgrading to a modern handheld unit, but I keep putting
it off.  I've done a few geocaches with a friend and it's sort of fun.
I can never make up my mind if I want bluetooth, standalone, etc...

-DanD

-- 
#  Dan Duncan (kd4igw)  dand at pcisys.net  http://pcisys.net/~dand
# "Feet are assumed to be 11 inches long to be conservative."
# From the "tar" manpage, Digital Unix 4.0b



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