I used Keyspan - Tripplite converters, with Coastal Explorer
under Win7, for a while. At some point, however, they just didn't
get the job done. It's a pity, as they were good when they were
Keyspan products. Gotta wonder if Tripplite "improved" things.
73 de KC3DOO
Rick
For years I have used the Keyspan (now Tripplite) USA-19HS serial to USB adapter. It has always worked no matter the operating system or software being used. I have customers (I’m in the marine electronics business) who have bought cheapy knockoffs and can’t get their pc integration to work properly. I sell them a USA-19HS and without any other changes, other than the proper driver install, everything works just fine. While it is more expensive than a $5 Chinese clone, how much do you value your time and peace of mind. Is it really worth the frustration with something that is supposed to be an enjoyment just to save a few dollars?
73s,Jim K2SON
---Jim McCorisonOrcas Island, WA
On Aug 28, 2016, at 11:11 AM, Pavel Milanes (CO7WT) <pavelmc@gmail.com> wrote:
Yes, I agree.
I recently upgraded my desktop PC board to a Corei5 Asus with zero serial ports, I have tested two usb-serial adapters (linux OS here) with no joy.
One ark and the other ch340 chipset, the ch340 work so so, but some radios does not work with it, the ark is a waste of time, it has only rx/tx and It get stuck easily.
I am looking desperately for a ftdi adapter here un Cuba.
73 Pavel CO7WT
El 27 de agosto de 2016 7:42:45 PM GMT-04:00, "Richard B. Emerson" <pavilion@pinefields.com> escribió:
Following the traffic here, I think the following should be (if it
isn't) a FAQ item. Nonetheless it bears repeating here:
FTDI conversion chips and drivers are extremely stable. Anything else,
including Prolific, is a gamble with poor odds. It's that simple.
Background: On our sailboat, I do a number of serial/USB conversions.
This converts (admittedly ancient) NMEA 183 serial data from
instrumentation for a USB port on a laptop running a navigation program
(Coastal Explorer - don't leave port without it). Initially I used
Prolific-based convertes (what did I know?). Simply put, it became one
non-stop headache. Data wouldn't come through, drivers stopped
functioning, etc., etc. I switched to an FTDI-based 10-port serial/USB
converter. The only changes to the system was to plug the DB-9 pigtails
into the new converter and load the FTDI driver. End of problems, no
crashes, full functionality. To clarify, one port services the full
NMEA
183 data stream from the autopilot computer (speed through the water,
depth, wind direction and speed, full GPS data stream [position, speed
over the bottom, direction, GPS status, time of day)) and the port
sends
steering information to the autopilot, waypoint location data, and
more.
Another port sends data to the VHF and SSB radios (position, time of
day) and receives data from the VHF (Digital Selective Calling data
including emergency data received). Another port sends position, time
of
day, waypoint location data and receives target data from the radar
including Modified Automatic Radar Plotting Aid data. The last active
port receives data from the Automatic Identification System and an
auxiliary GPS receiver (part of the AIS system). (full translation of
"NMEA 183", "waypoint", etc. available off-list)
This is a long and probably very boring summary of what goes through
FTDI devices at a mix of data rates (4800 baud for all but the AIS,
which works at 38400 baud). If the FTDI part fails, life gets ugly fast
(yes, there are backups). I bet a lot on FTDI and have no cause to
regret it. Prolific devices were... my wife wore earplugs when the
converters failed.
Again, FTDI good - not FTDI bad.
73 de KC3DOO
Rick
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_______________________________________________ chirp_users mailing list chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailman/listinfo/chirp_users This message was sent to KC3DOO at pavilion@pinefields.com To unsubscribe, send an email to chirp_users-unsubscribe@intrepid.danplanet.com