[aprssig] Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator
WA8LMF@aol.com WA8LMF2 at aol.comSun Aug 29 15:18:40 UTC 2004
- Previous message: [aprssig] Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator
- Next message: [aprssig] Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Chris Bouck wrote on 8/29/2004, 6:33 AM: > Has anyone used the Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator" Wrist > GPS unit with the KNW TH-D7? Less than 48 hours ago, I made a post on this very issue on this and two other APRS-related mailing lists. Quoting my post of 27 Aug 2004: "Subject: REVIEW: Way Cool Gadget! Wrist Wearable GPS is great with TH-D7, TinyTrak or PocketTracker! Date: 8/27/2004, 2:45 AM From: "Stephen H. Smith" <WA8LMF2 at aol.com> To: TAPR APRS Special Interest Group <aprssig at lists.tapr.org> Excerpt from the full review, with more information and photos, posted on my website at: http://members.aol.com/wa8lmf/aprs/Foretrex.htm Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator" Wrist GPS This GPS receiver may well be the ultimate accessory for the Kenwood TH-D7 APRS hand-held radio. The TH-D7 has a serial data input jack for transmitting position reports provided by an attached GPS receiver. However most GPS devices are nowhere near as conveniently portable as the Kenwood radio. The Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator" is a miniature GPS receiver that you wear on your wrist like a watch. The device is secured to your wrist with a Velcro strap and is powered by an internal rechargeable lithium-ion battery. Specs in the manual say the battery will power the unit for up to 15 hours. The unit is WAAS-enabled. The built-in patch antenna is astonishingly sensitive. I found that it worked quite consistently while walking with my arm by my side, with no special efforts to orient the unit favorably to the sky. It even worked inside the car as long as I wore it on my left hand and kept my left hand on the steering wheel. ( I assume one would have to wear it on the right hand to get the same results in the U.K!) The unit lists for USD $179 but I got mine through an Internet mail-order dealer for $135 . The ForeTrex works perfectly with the TH-D7, D700 and virtually all moving map programs running on PCs . I have tested it with Delorme Street Atlas, Topo USA!, UI-View, APRSplus, Visual GPS and others. The main connection issue is that, like the Radio Shack Digitraveller GPS, the unit's serial port won't start talking until it sees a non-zero voltage on the data input pin. Any voltage, positive or negative, of more than about 1 volt on the input pin will turn the serial port on. In other words, you can't use a simple two-wire (TXD and GND/COMMON) hookup. This presents no problem with either a PC or a TH-D7, both of which present a non-zero voltage (most PC ports are quiescent at -8 volts or so while the TH-D7 presents +5 volts out). This IS a problem with the TinyTrak since it's data output line is set to zero volts during normal operation (i.e. when not being programmed). Probably the simplest way to handle the TinyTrak is to apply +5 volts from it's internal regulator through a 1K resistor to the data input line of the ForeTrex. Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com Home Page: http://wa8lmf.com
- Previous message: [aprssig] Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator
- Next message: [aprssig] Garmin ForeTrex 201 "Personal Navigator
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the aprssig mailing list
