Difference between revisions of "User talk:Mrnuke"
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This is the official interface cable sold by Brymen. It works with the BM857a and BM859a, but does not work with thw non-a models. | This is the official interface cable sold by Brymen. It works with the BM857a and BM859a, but does not work with thw non-a models. | ||
=== Reverse engineering the cable === | |||
It is clear at this point that the protocol on the RS-232 side is not the same as the protocol used on the IR side. This raises an interesting question: Can the protocol be reversed-engineered and implemented as a simple UART? If the IR encoding is a simple UART, then it is feasible. A "brymen-dmm-raw" driver could provide users with a quick way to put together a circuit and communicate with their Brymen. | |||
=== Photos === | |||
These are from the Extech SW810a kit. The components are all manufactured by Brymen, and carry the Brymen part numbers. | These are from the Extech SW810a kit. The components are all manufactured by Brymen, and carry the Brymen part numbers. | ||
Revision as of 19:24, 8 December 2012
BM857 PC interface cable
I'm trying to build a PC interface cable for my Brymen BM857. I have used Radioshack 276-142 IR diode and photo-transistor set, and a PL2303 USB to serial converter.
If you have a real cable you'd like to donate, hop on to #sigrok and contact me.
Info
This is an experimental homebrew design. It does NOT work. The manufacturer's cable contains a PIC microcontroller that communicates with the PC, and multimeter. The data sent through the serial port is not what the DMM receives/sends. Any straight cable will not work.
It is unclear if the IR protocol is a simple UART, or is pulse-width based, or if it uses any other encoding.
Schematic
Photos
Brymen BC-58Xa interface cable
This is the official interface cable sold by Brymen. It works with the BM857a and BM859a, but does not work with thw non-a models.
Reverse engineering the cable
It is clear at this point that the protocol on the RS-232 side is not the same as the protocol used on the IR side. This raises an interesting question: Can the protocol be reversed-engineered and implemented as a simple UART? If the IR encoding is a simple UART, then it is feasible. A "brymen-dmm-raw" driver could provide users with a quick way to put together a circuit and communicate with their Brymen.
Photos
These are from the Extech SW810a kit. The components are all manufactured by Brymen, and carry the Brymen part numbers.