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Interfacing Radar and GPS
I recently bought a 1995 320 Albemarle Express Fisherman. It has a Furuno
1830 Radar and a Garmin 220 GPS. In reading through the manuals for these pieces of equipment, I have noticed that it's possible to connect a GPS to the radar and it will display some nav information on the Radar unit as well as having the ability to plot the speed and direction of various targets on the radar. Is this simply a matter of purchasing and attaching some sort of cord between the units, and if so, where do I get this? I am not sure if they are fairly universal or do I need to contact one of the vendors for this, and if so, which one...Furuno or Garmin? Is there more to it than this? Any idea how much it costs? Thanks! Gary € |
#2
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"Gary" wrote in
: I recently bought a 1995 320 Albemarle Express Fisherman. It has a Furuno 1830 Radar and a Garmin 220 GPS. In reading through the manuals for these pieces of equipment, I have noticed that it's possible to connect a GPS to the radar and it will display some nav information on the Radar unit as well as having the ability to plot the speed and direction of various targets on the radar. Is this simply a matter of purchasing and attaching some sort of cord between the units, and if so, where do I get this? I am not sure if they are fairly universal or do I need to contact one of the vendors for this, and if so, which one...Furuno or Garmin? Is there more to it than this? Any idea how much it costs? Thanks! Gary You can find the owner's manual on the Furuno web site. Your specific manual is at http://www.furuno.com/Furuno/Doc/0/U...KU2HHIG03/1830 +Operator%27s+Manual.pdf If it's like my Furuno you'll simply need to get a Garmin cable and connect the NMEA output from it to the radar. -- Geoff |
#3
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On Fri, 22 Oct 2004 13:27:49 GMT, "Geoffrey W. Schultz"
wrote: If it's like my Furuno you'll simply need to get a Garmin cable and connect the NMEA output from it to the radar. ========================================= Is that sufficient to support the so called "ARP" plotting functions, or do you also need a flux gate compass to provide heading information? |
#4
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I needed two cables to connect my Garmin GPS to my Furuno 1622 Radar.
The Garmin cable costs about $35. It has a Garmin connector on one end and a serial connector (for a PC) on the other. My Furuno cable cost about $60. It has a Furuno cable on one end and bare wires on the other. I wired a serial connector to the Furuno bare wires and plug one serial connector into the other. Your Furuno may just have screw posts for the Garmin wires to connect to. When the GPS is wired to the radar, the radar disply can indicate your course and speed, latitude and longitude, and waypoint bearing and distance. "Geoffrey W. Schultz" wrote in message . .. "Gary" wrote in : I recently bought a 1995 320 Albemarle Express Fisherman. It has a Furuno 1830 Radar and a Garmin 220 GPS. In reading through the manuals for these pieces of equipment, I have noticed that it's possible to connect a GPS to the radar and it will display some nav information on the Radar unit as well as having the ability to plot the speed and direction of various targets on the radar. Is this simply a matter of purchasing and attaching some sort of cord between the units, and if so, where do I get this? I am not sure if they are fairly universal or do I need to contact one of the vendors for this, and if so, which one...Furuno or Garmin? Is there more to it than this? Any idea how much it costs? Thanks! Gary You can find the owner's manual on the Furuno web site. Your specific manual is at http://www.furuno.com/Furuno/Doc/0/U...KU2HHIG03/1830 +Operator%27s+Manual.pdf If it's like my Furuno you'll simply need to get a Garmin cable and connect the NMEA output from it to the radar. -- Geoff |
#5
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In article ,
Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 22 Oct 2004 13:27:49 GMT, "Geoffrey W. Schultz" wrote: If it's like my Furuno you'll simply need to get a Garmin cable and connect the NMEA output from it to the radar. ========================================= Is that sufficient to support the so called "ARP" plotting functions, or do you also need a flux gate compass to provide heading information? No, ARPA functions are much more complicated that the simple NEMA interface on the small commercial Furuno Radars. You need an compass input to get the Waypoint Popsicle on the Radar Display. ARPA takes a complete ARPA Unit which is a complete cpu based system that is in addition to the basic radar display system. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#6
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I saw a few people said something about needing a fluxgate compass. I also
have a Robertson AP3000X autopilot that is connected to a fluxgate compass. Am I going to need 3 cables now, or is the GPS most likely connected to the fluxgate compass already? "Gary" wrote in message . .. I recently bought a 1995 320 Albemarle Express Fisherman. It has a Furuno 1830 Radar and a Garmin 220 GPS. In reading through the manuals for these pieces of equipment, I have noticed that it's possible to connect a GPS to the radar and it will display some nav information on the Radar unit as well as having the ability to plot the speed and direction of various targets on the radar. Is this simply a matter of purchasing and attaching some sort of cord between the units, and if so, where do I get this? I am not sure if they are fairly universal or do I need to contact one of the vendors for this, and if so, which one...Furuno or Garmin? Is there more to it than this? Any idea how much it costs? Thanks! Gary ? |
#7
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On Fri, 22 Oct 2004 17:33:42 GMT, Bruce in Alaska
wrote: ARPA takes a complete ARPA Unit which is a complete cpu based system that is in addition to the basic radar display system. ====================================== I'm under the impression that ARPA is included on the Furuno 1833 that I've been considering. Is that not correct? I would like to be able to eliminate the flux gate compass requirement by assuming COG = heading but not sure if it's possible. |
#8
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"Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Fri, 22 Oct 2004 17:33:42 GMT, Bruce in Alaska wrote: ARPA takes a complete ARPA Unit which is a complete cpu based system that is in addition to the basic radar display system. ====================================== I'm under the impression that ARPA is included on the Furuno 1833 that I've been considering. Is that not correct? I would like to be able to eliminate the flux gate compass requirement by assuming COG = heading but not sure if it's possible. The ARP11 (10 target ARPA) is listed as an option for your radar. As far as the data connection between the GPS and radar, if the Garmin cable is the same as most of the others they make it would have some un-terminated wires plus the red and black for power. You need the NEMA data cable for the radar (the one with the bare ends). Nothing more then connecting 2 wires from each cable and setting up the data outputs and inputs on each unit. Sorry I can't remember the colors you need to connect and the info is at work. Andy K. |
#9
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In article ,
"Andy K." wrote: The ARP11 (10 target ARPA) is listed as an option for your radar. As far as the data connection between the GPS and radar, if the Garmin cable is the same as most of the others they make it would have some un-terminated wires plus the red and black for power. You need the NEMA data cable for the radar (the one with the bare ends). Nothing more then connecting 2 wires from each cable and setting up the data outputs and inputs on each unit. Sorry I can't remember the colors you need to connect and the info is at work. Andy K. I am under the impression that ARP is and add on option for all the small commercial Furuo Radars. I am not 100% sure on that exact model (1833) but I bet Doug could give us a difinitive answer. Any add on option is going to cost BIG BUCKS, however and probubly not worth the cash for a noncommercial users. The standard NEMA input for these type Furuno Radars is to display the Position Information, Speed, Course over Ground, and Next Waypoint Bearing and Distance, at the bottom of the screen in the NAV Info Position. If you want the Waypoint Popsicle to display on the screen, then you must input Compass Data on the Gyro Input, and that is a seperate connection from the NEMA Input. All the Furuno's I have dealt with will NOT accept Compass Data from the NEMA Data Stream, but only on the Gyro Input. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#10
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Using NMEA from my Garmin (Etrex Mariner or GPS 12) to my Furuno 1622 does
provide the Wapoint Popsicle, in addition to everything else. "Bruce in Alaska" wrote in message ... In article , "Andy K." wrote: The ARP11 (10 target ARPA) is listed as an option for your radar. As far as the data connection between the GPS and radar, if the Garmin cable is the same as most of the others they make it would have some un-terminated wires plus the red and black for power. You need the NEMA data cable for the radar (the one with the bare ends). Nothing more then connecting 2 wires from each cable and setting up the data outputs and inputs on each unit. Sorry I can't remember the colors you need to connect and the info is at work. Andy K. I am under the impression that ARP is and add on option for all the small commercial Furuo Radars. I am not 100% sure on that exact model (1833) but I bet Doug could give us a difinitive answer. Any add on option is going to cost BIG BUCKS, however and probubly not worth the cash for a noncommercial users. The standard NEMA input for these type Furuno Radars is to display the Position Information, Speed, Course over Ground, and Next Waypoint Bearing and Distance, at the bottom of the screen in the NAV Info Position. If you want the Waypoint Popsicle to display on the screen, then you must input Compass Data on the Gyro Input, and that is a seperate connection from the NEMA Input. All the Furuno's I have dealt with will NOT accept Compass Data from the NEMA Data Stream, but only on the Gyro Input. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
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