Hi All,
I have bought a Fortuna U2 (PS2 connector) and matching cable to go into a O2 XDA (Wallaby). Nice little unit at a great price.
When I connect the two units up and check to see what messages I'm getting from the GPS, it is all random characters. I have tried reading both NMEA and SiRF settings - but still random characters.
I have later found out that this unit can do both NMEA and SiRF messages but it defaults at SiRF messages and I need NMEA to run my Navman software.
I have tried about 2467242 different programs on the PDA to try and get it to read the SiRF messages and then set the unit to run as NMEA GPS. Simply not working.
I have turned the IR port off and don't have an external keyboard. Is there something I'm missing ?
When I use a terminal software tool, I'm getting something through on COMM port 1, but it's absolute gibberish. I'm stumped.
Can anyone please tell me how to get the GPS unit to output NMEA messages by sending a command from the PDA to the GPS unit.
Cheers
Sonny
macsonny said:
Hi All,
I have bought a Fortuna U2 (PS2 connector) and matching cable to go into a O2 XDA (Wallaby). Nice little unit at a great price.
When I connect the two units up and check to see what messages I'm getting from the GPS, it is all random characters. I have tried reading both NMEA and SiRF settings - but still random characters.
I have later found out that this unit can do both NMEA and SiRF messages but it defaults at SiRF messages and I need NMEA to run my Navman software.
I have tried about 2467242 different programs on the PDA to try and get it to read the SiRF messages and then set the unit to run as NMEA GPS. Simply not working.
I have turned the IR port off and don't have an external keyboard. Is there something I'm missing ?
When I use a terminal software tool, I'm getting something through on COMM port 1, but it's absolute gibberish. I'm stumped.
Can anyone please tell me how to get the GPS unit to output NMEA messages by sending a command from the PDA to the GPS unit.
Cheers
Sonny
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
When using Tom TOm Navigator you'll have a GPS Terminal that allows you to change your baud rate. Try that. Use several baud rates on the com port. One of them should work. I think I use 9600 but I'm not sure.
regards
Ended up being a faulty cable. All fixed now.
is there anyone using WM5 ROM's on a BA that succesfully uses the integrated GPS virtualizer as can be found as "GPS" button in the settings->connections
In more detail this is what i find:
Ozi seems to be the only gps using application that can setup an active bluetooth connection to an GPS device using the build-in GPS virtualizer of WM5 wich is called Intermediate GPS driver and wich can be found via the "GPS" button at the connections settings page of your device.
The use of this virtualizer is that you can simultanious have multiple applications active that use GPS data.
Next info is what i tested so far, maybe others recognize and/or understand much better then i do how this should work. Any help is appreciated.
I think it has something to do with discovering, or being allowed to discover by WM5, COM ports.
Just to make sure we're talking the same issue a little chain:
- there's a BT-GPS device
- discovered via BT-applet on WM5
- on my bt-gps: if the blue light goes on&off it's not connected, if its steady on it's connected to a PDA
NEW in WM5 is that one has to seperatly define:
- the service the bt-gps needs to use: just one choice "serial services"
- next on a seperate tab one needs to define an new outgoing and/or incoming port
- one can choose only the discovered bt-gps
- one can only choose a COM port numbered 6, 7 or 8 and one defines the baudrate here.
- i choose COM6 and 57600baud
From this point there is a COM6 available for applications, any application i start is able to set-up the bt-gps connection and read gps-data.
- ozi explorer, tomtom, igo, reperion
- all setup with listening to COM6
- all make the blue-light on the gps-device go steady on
- all disconnect from the gps-device when exiting the application, blue-light on gps-device starts flashing
Next step is using the intermediate gps driver incorporated in WM5 to virtualize&share the gps-device.
- on the GPS-applet define COM6 as the h/w port with 57600 baudrate
- on the GPS-applet define COM7 as the s/w port, choices are COM0/9 and GPD1/9
- i defined COM7 as the s/w port.
So now with COM7 we are on the virtual side of the GPS-applet
When i start ozi-explorer i can choose several ports for the GPS
- COM1/4 for specific goals
- COM6 (recognized by ozi as Bluetooth Serial Port)
- COM7 (recognized by ozi as ActiveDevice)
Activating the GPS function in Ozi with GPS-port set to COM7 will make ozi to talk to the virtualside of the intermediate gps driver and then via this driver will initiate the bt-gps connection (blue light on the gps-device will go steady on) and start reading gps-data. Stopping&starting the gps function in ozi will nicely turn the bt-gps connection off&on.
So far so good.
Important note: In the registry one can find \HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\GPS Intermediate Driver\ActiveDevice
According to the writer of gpsid.dll http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/d...rmediatedriverinputsourceregistrysettings.asp this is the place to look for the gps-device definitions.
As you might have read above the name "ActiveDevice" is exactly what ozi found as tag for COM7
All the other gps using product like Igo see COM7 as "unnamed" port.
So it looks as if the other app's, including Fransons serial tools, don't look at the right place in the registry for the info on COM7. And since Ozi does work well i think it's a problem to be resolved by the navigation application developers and not on WM5 level.
And once ozi setup the connection all the other apps suddenly do find COM7 and read GPS data. From that point on i can stop ozi, the connection to the bt-gps will stay. When i then stop igo or reperion or whatever, then the bt-gps will be disconnected.
Then a bit about gpsgate, maybe to get some more idea on how the behaviour is in wm5.
- i totaly inactivate the Intermediate GPS driver from WM5 (b.t.w. i softreset after every change to make sure it's a clean test)
- all the nav. Apps can directly connect to COM6 (see above)
- gpsgate will only give me COM1/4 and COM9 as an option
- COM6/7/8, the only options i have as h/w port on the bt-gps are NOT seen by gpsgate
- then i re-active the Intermediate GPS driver and now gpsgate gives me the option of COM7 as input and i setup a virtual port in gpsgate COM8.
- quite useless, a gps-virtualizer which can only listen to some other driver's virtual port.
- but then it act as all the other app's. Only when a bt-gps connection is setup via ozi, gpsgate will read data on the virtual com7 port.
- this gives the weard situation:
- bt-gps comes in on h/w COM6
- Intermediate GPS driver from WM5 listens to port6 and virtualizes that to COM7
- Ozi explorer initiate the connection and listens to COM7
- gpsgate will also listen to virtual COM7, where gpsgate thinks this is the h/w input side
- gpsgate will passthrue to its own virtual port COM8
- reperion i configured to listen to COM8, and reperion will succesfully read data from COM8, via COM7, via COM6.
Still with me? Maybe you need to draw this out on a little piece of paper ;-)
Anyway, it looks as if most gps-using s/w don't setup the gps-communication up in a proper way to be handled by the Intermediate GPS driver. Ozi Explorer is the positive exception here.
Found an app on SourceForge called GPSproxy... first off it enables me to use Garmin Que, and all the MapSource maps with my non Garmin BT-GPS... but it also enables the use of Virtual COM Ports in WM5... so far I have had Garmin Que, with at least two of the following: TomTom, Vito Navigator II and Virtual Earth Mobile running at the same time on my BA... still playing, I'll update after my trip to Scotland...
thx for the info. took me a while to get it all my pda via gprs on holiday and no desktop around.
just can't get the virtual ports passing data. it works when mapping one port to another via ' settings' in gpsproxy. but when I add a port in 'virtual port' settings it is recognized in navprogs, but gps data comes through.
I turned off the internal gps-applet
any tips on how you set it up.
thx.
Have you guys tried these?
http://www.pocketgear.com/software_detail.asp?id=22697
http://franson.com/gpsgate/
We're judging them in the PocketPC Magazine Awards.
V
yep, tried it. doesn't pickup the right definitions from wm5 registry, doesn't setup the comms to the gps. and when asking for support just blaming microsoft, so i'm not thrilled.
so far the only good one is ozi-explorer. picks up all the right registry values, realtime, no softresets or whatever needed. just plug&play on bt-gps & wired gps.
I was using Mapking 7 and Agis 1.66 beta when a friend introduced me to Garmin que. I managed to use GPSProxy 2.2 to run Garmin Que 2.9 with Agis concurrently but was not able to run Garmin que and Mapking concurrently. If I don't use Garmin Que and use WM 5 GPS control, I can run Agis and Mapking together but not Garmin Que.
Garmin Que needs at least 1 available port as virtual port to support Garmin Que protocol and another available port as virtual port to run another GPS programme. I'm using a O2 XDA IIs and I can only manage to squeeze out com port 7 for Garmin Que protocol and com port 0 which is not supported in Mapking. Agis is able to use com port 0.
After searching for about a week, I realised that if I don't need to use Infra Red, I can make use of that com port. I used Task Manager v2.1 by FdcSoft to unload the infra red dll (IRCOMM.DLL) and got hold of com port 3, which I was able to create as a virtual port.
Now I can run Garmin Que and Agis or Garmin and Mapking using GPSProxy.
GPS port is com port 6.
Garmin Que Protocol is com port 7
Garmin Que output port is com port 3
The only issue I have now is to find out a way to disable com port 3 by default so that I don't need to do it after each soft reset. Any help here would be most appreciated.
xdaradar said:
is there anyone using WM5 ROM's on a BA that succesfully uses the integrated GPS virtualizer as can be found as "GPS" button in the settings->connections
In more detail this is what i find:
Ozi seems to be the only gps using application that can setup an active bluetooth connection to an GPS device using the build-in GPS virtualizer of WM5 wich is called Intermediate GPS driver and wich can be found via the "GPS" button at the connections settings page of your device.
The use of this virtualizer is that you can simultanious have multiple applications active that use GPS data.
Next info is what i tested so far, maybe others recognize and/or understand much better then i do how this should work. Any help is appreciated.
I think it has something to do with discovering, or being allowed to discover by WM5, COM ports.
Just to make sure we're talking the same issue a little chain:
- there's a BT-GPS device
- discovered via BT-applet on WM5
- on my bt-gps: if the blue light goes on&off it's not connected, if its steady on it's connected to a PDA
NEW in WM5 is that one has to seperatly define:
- the service the bt-gps needs to use: just one choice "serial services"
- next on a seperate tab one needs to define an new outgoing and/or incoming port
- one can choose only the discovered bt-gps
- one can only choose a COM port numbered 6, 7 or 8 and one defines the baudrate here.
- i choose COM6 and 57600baud
From this point there is a COM6 available for applications, any application i start is able to set-up the bt-gps connection and read gps-data.
- ozi explorer, tomtom, igo, reperion
- all setup with listening to COM6
- all make the blue-light on the gps-device go steady on
- all disconnect from the gps-device when exiting the application, blue-light on gps-device starts flashing
Next step is using the intermediate gps driver incorporated in WM5 to virtualize&share the gps-device.
- on the GPS-applet define COM6 as the h/w port with 57600 baudrate
- on the GPS-applet define COM7 as the s/w port, choices are COM0/9 and GPD1/9
- i defined COM7 as the s/w port.
So now with COM7 we are on the virtual side of the GPS-applet
When i start ozi-explorer i can choose several ports for the GPS
- COM1/4 for specific goals
- COM6 (recognized by ozi as Bluetooth Serial Port)
- COM7 (recognized by ozi as ActiveDevice)
Activating the GPS function in Ozi with GPS-port set to COM7 will make ozi to talk to the virtualside of the intermediate gps driver and then via this driver will initiate the bt-gps connection (blue light on the gps-device will go steady on) and start reading gps-data. Stopping&starting the gps function in ozi will nicely turn the bt-gps connection off&on.
So far so good.
Important note: In the registry one can find \HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\GPS Intermediate Driver\ActiveDevice
According to the writer of gpsid.dll http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/d...rmediatedriverinputsourceregistrysettings.asp this is the place to look for the gps-device definitions.
As you might have read above the name "ActiveDevice" is exactly what ozi found as tag for COM7
All the other gps using product like Igo see COM7 as "unnamed" port.
So it looks as if the other app's, including Fransons serial tools, don't look at the right place in the registry for the info on COM7. And since Ozi does work well i think it's a problem to be resolved by the navigation application developers and not on WM5 level.
And once ozi setup the connection all the other apps suddenly do find COM7 and read GPS data. From that point on i can stop ozi, the connection to the bt-gps will stay. When i then stop igo or reperion or whatever, then the bt-gps will be disconnected.
Then a bit about gpsgate, maybe to get some more idea on how the behaviour is in wm5.
- i totaly inactivate the Intermediate GPS driver from WM5 (b.t.w. i softreset after every change to make sure it's a clean test)
- all the nav. Apps can directly connect to COM6 (see above)
- gpsgate will only give me COM1/4 and COM9 as an option
- COM6/7/8, the only options i have as h/w port on the bt-gps are NOT seen by gpsgate
- then i re-active the Intermediate GPS driver and now gpsgate gives me the option of COM7 as input and i setup a virtual port in gpsgate COM8.
- quite useless, a gps-virtualizer which can only listen to some other driver's virtual port.
- but then it act as all the other app's. Only when a bt-gps connection is setup via ozi, gpsgate will read data on the virtual com7 port.
- this gives the weard situation:
- bt-gps comes in on h/w COM6
- Intermediate GPS driver from WM5 listens to port6 and virtualizes that to COM7
- Ozi explorer initiate the connection and listens to COM7
- gpsgate will also listen to virtual COM7, where gpsgate thinks this is the h/w input side
- gpsgate will passthrue to its own virtual port COM8
- reperion i configured to listen to COM8, and reperion will succesfully read data from COM8, via COM7, via COM6.
Still with me? Maybe you need to draw this out on a little piece of paper ;-)
Anyway, it looks as if most gps-using s/w don't setup the gps-communication up in a proper way to be handled by the Intermediate GPS driver. Ozi Explorer is the positive exception here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wow wow wow....
I read it twice... I will read it again... because it's a little hard to understand ! (I took my piece of paper )
But I think I've got solution to my GPS prb here !
For me this is the solution - Tmob MDA Vario II - Cingular rom
IT WORKS !!!! BUT YOU HAVE TO CREATE TWO VIRTUAL PORTS - USE PORTSPLITTER !!!
All I had to do is download http://www.gpsmeter.com/ portsplitter as discussed in the other threads, HOWEVER......
Instead of what manuals seem to say, even from other softwarez like GPSGate, create TWO or more VIRTUAL ports in PORTSPLITTER!! Connect each GPS app to a DIFFERENT VIRTUAL PORT.
Also, when pairing and configuring your GPS, try taking a high Comport like 9. Go down one if no success.
Then when configuring PORTSPLITTER, don't be alarmed that your COMPORT isn't in the drop down list, MANUALLY enter "COMx" without the usual ":" where x stands for a number..the high real COM portnumber you configured when pairing/setting up.
You must use your keyboard or the stylus to manually enter the Comport if it is not in your dropdown list in PORTSPLITTER..
for speedreaders :
install PORTSPLITTER http://www.gpsmeter.com
use highest physical COMport available to pair your GPS
Define TWO virtual ports (instead of what seems to be written everywhere or am I really lame?)
Connect each Application to different virtual ports
My setup on a T-Mobile MDA Vario II (with Cingular ROM)
Physical Port 9
Virtual Ports in PORTSPLITTER 4,8
Hardware COMport in PORTSPLITTER (COM9 had to manually enter it, it was unavailable from drop down.... .... ...)
TomTom Navigator mapped to virtual COM8 (Didn't show up in TOMTOM until PORTSPLITTER running and connected to GPS.. ..)
Reperion *sweet favorite GPS app" mapped to Virtual COMPort 4 (Reperion eats all ports, no problems there....)
Please o please report...
jppech said:
wow wow wow....
I read it twice... I will read it again... because it's a little hard to understand ! (I took my piece of paper )
But I think I've got solution to my GPS prb here !
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I also have some problems in going through this text
I have a problem with Ozi and external GPS receiver as well, I do not know how to use the information i this post, perhaps if I tell you what the problem is you could help me
I have the FS Loox n560 with a built in GPS receiver but due to its rather poor reception I decided to buy an external device.
So far so good
Ozi has no problem in using the internal GPS, I simply choose the right COM port and the receiver switches on automatically.
But the problem is to use the external GSP receiver.
OZI can use only a limited number of COM ports (1,2,3,5,6,8)
COM 6 is the predefined software GPS port and COM 8 is the hardware port.
I cannot associate my BT GPS receiver with any of these ports.
Port splitter also does not help since it also can split only ports that I cannot associate with my BT GPS receiver.
I have been wondering how I could make use of my external GPS receiver with OZI???
Do you have any idea how to handle this probem?
my i-mate kjam have only 6 and 7, how can i have more???
my i-mate kjam have only 6 and 7, how can i have more???
many GPS softwares are looking for different ones.
please help me
Hello,
Where can i find the GPS on my Tilt ? in whice port ? rate ? type ?
thnx
beonfocus said:
Hello,
Where can i find the GPS on my Tilt ? in whice port ? rate ? type ?
thnx
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
COM 4, Baud 19200.
Works great for Google Maps, TOPO! and Pocket Streets.
baud 4800
com 4
tyeo098 said:
baud 4800
com 4
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
what program? I ask because I did some testing on different programs, and while the Hermes BT baud is 9600, the internal Kaiser was faster at 19200. It may run at the lower speed, but why not use it?
mattk_r said:
what program? I ask because I did some testing on different programs, and while the Hermes BT baud is 9600, the internal Kaiser was faster at 19200. It may run at the lower speed, but why not use it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OCN6 uses Com 4800 baud... On the Tilt.
My UK Tytn 2 also uses the GPS on com port 4 baud 4800, will not work with any other setting.
All my GPS programs use it, Tomtom Nav 6, Google Maps, GPS Test and GPS Tuner.
Radeon123 said:
My UK Tytn 2 also uses the GPS on com port 4 baud 4800, will not work with any other setting.
All my GPS programs use it, Tomtom Nav 6, Google Maps, GPS Test and GPS Tuner.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmmm... ok. Can't argue, but I wonder how I got it to work - and at the time I set it up it made since because being internal it should handle a faster serial baud rate than via the BT.
Anyhow, I'll try it at 4800 and see if it works there as well.
I use a Baud rate of 9600 with TOMTOM 6.032
Perhaps the Baud rate can change depending on your area (i.e which satellites you're pointing at)?
If you are using TT 6.032, then it automatically detects that you have a built-in GPS, so ignores the COM & Baud rate settings
Turn it on ?
Do i need to turn the GPS on ?
If yes how ?
Is there any improvements if I change a baud rate from 4800 to bigger value? I use RunGPS and TomTom6 with Diamond.
i wondered about this too, everything works fine at 4800 but does increasing it speeds up GPS data or no difference?
i think it's a software leftover from back when gps's was connected using serial cables and possibly virtual serial ports over bluetooth
The External GPS setting is for external GPS setting in case you don't want to use the internal GPS. whatever setting you change, it doesn't effect the internal GPS.
McGuider (Sygic DRIVE) autodetects the internal GPS on COM4, 19200 baud. Manually setting this in TomTom 7 also seems to work for me.
j0bro said:
McGuider (Sygic DRIVE) autodetects the internal GPS on COM4, 19200 baud. Manually setting this in TomTom 7 also seems to work for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
did you see any improvement between 4800 and 19200 ?
j0bro said:
McGuider (Sygic DRIVE) autodetects the internal GPS on COM4, 19200 baud. Manually setting this in TomTom 7 also seems to work for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
did you see any improvement between 4800 and 19200 ?
hi guys,
please kindly share your experience.
i would like to find out as well.
although i am not using tom tom but on beeline gps detection, it detect my gps as com4 and baud rate as 9600
Hi,
I've a S730. I'd like to use an external GPS.
The GPS is a Holux GPSlìm. This Morning I try to use it with My S730 and it work
(I used GPSTest 1.4). But with TomTom don't work because my version need port Com2 or Com3 only.
So I've used an external tool to setup gps setting to set Program Port, Hardware Port, Hardware Port Baud Rate.
But now it no longer works even with GPSTEst.
I try to set
Program Port <-COM2
Hardware Port<- COM4
HardwarePortBaudRade<-4800
with Manage Automaticaly setted...
but it not work.
Whar are the correct settings ?
Thanks in andvance and forgive me for my bad english!