Jim Rees
Fri, 29 Jun 2001 21:57:58 -0700
I didn't think there was a conflict at all between N and CWT/BWT. N is how long the reader waits before sending the next byte. CWT is how long it waits before giving up on receiving the next byte. BWT is how long it waits before giving up on receiving the next block. Also, I'm not getting the same proto bytes you are. I think TD2=31 says that TA3=ff and TB3=65, not TB3=FF and TC3=65. I'm just counting bits from the right side of the left half of TD2. That would give something like CWT=4 ms, BWT=6.4 sec, which seem like reasonable values. *************************************************************** Linux Smart Card Developers - M.U.S.C.L.E. (Movement for the Use of Smart Cards in a Linux Environment) http://www.linuxnet.com/smartcard/index.html ***************************************************************