the speed sensor (paddle wheel type) will not show continuity with a 
multimeter.  It will send pulses when powered up and spinning.  You need 
something more sophisticated to see it.

Leslie
C&C32 1983

--------------------------------------------
On Tue, 1/14/14, Curtis <cpt.b...@gmail.com> wrote:

 Subject: Re: Stus-List Autohelm St4000 how it should work with the GPS
 To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
 Date: Tuesday, January 14, 2014, 4:31 AM
 
 I worked with the paddle
 wheel last night ad was able to
 clean it. It now spins freely but shows however it still has
 no activity on the
 ohms meter.  All that being said, how
 much does this speed help you anyway? I mean it will tell me
 how fast the river
 is passing under my boat but not if I’m making speed? The
 GPS tells me distance
 over the ground, I have been sailing real good before and
 not making much
 distance over the ground. What are your thoughts on this? I
 will hook it back
 up and try it tonight after work. But if there is no
 activity on the meter It
 may have a bad wire or something. 
 
 Thanks for you guys
 helping me out. I take no offence I know
 I’m green at all of this and expect a bit of new guy jokes
 and slapping around.
 It’s all good with me I’m just glad to have someone to
 ask help from. I am very
 glad you guys are her.   
 
 Curtis
 
 On Tue,
 Jan 14, 2014 at 1:08 AM, Jim Watts <paradigmat...@gmail.com>
 wrote:
 
 I had to knock the pin out of my paddlewheel
 and replace the wheel and the pin, since I had whacked into
 something hard and it stopped working, pretty much. Bent the
 pin, knocked one of the lobes off the paddlewheel. Then I
 put the new paddlewheel on backwards, and it worked well
 enough since I had a nice straight pin, but it took a lot of
 calibrating. I noticed sometime the next year.  
 
 
 
 It's a steep learning curve. 
 
 Jim Watts
 Paradigm Shift
 C&C 35 Mk
 III
 Victoria, BC
 
 
 
 On 13 January 2014 22:02,
 Rich Knowles <r...@sailpower.ca>
 wrote:
 
 
 Hi Curtis.
 Apologies for sounding frustrated.
 You are asking some simple questions for which there are
 relatively complex answers. I appreciate where you are as
 it's a place where most of us have been at one point,
 but it's so long ago we have forgotten:) I think we are
 all trying to answer your questions with the best we have to
 offer. I was under the mistaken impression that you did not
 have the manuals for the gear. Sorry! Bear with us. We all
 have the best of intentions!
 
 
 I looks like you have a
 well equipped boat, even if the gear is not brand new. A
 couple of comments:
 If your paddlewheel on your
 speed/temp transducer is not turning freely, you should be
 able to remove it inside the boat and push the paddle wheel
 shaft out to remove the wheel, clean it up, and get it going
 freely. If your boat is in the water, you can still pull the
 transducer out as long as you are prepared for a short spurt
 of water until you get a plug or the dummy transducer in the
 hole. The lack of continuity, however you are measuring it,
 may or may not mean anything. Try getting it rotating freely
 and spin it while it's in the boat to see if it's
 registering on your knotmeter. 
 
 
 If the wind vane is working
 ok, you should be able to tie it into the autohelm and use
 it as a steering sensor. Your manuals should tell you
 how.
 Don't give
 up! We're here to help you out, and annoy the hell out
 of you occasionally just to get even:)
 
 
 Cheers.
 
 Rich Knowles
 INDIGO LF38
 Halifax, NS.
 
 
 On Jan 13,
 2014, at 11:09 PM, Curtis <cpt.b...@gmail.com>
 wrote:
 
 Rich,I have read and continue to
 read the manuals for all this
 equipment. I note a bit of frustration with regards’ to my
 lack of
 understanding of this equipment. I have only owned my
 C&C30 for a couple of
 years now, The boat came with a lot of st50 auto-helm
 equipment 
 
 
 
 
 1) Tri-data2) VMG
 
 3) ST40004) Wind5) Multi6) Speed Trim7) NAV-Data8) I also have a 36” pole
 with a wind feather on the top of
 it? Z159 
 Transducers’= (wind speed
 true/app Direction) (Water speed paddle wheel)
 (Depth temp)(Wind angle? Z159)
 
 (Fluxgate) 
 Everything seams to power up,
 but the paddlewheel will not
 turn freely. And there is no continuity in the cable? So,
 it’s fair to say the
 speed trans is no good.The fluxgate I was able to
 swing in as the “Manual” instructed.
 I’m able to set the clutch in place and hold the boat at
 the heading I point it
 at using the st4000 so I know that works. But reading the
 above makes sense
 that it would be independent of the Garmin GPS. However I
 was told that’s what
 makes the system so cool is It would follow a courts set by
 gps. If I read
 Schiller’s post correctly I could set it to receive the
 wind vane so I might
 steer a wind angle? Now that would be
 progress. 
 Moving forward I will hook
 back up the Fluxgate compass and
 reconsider what else?  
 Thanks again its just so much
 to take in for someone that
 has never been involved in marine electronics and new to
 boat ownership as
 well.I will get it. It
 just may take me more time than I was
 hoping for. Thanks
 again for all the advice and help. With out you guys
 I would flounder for months on this stuff.  Maybe I should
 just cut it all loose and e-bay
 it. Just use the Garmin and the depth sounder. It would be a
 way to watch both
 ends of the boat in close anchorages.Cheers, Curtis
 
 On Mon,
 Jan 13, 2014 at 4:26 PM, Rich Knowles <r...@sailpower.ca>
 wrote:
 
 
 
 Curtis:
 The fluxgate compass is the primary
 source of heading information for the autopilot head and
 should not be disconnected. 
 
 
 
 When you push the
 "AUTO" button, the course computer locks on to the
 compass heading the boat is on and develops internal
 correcting signals as the boat yaws to either side of the
 original heading and uses those cross-track error signals to
 drive the wheel and hold the course steady. Once properly
 set up, the course holding abilities of the ST4000 are quite
 good and you should be on a constant course in the direction
 originally set. This way of using the ST4000 is the standard
 way of operating. It's just fine for relatively short
 legs but, as it only uses the boat's heading as a
 reference, it cannot compensate for current or leeway of the
 boat. In other words, you could be doing 220 deg for several
 hours and be miles of your intended destination if a cross
 current caused by tide has pushed you away from the rhumb
 line.
 
 
 
 To avoid getting pushed off
 course by factors that the fluxgate compass cannot measure
 or compensate for, an external source of cross-track error
 signals is needed that uses the final destination point as
 the reference from which to calculate whether course
 correction is needed.
 
 
 
 When you have a "GO
 TO" destination set up and activated on the GPS unit,
 the GPS will develop off course signals that can be used by
 the auto helm computer to steer the boat to the destination.
 That information is delivered to the ST4000 via the NMEA
 signals.
 
 
 
 Pardon me if you are aware
 of this already. I strongly recommend reading the manuals
 and, if there are terms that are unclear, Google them
 up. 
 Hook that
 compass up and RTFM!
 
 
 
 
 Rich Knowles
 INDIGO LF38
 Halifax, NS.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 On Jan 13, 2014, at 4:26 PM,
 Curtis <cpt.b...@gmail.com>
 wrote:
 
 I have a flux gate compass I disconnected it from the head
 because I thought the auto-pilot head would now get its
 heading from the GPS unit?  So I will take
 some photos and show you what I have.
 
 How will I ever nap a nap
 in??? 
 
 On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at
 2:19 PM, Michael Brown <m...@tkg.ca>
 wrote:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 >Though something to consider is
 that the 0183 standard is for a total of 4
 
 >wires to send and recieve.  RX+GND and
 TX+GND.  I didn't see where you
 
 >mentioned all those wires...sounded
 like too few.
 
 
 The ST4000 control head is NMEA IN only,
 two wires marks - +.
 
 >
 
 > So now, If I understand you correctly.
 I first have to create a route then to
 
 > start navigating a course or to a
 way-point.  That should start
 
 > broadcasting a course to steer signal.
 then I in-gauge the st4000  by
 
 > pressing the +10 and -10 at the same
 time and it should start taking
 
 > direction from the Garmin?
 
 > does this sound correct?
 
 >
 
 
 
 With NEMA to the ST4000 it depends on
 what is being sent. Autohelm describes two
 scenarios,  automatic acquisition and manual
 acquisition.
 
 Automatic -
 both cross track error and bearing to waypoint are sent
 
 
 
 
 Manual - only cross track error is sent
 
 With automatic get everything engaged and press
 +10 and -10 together. The manual
 requires
 that you get on course withing 5 degrees of the bearing to
 the waypoint and
 cross track less than 0.1
 nm, then press +10 and -10 together.
 
 
 
 
 
 My guess is, and strictly a guess, is that
 the ST4000 uses its own fluxgate compass
 for
 navigation and takes some error correction from NEMA for
 cross track.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 >I know it has probably been done by
 others but I am not sure that I would
 
 >ever let my ST 4000 plus steer a course
 unattended based on transfer data
 
 >from my chart plotter.
 
 
 
 
 I
 wonder if that was what Autohelm was thinking, they seem to
 use the fluxgate compass.
 
 
 > Curt ? it?s been my experience that pretty
 much NO equipment uses the same color wire for the same
 thing, even among equipment from the same manufacturer. 
 
 
 
 
 
 >You
 need to connect the NMEA0183 output wires from the GPS to
 the NMEA0183 input wires on the > autopilot; TX+ and TX-
 on the Garmin to RX+ and RX- on the Raymarine. 
 
 
 
 >I can
 guarantee that the chances of any two of these wires having
 common colors is about zero.
 
 
 
 
 Supposedly the + is Red and - is Blue,
 however Autohelm agrees with you. They are marked + and -
 only.
 
 
 Michael Brown
 Windburn
 C&C 30-1 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
 
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 At sea, I
 learned how little a person needs, not how much.
 
 
 
 
 -  Robin Lee
 Graham
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo
 Album
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 
 
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
 
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 At sea, I
 learned how little a person needs, not how much.
 
 
 
 -  Robin Lee
 Graham
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo
 Album
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
 
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 
 
 
 
 
 _______________________________________________
 
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
 
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 
 
 
 
 
 -- 
 At sea, I
 learned how little a person needs, not how much.
 
 -  Robin Lee
 Graham
 
 
 
 -----Inline Attachment Follows-----
 
 _______________________________________________
 This List is provided by the C&C Photo
 Album
 http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
 CnC-List@cnc-list.com
 

_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
CnC-List@cnc-list.com

Reply via email to