Thanks Ken!

On Mon, Jun 4, 2018 at 9:44 PM, Ken Pettit <[email protected]> wrote:

> Steve,
>
> There are two ways, depending on the version of firmware you have.
>
> 1.  You can type "baud 76" (or "baud 76000" if you want) and hit enter.
> It will switch immediately to the baud rate.  The catch here is that
> usually when you type commands at the ">" prompt, you expect feedback in
> the form of characters echoed back to you.  But when switching baud rates,
> you kinda don't want to have to deal with bytes echoed back ... you are
> about to change baud rates and have no control over the timing of the
> switch.
>
> So NADSBox puts a guard time of a few hundred miliseconds around the 'b'
> character when it is typed.  The idea being if a human is typing it
> interactively, then it will likely get echoed.  But when sent from a
> program, there would be little time between the 'b' and the 'a'.  In this
> mode, NADSBox will not echo the command.  It will switch directly to 76000
> baud and expect the next character after the ENTER to be at 76000.
>
> Other baud rates supported by NADSBox:
>
> 9600
> 19200
> 38400
> 57600
> 76000
> 115200
>
> You can optionally use just the first 2 numbers with the baud command.
>
> 2.  I added a TPDD protocol extension for changing baud rates following
> the standard "ZZ..." format.  I don't recall the opcode number / format at
> the moment.
>
> Ken
>
>
> On 6/4/18 6:30 PM, Stephen Adolph wrote:
>
> I was just reading the manual.. didn't see a command for that though.  if
> you can pass along some info that would be great Ken--
> thx
> Steve
>
> On Mon, Jun 4, 2018 at 9:22 PM, Ken Pettit <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> NADSBox can support 76800.
>>
>> Ken
>>
>>
>> On 6/4/18 6:22 PM, Stephen Adolph wrote:
>>
>> yah my pc cannot run at 76800 unfortunately.  But.. what about NADSbox?
>>
>> On Mon, Jun 4, 2018 at 9:20 PM, John R. Hogerhuis <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jun 4, 2018 at 6:13 PM Stephen Adolph <[email protected]>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I intend to find out!  for moving 1.6MB into the M100/T200, I think it
>>>> should make a difference.
>>>>
>>>> My Rx loop reads a byte and places it directly in the target location.
>>>> can't go much faster than that.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Cool!
>>>
>>> Just keep in mind that 76800bps is an odd rate. Some devices / drivers
>>> support it and some don’t. Definitely worth the speed up for large files if
>>> everything can’t handle it.
>>>
>>> Everything seems to support 38400.
>>>
>>> — John.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>

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