By pure co-incidence, I have a Haicom HI-204E on my desk here, completely 
un-nixie related. I liberated it from work a few years back and was going 
to use it, along with a PIC16F877, to run the display section from an old 
scrolling 60x7 LED board that has a somewhat handicapped controller at 
present. I have a drawer full of 16f877 and a somewhat masochistic attitude 
to writing software.
I also have the manual for said GPS receiver, and the CD with the manual as 
a .pdf so can upload it if interested? 
If anyone does get any source code, I would definitely be interested in 
having a peruse of his GPS routines :-)
- Alex

On Thursday, 31 July 2014 15:27:18 UTC+1, rubli wrote:
>
> I found the mail Jeff once sent me :
>
> Correct, the GPS receiver is a Haicom HI-203E.
> The PS2 connector pinout may still be available on the Haicom web site.
> Four of the pins are active: Power=5vdc, Gnd, Serial data IN, Serial data 
> OUT. 4800b, 8 bits, no parity.
> Only the $GPRMC is transmitted at each epoch (one per second), all other 
> NMEA-0183 strings are disabled during reprogramming here when the clocks 
> are assembled.
>
> If you can locate the pinout, then you can use any terminal program set to 
> 4800b to monitor the output. If the receiver does output the string, then 
> the clock is bad, and must be returned for repair.
>
> Jeff
>
> On Apr 7, 2006, at 10:40 AM, Alex Rubli wrote:
>
>

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