Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread David Pratt
See many earlier posts about the relative merits of RS-232 and USB 
interfaces.  They have been discussed many times before.  If your 
desktop does not have a serial input, fit one. If you use a laptop or 
notebook computer, get a USB to RS-232 cable.

73 de David G4DMP

In a recent message, Pete Smith N4ZR n...@contesting.com writes
I have lusted after the XG-3 ever since it was released, but just
noticed that it has an RS-232 port for computer connection.  Why on
earth not a USB port?


-- 
  + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - +
  | David M Pratt, Kippax, Leeds.   |
  | Website: http://www.g4dmp.co.uk |
  + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - +

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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread amsctalx
Here is a good primer on previous versions of this conversation: 

http://elecraft.365791.n2.nabble.com/K3-USB-port-td5753862.html#a5753984 

I would rather have built-in USB, but will probably have to cope with RS-232 on 
hobby devices for years to come... 


Mike Alexander 

amsct...@comcast.net 

- Original Message -
From: David Pratt da...@g4dmp.fsnet.co.uk 
To: Pete Smith N4ZR n...@contesting.com 
Cc: Elecraft List elecraft@mailman.qth.net 
Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2012 8:15:02 AM 
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232 

See many earlier posts about the relative merits of RS-232 and USB 
interfaces. They have been discussed many times before. If your 
desktop does not have a serial input, fit one. If you use a laptop or 
notebook computer, get a USB to RS-232 cable. 

73 de David G4DMP 

In a recent message, Pete Smith N4ZR n...@contesting.com writes 
I have lusted after the XG-3 ever since it was released, but just 
noticed that it has an RS-232 port for computer connection. Why on 
earth not a USB port? 
 

-- 
+ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + 
| David M Pratt, Kippax, Leeds. | 
| Website: http://www.g4dmp.co.uk | 
+ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - + 

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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread Kevin
Probably because that would put Elecraft squarely between you and the 
guy at Prolific or FTDI who writes the drivers. Who would get your 
complaint when the XG3 loses connectivity with the next service pack 
release of your favorite operating system?


On 05/12/2012 07:04 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 I have lusted after the XG-3 ever since it was released, but just
 noticed that it has an RS-232 port for computer connection.  Why on
 earth not a USB port?



-- 
R. Kevin Stover
AC0H

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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread Pete Smith N4ZR
Not exactly comparable to the XG-3, perhaps.  I would have thought that 
a USB port would have advantages so far as space and weight, maybe even 
power consumption, in a battery powered miniature device.  For those 
using old computers, USB port cards for the PCI bus are absolutely dirt 
cheap.

73, Pete N4ZR
The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at 
reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and
arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000


On 5/12/2012 8:50 AM, amsct...@comcast.net wrote:
 Here is a good primer on previous versions of this conversation:

 http://elecraft.365791.n2.nabble.com/K3-USB-port-td5753862.html#a5753984

 I would rather have built-in USB, but will probably have to cope with RS-232 
 on hobby devices for years to come...


 Mike Alexander

 amsct...@comcast.net

 - Original Message -
 From: David Prattda...@g4dmp.fsnet.co.uk
 To: Pete Smith N4ZRn...@contesting.com
 Cc: Elecraft Listelecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2012 8:15:02 AM
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

 See many earlier posts about the relative merits of RS-232 and USB
 interfaces. They have been discussed many times before. If your
 desktop does not have a serial input, fit one. If you use a laptop or
 notebook computer, get a USB to RS-232 cable.

 73 de David G4DMP

 In a recent message, Pete Smith N4ZRn...@contesting.com  writes
 I have lusted after the XG-3 ever since it was released, but just
 noticed that it has an RS-232 port for computer connection. Why on
 earth not a USB port?

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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread amsctalx
This is another common misconception. All of the microprocessor vendors that I 
am aware of have built-in USB peripherals, and often have reference drivers and 
driver templates. Assuming that Elecraft uses MicroChip PICs, there are few 
reasons to add an off-package USB peripheral. 

MicroChip has an excellent USB section at their website that covers USB (as it 
relates to their microprocessors): 

http://www.microchip.com/stellent/idcplg?IdcService=SS_GET_PAGEnodeId=1486 


Mike Alexander - N8MSA 

amsct...@comcast.net 

- Original Message -
From: Kevin kevin.sto...@mediacombb.net 
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net 
Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2012 9:09:45 AM 
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232 

Probably because that would put Elecraft squarely between you and the 
guy at Prolific or FTDI who writes the drivers. Who would get your 
complaint when the XG3 loses connectivity with the next service pack 
release of your favorite operating system? 


On 05/12/2012 07:04 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote: 
 I have lusted after the XG-3 ever since it was released, but just 
 noticed that it has an RS-232 port for computer connection. Why on 
 earth not a USB port? 
 


-- 
R. Kevin Stover 
AC0H 

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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread Joe Subich, W4TV

On 5/12/2012 9:17 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 I would have thought that a USB port would have advantages so far as
 space and weight, maybe even power consumption, in a battery powered
 miniature device.

Not so ... many microprocessor controllers contain one or two built-in
serial ports.  It is far cheaper to adapt those TTL (or 3.3V) ports to
RS-232 compatible operation (typically a single line driver) than to
install a USB UART and deal with drivers for a multitude of operating
systems.

The low power line drivers consume less power, need fewer parts (no
crystal), can be smaller than the USB UART and are likely to be more
reliable.

If you *want* USB interface to the XG-3 pick up one of the USB scanner
programming cables - typically USB to RS_232 compatible 3.5mm stereo
plug.  I believe Elecraft have such a cable as the KXUSB (standard for
the KX3) ... I don't know if they list it separately as a spare.

73,

... Joe, W4TV


On 5/12/2012 9:17 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 Not exactly comparable to the XG-3, perhaps.  I would have thought that
 a USB port would have advantages so far as space and weight, maybe even
 power consumption, in a battery powered miniature device.  For those
 using old computers, USB port cards for the PCI bus are absolutely dirt
 cheap.

 73, Pete N4ZR
 The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
 The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at 
 reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
 spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and
 arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000


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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread amsctalx
Topic by topic: 

Many microprocessor controllers have...built-in serial ports 

Correct, and usually I2C, EtherNet, SPI and a host (pun intended) of 
communications peripherals. But even the beefy Motorola/FreeScale SCI (similar 
to a UART) ports need, in almost any implementation that I am familiar with, 
buffer circuitry - I hope no-one is routing the uC directly to a connector. 

USB needs a similar buffer circuit, known as a transceiver, which provides 
signal-level conversion and isolation. That's it...there is no UART in the 
classic sense. 

And RS-232 serial ports are rapidly become scarce on microcontollers...just go 
their websites and read the datasheets. 

The low power line drivers consume less power, need fewer parts (no crystal), 
can be smaller than the USB UART and are likely to be more reliable. 

Again, no-one really needs free-standing USB protocol units (chips) anymore, so 
the crystal comment is irrelevant. 

Aside from peripheral power supply capability, which is optional, the signal 
driver power demans are actually similar, the USB using a low-voltage 
differential-mode signal with moderate drive currents, and RS-232 are 
high-voltage (5-25V), single-ended signals with low drive currents. 

As for reliability...there are a thousand factors to be considered, and I don't 
see any data anywhere to back that up. 

If you want USB... 

That's where we run into problems. Adapters are inherently less stable than 
well-implemented on-device peripherals. That's why people such as myself want 
native USB capability - conversion is not the same, despite assertions I have 
seen in this mail list and in other forums. 

I realize there will be a cost delta between RS-232 and USB, and there may not 
be a business case on a hobby product. I can live with that on some devices, 
such as the XG-3, but I am really beginning to struggle with RS-232 on 
transceivers and similar devices. It just doesn't make a lot of sense to me 
anymore, and that's coming from a person that has done embedded system design 
using both RS-232 and USB. 

I'm not knocking Elecraft, but I think that, based on today's PC market and the 
maturity of the alternatives, the era of RS-232 as the only choice should be 
drawing to a close. 



Mike Alexander - N8MSA 

amsct...@comcast.net 

- Original Message -
From: Joe Subich, W4TV li...@subich.com 
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net 
Sent: Saturday, May 12, 2012 10:42:37 AM 
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232 


On 5/12/2012 9:17 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote: 
 I would have thought that a USB port would have advantages so far as 
 space and weight, maybe even power consumption, in a battery powered 
 miniature device. 

Not so ... many microprocessor controllers contain one or two built-in 
serial ports. It is far cheaper to adapt those TTL (or 3.3V) ports to 
RS-232 compatible operation (typically a single line driver) than to 
install a USB UART and deal with drivers for a multitude of operating 
systems. 

The low power line drivers consume less power, need fewer parts (no 
crystal), can be smaller than the USB UART and are likely to be more 
reliable. 

If you *want* USB interface to the XG-3 pick up one of the USB scanner 
programming cables - typically USB to RS_232 compatible 3.5mm stereo 
plug. I believe Elecraft have such a cable as the KXUSB (standard for 
the KX3) ... I don't know if they list it separately as a spare. 

73, 

... Joe, W4TV 


On 5/12/2012 9:17 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote: 
 Not exactly comparable to the XG-3, perhaps. I would have thought that 
 a USB port would have advantages so far as space and weight, maybe even 
 power consumption, in a battery powered miniature device. For those 
 using old computers, USB port cards for the PCI bus are absolutely dirt 
 cheap. 
 
 73, Pete N4ZR 
 The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com 
 The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at 
 reversebeacon.blogspot.com, 
 spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and 
 arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 
 
 
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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread Eric Swartz WA6HHQ - Elecraft
Let's end the pro/con RS-232 versus USB thread now before it takes on a life of 
its own ;-) As noted by others, there are many prior threads that you can 
search on for this discussion.

The short answer for the XG3 is that it only uses a simple command set that 
does not require any USB specific functions. There is no operational advantage 
for USB versus RS-232 on the XG3. We support both RS-232 and USB on all of our 
products for control via our RS232 and USB cables.  Many hams use legacy 
computers that only have RS232, so that is the lowest required denominator for 
comm support.

Also note, we -do- have cables for the XG3 (and KX3, W2 and W1) that connect 
directly from their comm port to USB. The part number is KXUSB. Its not on our 
order form yet, but will be next week. (It is included by default with the KX3.)

[Thread Closed]

73,
Eric
List Moderator, among other duties..
www.elecraft.com
_..._



On May 12, 2012, at 7:42 AM, Joe Subich, W4TV li...@subich.com wrote:

 
 On 5/12/2012 9:17 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 I would have thought that a USB port would have advantages so far as
 space and weight, maybe even power consumption, in a battery powered
 miniature device.
 
 Not so ... many microprocessor controllers contain one or two built-in
 serial ports.  It is far cheaper to adapt those TTL (or 3.3V) ports to
 RS-232 compatible operation (typically a single line driver) than to
 install a USB UART and deal with drivers for a multitude of operating
 systems.
 
 The low power line drivers consume less power, need fewer parts (no
 crystal), can be smaller than the USB UART and are likely to be more
 reliable.
 
 If you *want* USB interface to the XG-3 pick up one of the USB scanner
 programming cables - typically USB to RS_232 compatible 3.5mm stereo
 plug.  I believe Elecraft have such a cable as the KXUSB (standard for
 the KX3) ... I don't know if they list it separately as a spare.
 
 73,
 
... Joe, W4TV
 
 
 On 5/12/2012 9:17 AM, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 Not exactly comparable to the XG-3, perhaps.  I would have thought that
 a USB port would have advantages so far as space and weight, maybe even
 power consumption, in a battery powered miniature device.  For those
 using old computers, USB port cards for the PCI bus are absolutely dirt
 cheap.
 
 73, Pete N4ZR
 The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
 The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at 
 reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
 spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 and
 arcluster.reversebeacon.net, port 7000
 
 
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 Elecraft mailing list
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Re: [Elecraft] XG-3 - why RS-232

2012-05-12 Thread Wayne Burdick
The RS232 circuitry we use on the KX3, XG3, K144XV, W1, and W2 has  
three main benefits:  (1) Current drain is near zero. (2) There's  
absolutely no RFI. And (3) you can use any of these devices with  
either a USB or RS232 port at the computer end by ordering the  
associated Elecraft adapter.

73,
Wayne
N6KR


 Not exactly comparable to the XG-3, perhaps.  I would have thought  
 that
 a USB port would have advantages so far as space and weight, maybe  
 even
 power consumption, in a battery powered miniature device.  For those
 using old computers, USB port cards for the PCI bus are absolutely  
 dirt
 cheap.
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