Hi Phil,
 
That is the picture and I made my cable.
 
I am using a Garmin GPS V not the Nuvi 350. But that is not anything to
wonder about too much. Both receivers talk the same protocol known as the
Garmin Protocol.
 
If you were to follow my path somewhat, you would need a cable to connect
the Nuvi350 to the OT2m. That keeps the OT2/GPS connection easy.
 
I ordered a Kenwood version of the GTRANS. I didn't have any right angle
2.5mm connectors at the time whereas I have a ton of DE-9 connectors. The
right angle USB cable is sitting in the project box. If you buy the Kenwood
version, just remember the tip and ring need to be swapped. 
 
There are two reasons I followed this path. First, I wanted to use the
Garmin Protocol for communication with the GPS. By doing so, I get an
antenna for a repeater object, a car for a vehicle, etc. In NMEA mode, I get
dots. So, a dots or an antenna, car, etc? I chose the cool icons! Second, I
wanted less clutter. With the GTRANS inside the OT2 it sees no strain or
stress of the cables. You could certainly splice the GTRANS in anywhere you
like.
 
My OT2 has five connectors on the back. One is for the LCD which exits the
grommeted hole. One is for the radio and the other three are in a three
headed beast (rather than the two headed version Scott sells) that provides
a PC (Port A), GPS (Garmin Protocol/Port B) and GPS (NEMA/Port C, Pin 1)
connection. Port C is my addition!
 
I would bet your IC-91AD uses NMEA only. That makes it easy. There is also
no need for more than that. The radios do not send waypoints to the GPS
anyway. Of course my assumption is based on the radio I have, the IC-U82
(UHF only) and my friends radio, the ID-800 (VHF/UHF). Okay, inquiring minds
have to know: A total 5 sentences, RMC, GGA, GLL, GSA and VTG are available
according to the manual (page 58).
 
More manual information (page 34): The IC-91A*/91AD can be operated in
digital voice mode and low-speed data operation for both transmit and
receive. It can also be connected to a GPS receiver (compatible with an
RS-232 output/NMEA format/4800 bps) and transmit/receive position data.
 
Best regards,
Fred
 
 


  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of liquid_squelch
Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2010 15:29
To: [email protected]
Subject: [tracker2] Re: Sharing the OT2m's Nuvi 350 with D-Star ?


  

Fred,
I think I found your pictures here:
http://groups.
<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/tracker2/photos/album/508316112/pic/186481172
3/view?picmode=&mode=tn&order=ordinal&start=1&count=20&dir=asc>
yahoo.com/group/tracker2/photos/album/508316112/pic/1864811723/view?picmode=
&mode=tn&order=ordinal&start=1&count=20&dir=asc

Are you using this cable from Argent?
https://www.
<https://www.argentdata.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=113>
argentdata.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=113

So I assume you are running the FMI cable from the Nuvi to the OT2m. Inside
the OT2m you have the GTRANS's USB side of the cable cut?

Maybe I am lost, but wouldn't it have been easier to have the GTRANS cable
come off the NUVI, and split before it hit the serial port of the OT2m? I
think I am missing something..

I will have to look and see if the IC92 and IC91 speak the same language. I
would think they do.

And yes, the purpose of this is to keep the clutter down, and put all of my
data tracking into one easy to grab kit. 

Thanks again for the help
73
Phil / w2lie

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