Sirf proprietary nmea input messages – RoyalTek REV-2000 User Manual

Page 30

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RoyalTek GPS Receiver REB-2000/REB-12R REV-2000 Operational Manual

13

VTG-Course Over Ground and
Ground Speed

Table 7 contains the values of the following

example:$GPVTG, 309.62, T, , M,

0.13, N, 0.2, K*6E

Table 7 VTG Data Format

Name Example

Units

Description

Message ID

$GPVTG

VTG protocol header

Course 309.62

degrees

Measured

heading

Reference T

True

Course

degrees

Measured

heading

Reference M

Magnetic

Speed

0.13

knots

Measured horizontal speed

Units N

Knots

Speed

0.2

km/hr

Measured horizontal speed

Units

K

Kilometer per hour

Checksum *6E

CR><LF>

End of message termination

SiRF Proprietary NMEA Input

Messages

NMEA input messages allow you to control

the Evaluation Unit in NMEA protocol mode.

The Evaluation Unit may be put into NMEA

mode by sending the SiRF Binary protocol

message “ Switch To NMEA Protocol –

Message I.D.129 ” on page 17 using a user

program or using SiRFdemo.exe and

selecting Switch to NMEA Protocol from the

Action menu. If the receiver is in SiRF Binary

mode, all the NMEA input messages are

ignored. Once the receiver is put into NMEA

mode, the following messages may be used

to command the module.

Transport Message

Start Sequence

Payload

Checksum

End Sequence

$PSRF<MID>1 Data2 *CKSUM3 <CR><LF>4

1

Message Identifier consists of three

numeric characters . Input messages begin

at MID 100.

2

Message specific data. Refer to a specific

message section for <data>…<data>

definition

3

CKSUM is a two-hex character checksum

as defined in the NMEA specification . Use

of checksums is required on all input

messages.

4

Each message is terminated by using

Carriage Return (CR) Line Feed (LF) which

is \r\n which is hex 0D 0A. Because \r\n are

not printable ASCII characters , they are

omitted from the example strings, but must

be sent to terminate the message and cause

the receiver to process that input message.

Note – All fields in all proprietary NMEA

messages are required, none are exceptional.

All NMEA messages are comma delimited

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