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- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!ni.umd.edu!zben-mac-ii.umd.edu!user
- From: zben@ni.umd.edu (Charles B. Cranston)
- Subject: Re: RS-232 Line Monitor???
- Message-ID: <zben-030992202404@zben-mac-ii.umd.edu>
- Followup-To: sci.electronics
- Sender: usenet@ni.umd.edu (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: zben-mac-ii.umd.edu
- Organization: UM Home for the Terminally Analytical
- References: <geb1.715477196@Isis.MsState.Edu>
- Date: Fri, 4 Sep 1992 00:28:22 GMT
- Lines: 31
-
- In article <geb1.715477196@Isis.MsState.Edu>,
- geb1@ra.msstate.edu (Granville Barker) wrote:
-
- > I am trying to build a RS-232 line monitor.
- > I want to connect it between two RS-232 devices, and have a wire comming
- > off that I can connect to another computer and monitor both sides of the
- > conversation between the other two devices. Ie.. a Plotter and a Computer.
- > I need to see what is being transmited and received, I tried hooking
- > pins 2 and 3 to diodes, then connecting rx on the monitor computer to
- > the other end of the diodes. THe other 2 devices still communicate ok, but
- > I never see anything on my monitor computer. I am connecting ground.
-
- I built something similar, but with an SPDT switch to select whether the
- "monitor" was listening to the "terminal" or the "line". Most of the
- time you're only interested in one end of the conversation or the other.
- Much of the time you are interested in both you can do the experiment
- twice, once listening to one direction and again listening to the other.
-
- When I need to see the relative timing I borrow the line monitor box from
- our hardware people (multi thousand dollar box but using only 5% of its
- capacity can monitor both sides of the line at once :-).
-
- The only other general solution I can see is using a PC with two serial
- ports, and doing the displaying of both sides in software.
-
- BTW, the box I built had another SPDT switch that allowed substitution
- of the "monitor"'s keyboard for that of the "terminal". This came in
- handy when the "terminal" (a macintosh) had crashed and I wanted to send
- some command to the "line" (a mainframe).
-
- zben@ni.umd.edu -KA3ZDF
-