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Budget USB Enabled GPS
Posted on February 28th, 2009 9 commentsLooking for a cheap GPS receiver? Look no further than the GPS-500 Microsoft Streets and Trips GPS by Pharos. This tiny unit features a SiRF Star III chipset and most are selling on ebay for just under 10 dollars! This GPS receiver can be interfaced via a RS232 serial link using a MAX232 chip from Maxim IC and a low cost USB to serial converter.
Difficulty : Medium
Time: 1 HourAfter purchasing this GPS receiver, I thought that it would be ready to go, very wrong. In reality the unit needs a special converter cable to interface with a serial port, who has time to buy and wait for that?
Assuming that most devices use 5 volts, I started the very dangerous method of applying power and ground to various pins on the GPS receiver. Once the power was applied correctly a blue led turned on.
Now, I just needed to get the NMEA output data from the GPS receiver. Using a RS232 converter like the MAX232ACPE shown in the schematic below, I connected pin 14 of it to the RX pin of a serial port and listened for data via hyperterminal. Next, I attached a wire to pin 11 of the MAX232ACPE and tried the remaining pins on the GPS receiver.
Upon finding the TX pin of the GPS receiver, hyperterminal was receiving garbage text because of an incorrectly set baud rate. After some trial and error, the baud rate was found to be 4800bps.
Based on what I have found, the pinouts are as follows below. The unused pins could be RX or some sort of special functionality that the SiRF Star III GPS chipset has to offer.
Lastly, I added a switch on the output of the GPS’s TX line, a usb to serial converter, and LOTS of hot glue to secure the wires in order to interface with my laptop. The switch was added to shut off the GPS’s TX output from sending data to the computer during the first 5 seconds of powering up. Otherwise, hyperterminal would cease to read from the device.
The SiRF Star III technology is quite remarkable, I was able to acquire 8 GPS satellites on the first floor of a two story house!
9 responses to “Budget USB Enabled GPS”
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intibioro March 13th, 2009 at 01:47
Only site on the net with the GPS-500 pinouts! Thank you!
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Nice, i’ll try mine again this weekend (i hope) i gotta find the parts again after having moved…
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Any idea what pin is the RX pin ?
Thanks
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Thanks a lot, I was thinking of doing a very similar project and I just spent an hour and a half looking for this exact data. Kudos to you!
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colt45 June 10th, 2009 at 04:42
Cookies! Oh wait, I mean Pinout!!!
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Jason:
The second to the last “Unused” pins right next to ground on the right is the RX pin. Sadly every time I tried to connect to it my gps unit would stop outputting NMEA data. Maybe you could have better luck!
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[...] previously in the Budget USB Enabled GPS post, this tiny gps unit is perfect for tracking the location of the rover. The gps unit was [...]
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Thanks, this is what I was looking for.
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Very awesome work! Thanks for putting this up for everyone to learn from. I really appreciate sites like yours.
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