hcarter333 / rockmite

Flying Rockmite 20 metere QRPp tranciever issues and projects
0 stars 0 forks source link

Flying RockMite RJ45 breakout board #4

Open hcarter333 opened 1 year ago

hcarter333 commented 1 year ago

Add a RJ45 connector into a case for the flying RockMite. Bring that down (via CAT5) to the keyer, headphone, and battery box (?).

Add the same connector to the desktop RockMite to use the same keyer/headphone/battery box.

Write about this in relation to the following: https://www.hamradioworkbench.com/podcast/hrwb-167-open-headset-standard-interface-with-mark-n6mts

hcarter333 commented 1 year ago

Sketch of the complete system: image

hcarter333 commented 1 year ago

The standard mentioned above is available on github at https://github.com/Halibut-Electronics/Open-Headset-Interconnect-Standard/blob/530e3e65d7fc3c0e13bd4e36594523e0a6ecb43e/docs/Open-Headset-Interconnect-Standard.pdf by @Halibut-Electronics

The diagram is spiffy as a base for the work here: image

Just change the microphone to the Rockmite's two paddle keyer, and the PTT button to the Rockmite's keyer speed/frquency select button. For this version, everything shares a single ground.

Oh! Also need to add battery power, so for the Rockmite, the wire listing becomes: Radio power: 1 ground 1 postive power Audio: 1 headphone Keyer: 1 di paddle 1 da paddle 1 uController button

= 6 total wires?

Yup! That's corroborarted by the original flying Rockmite picture: image

Note the two unused wires.

Quick link to that picture and its associated post: https://copaseticflow.blogspot.com/2011/05/first-flying-rockmite-qso.html

hcarter333 commented 1 year ago

Initial placement of the board has been determined: PXL_20221210_003848661

Make the initial prototype via two breakout boards, (maybe use a rubberband to attach the one seen above at first, and just use the screw terminals on the back of the board for the radio-side breakout board.