Friday, April 16, 2010

UPDATE: Converting GPS Serial Output to TTL levels

I ordered a sample ADM232A which is a high-speed CMOS RS-232 Driver/Receiver. The chip was designed to take an RS232 signal and convert it to TTL levels and vice-versa. While our implementation using a rail-to-rail op-amp worked, the ADM232A is specifically designed to handle this task. I wired the circuit as shown below.


Using a function generator, I provided a 12 V peak-to-peak signal at 4800 Hz (the same signal as the output from the GPS we are using) as a simulated RS232 input. The output signal was from 0 - 5 V and inverted. The oscilloscope measurement can be seen below. The blue line is from the function generator, and the yellow line is output from the ADM232A.



Overall, I would recommend that we use the ADM232A instead of the op-amp solution. The ADM232A has very low power requirements (as configured, I measured the current draw between 2 - 3 mA), and it was made specifically to solve our RS232 - TTL voltage issue.

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