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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 2013-04-10 17:43, Dan Smith wrote:
</div>
<blockquote cite="mid:20130410174356.6f8deae6@theine.danplanet.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">A lot of laptop computers and many USB-to-serial adapters actually just
swing +5V and 0V for the two states. It's a real problem for gear that
is strict about the standard, and may be why you have problems powering
that device there. Maybe the Digi box will swing to -5V for low, and
that gives you 10V to power it? I've not seen any adapters that are
only doing 5V that actually go to -5V on the low side, so this may mean
that box wouldn't work there anyway.
</pre>
</blockquote>
<br>
I've now obtained a second Digi PortServer TS4 box from eBay, and
one is apparently slightly newer. Digi made so many different minor
variants, that while the two boxes run the exact same firmware (I
know, because I upgraded both to the latest firmware), there are
differences:<br>
<br>
<ol>
<li>The newer box can be powered by external power and also Power
over Ethernet (PoE). The older box does that, and also can be
powered from RS-232C RI ("Ring Indicate"). However, I'm only
powering both boxes with external power (which can be anything
from 9-30vDC, and I'm supplying 13.8vDC).</li>
<li>Both boxes can support both RS-232C, RS-422, and RS-485 via
switch settings, but only the older box has switch settings for
each serial port.</li>
<li>The newer box works with all my radios with DTR and RTS high.
The older box works the same, except that for the CT-29A cable,
it requires RTS=high, DTR=low. If the older box sends DTR high
to the CT-29A cable, the cable responds in such a way in such a
way that the Digi box <b>locks up</b><b> </b>(which means <b>all
serial ports on the box go down</b>). The Yaesu CT-62 serial
cable from the FT-897D gets its power from the radio, and the
OPC-1529R cables from the Icom D-Star radios are just TX/RX/GND
wires (DTR/RTS are unconnected), so those radios work just fine
with either Digi box.<br>
</li>
</ol>
<br>
My reason for having both boxes is that I have one on the DMZ, and
one on the local LAN. That allows me to move radio control for each
radio individually between the DMZ (eg, for use from the Internet)
and the LAN (protected from the world). Plus, I like spares ...<br>
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