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Hi, I'm new to the Forum and I hope you can help me out with my problem. On my boat I have a C70 Raymarine Multifunction Display (that has the common screen-flickering problem and many times can't be used) and some Raymarine devices (Analog Radar, Digital Sound Meter, VHF, GPS antenna, Autopilot). I have been searching in the last few days a way to connect my Raymarine devices to my laptop. Appuyez sur le bouton de microphone PUSH TO TALK et dites. X All marine VHF channels for the U.S., Canada, and international waters x National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather channel watch - Sounds a warning tone when a hazard alert is issued for your area.
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There is nothing you can plug in that will let you operate the radar. It's a completely proprietary connection involving some serial communications, some dedicated signal wires (eg, one that pulses to mark the antenna revolutions) and an analogue video signal. It's just possible that you might be able to piggyback an analogue screen off the video cable, leaving control to be done via the plotter, but unless you know how to drive an oscilloscope I don't rate your chances.I know less about the fishfinder module, but again I doubt you can easily connect it to something else.Better to fix or replace the plotter. I've not looked inside one myself, but I'm told the problem is due to a separate video board. Either the contacts that connect it to the main board corrode, which might well be fixable with a little cleaning, or the traces on the board itself go which means a replacement board. Spare ones are still available.If you're not confident opening it up yourself, do this particular repair all the time (no connection, just a customer).
It's a known weakness.Pete. You need to tell us much more about how all of this is wired up in order for someone to comment meaningfully on what will or won't be posible.First of all any connection to PC software is going to be via NMEA0183 and you are going to be limited by a) what data the software will be able to display and b) what can be bridged out of your system.Looking at the Raymarine installation manual I see that the suggested installations have most of the items you list above either in the Seatalk network or making dedicated connections to the C70. If the 0183 port is free it could be used to bridge out basic data (including a couple of the radar sentences) as below:APB, BWC, BWR, DBT, DPT, GGA, GLL, MTW, RMA, RMB,RMC, RSD, TTM, VLW, VHW, VTG, WPL, VHF/DSC and ZDAThis would only need a single connection to the PC e.g. A Digital Yacht NMEA to USB cable or homemade equivalent.An alternative would be to use a Raymarine seatalk to RS232 box to get NMEA out of the Seatalk network. You would have to look at the specifications of such a box to work out what NMEA could be got out, but it is not likely to be much different from the output from the NMEA port.
A more useful purpose for a RS232 box could be to patch anything currently occupying the NMEA port (e.g. VHF?) into the Seatalk network.
However I am not familiar with Raymarine and Seatalk at all, hopefully someone who is will be along to help.As far as the multiplexer road goes, according to the C70 installation manual the radar and the DSM (I assume this is a fishfinder) make specific connections to the plotter. These are not likely to be easily compatible with anything non-Raymarine so are not likely to connect to a multiplexer directly.At the end of this will be whatever PC software you choose to use to display data from your system and the ones we are familiar with here (e.g.
PC Plotter as Clive mentions) aren't going to receive many more relevant NMEA sentences than those which can be bridged out of your 0183 port anyway. In particular, you are unlikely to be able to replicate your radar or fishfinder displays very easily, but I will not suggest a definitive opinion on that as I'm unfamiliar with either bit of kit.You will also need to consider whether you will use your existing charts or not. I see the C70 uses CF cards (Navionics?).
You may at the least need a special card reader to get the charts into something like PC plotter. If you needed to buy new vector charts to make it work, you could save a lot of money by choosing a PC plotting package using raster (e.g. Vist my harbour) but you may find the software which displays raster charts lacks some of the functionality (depth, speed etc) of more feature filled packages like PC Plotter. You will also need to consider whether you will use your existing charts or not. I see the C70 uses CF cards (Navionics?).
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You may at the least need a special card reader to get the charts into something like PC plotter. If you needed to buy new vector charts to make it work, you could save a lot of money by choosing a PC plotting package using raster (e.g. Vist my harbour) but you may find the software which displays raster charts lacks some of the functionality (depth, speed etc) of more feature filled packages like PC Plotter. Check out NavMonPC, which is a very good (free) data display program which can run alongside, and complimentary to, a budget raster chartplotting application.The Navionics CF cards for the old C-series Raymarine plotters definitely need a special card reader, and Raymarine advise that putting them in a normal card reader will destroy them!There's no way you can duplicate the screen display of the C-classic series plotters on anything else; they simply don't have the outputs required. As others have said, you can break out the NMEA sentences for display in another system, but that requires another navigation system to use the data, and there's no way that radar or fish-finder data can be transferred.
The E-series can do this, I think - but only to drive another Raymarine screen. Don't know about the capabilities of more recent ones. Well, I am merely quoting Raymarine's advice. But experience trumps theory!It changed, I think around the time they started doing the online updates. Prior to that you needed the special card reader to use your chart card with raytech rns.To add my agreement to what others have said: the OP is out of luck with the analogue radar: Even the venerable raytech will only display their digital radar (not, I'll wager a lot, the new quantum). If the 'DSM' is indeed a fish finder, that too will be proprietary transmission over ethernet, so no conversion to PC. If on the other hand it's just a depth sounder then those data, like the GPS, can be converted to NMEA-0183 and bridged to a PC.