Celestron Advanced Series C6-RGT 통신 프로토콜 매뉴얼 - 페이지 8

{카테고리_이름} Celestron Advanced Series C6-RGT에 대한 통신 프로토콜 매뉴얼을 온라인으로 검색하거나 PDF를 다운로드하세요. Celestron Advanced Series C6-RGT 8 페이지. Nexstar hand control

Celestron Advanced Series C6-RGT 통신 프로토콜 매뉴얼
Get Device Version
Devices include:
16 = AZM/RA Motor
17 = ALT/DEC Motor
176 = GPS Unit
178 = RTC (CGE only)
Get Model
1 = GPS Series
3 = i-Series
4 = i-Series SE
5 = CGE
6 = Advanced GT
7 = SLT
9 = CPC
10 = GT
11 = 4/5 SE
12 = 6/8 SE
Echo
- useful to check
communication
Is Alignment Complete?
- align=1 if aligned and
0 if not
Is GOTO in Progress?
- Response is ASCII "0"
or "1"
Cancel GOTO

Developer Notes

Timeouts
If the hand control is sent a command that requires it to communicate with another device, then the hand control will
make multiple attempts to get the message through in the event of communications problems. Examples include "Get
Position" commands, "GOTO in Progress" commands, etc.
Software drivers should be prepared to wait up to 3.5s (worst case scenario) for a hand control response. If serial
commands are "blindly" sent without waiting for a response, then some commands may be dropped or the software
driver could see responses that are for earlier commands.
Pass-through Commands with No Response
Commands that start with 'P' are special pass-through commands that communicate with a specific telescope device.
For instance, the Slew commands talk directly to the motor control. If a 'P' command is sent but no response is
returned (because the device is not there or the command is unknown or there was a communication problem) then one
extra data byte is returned before the '#' terminating character and any returned data is garbage. This is done to give
software drivers a flag that something went wrong so appropriate action can be taken. It is particularly useful if you
want to check for the existence of a device: for instance, check the time from the GPS unit, and look for an error
response. Software drivers should check for the '#' termination character and if it is a different character then the next
character (hopefully '#') should be consumed and any command-specific handling should be done.
"P" &
chr(major) &
chr(1) &
chr(minor) &
chr(dev) &
"#"
chr(254) &
chr(0) &
chr(0) &
chr(0) &
chr(2)
"m"
chr(model) &
"#"
"K" &
chr(x) & "#"
chr(x)
"J"
chr(align) &
#
"L"
prog & "#"
"M"
"#"
1.6+
2.2+
1.2+
1.2+
1.2+
1.2+