"Volker Tonn" wrote in message
...
Lucky schrieb:
"Volker Tonn" wrote in message
...
luckydaze schrieb:
Hi
I bought the original Lowe IF-150 computer interface.
The seller never mentioned it uses an outdated 25 pin connection and is
most likely useless in todays world.. I bought a 25 pin to 9 pin adapter
for it.
This 25-pin connector is standard on many items....
I started up the software in Win XP but it will not work. It opens up
but doesn't control the radio. I then tried using a DOS boot disk and
tried it in DOS. No good. Radio doesn't respond.
Does anyone have a solution for this? Is anyone using the IF-150
interface on their computer?
Do you use the *right* cable?
There are 2 different types of cable.
One is a straight modem connector cable, the other is a "null-modem"
cable with some wires crossed....
Check out what you need and take the right cable.
Hi Volker,
how have you been?
I bought a modem cable. OK, I got it working so far. Not the way it was
intended to work but it does the trick for now. This is what happened.
It seems the original Lowe 150 software defaults to the Com port 1
setting. I use com port 3.
When I try to change the setting to 3, I get a "bad address in the radio
module" from the radio software.
I reinstalled the program numerous times but it won't let me change it.
The Asus P4P800 motherboard I bought only has one serial port on the back
of the computer and it's port 3. Why it's assigned port 3 and not 1, I
don't know.
Hi again.
The only difference between COM1 and COM3 is the adress configuration. You
can not use COM1 and COM3 at the same time. They are using the same
physical resources on the I/O-circuit. You can have attached differnt
things (i.e. modems) to the ports but you can only connect with one of
them at a time.
Modern motherboards are somewhat tricky to handle. Maybe some internal
source has captured the COM1...
Do you have an internal modem or infrared-connector?
First I woud have a look into the setup of the mainboard and lock/disable
the COM1 for any use. In most cases you can find the COM-port preferences
in the peripherals menue. Then restart the system.
After WIN XP is up again, shut down the comp and start MB-setup again,
unlock/enable COM1, then restart...
Look if it works.
Otherwise you might check the system preferences in the hardware setup
menue...
If there is no COM1 you might install it manually...
Have a look on the preferences for your modem or infrared connections.
Maybe you can change them to COM2 there.
As I do not use WIN XP (I use W2K) I can't help there further.
At least it is a big disadvantage that the radio's software does not let
you chose the COM-port...
Have fun with our hobby.
73 from Berlin/ Germany
So, I tried various free software for other receivers but none would
control the 150.
Then, I tried Shortwave Log. It has choices for the Lowe 250 and a beta
choice for the Lowe 235. The 235 choice seems to work. Not the best, but
it shows the connection is there. I can change frequencies in AM well, but
SSB is a little off.
So, I'm going to contact my coding buddy in Canada. He'll write up a
little control program for me. Is there any other computer software that
works on the Lowe 150 that anyone knows about??
Thanks Volker. You're a good guy!
Lucky
Volker,
I fixed it. This is what I had to do.
In my mobo bios, serial port 1 is really com 3 and serial port 2 is really
com 1. So, I disabled serial port 2 so com 1 would be disabled. This left
com 3 in device manager. This was the only port that seemed work OK with
other radio software.
I then changed com port 3's setting to com port 1 in XP's device manager. It
warned me against it since it said com 1 was in use even though it was
disabled in the bios. I did it anyway.
The original Lowe software now works well like it should. It only looks for
com 1 and now the name of the port matched it with it. Strange.
Thanks again Volker!
Lucky
|