Hi Fred,
Those are a LOT of questions, I am in a bit of a hurry, so I will touch upon some of them:
- COM1 on RRC: see my answer before. It is only available for "tunneling" if you do NOT use CAT,
which is unlikely. Therefore, COM1 in a Twin configuration is blocked by CAT and is therefore
unavailable for controlling other devices. This is an exception relevant ONLY to Twin configurations!
Roger's comment is applicable to a non-Twin RRC setup, and then only if you don't run CAT at all
(in that case, you would have both serial ports available).
- I think Roger's offer was for tunneling PC serial ports, which is NOT what you want. You need a
serial server device, such as from Lantronix, Moxa, etc. On the control side, NO device is needed,
you just install virtual serial port drivers and your local PC "thinks" it has those remote serial ports
locally. Which brand you want is not important, just make sure that it supports "real serial mode"
and is not a "lite" version (some Moxas are that type).
- For antenna switching, look at the Microbit antenna switch. It integrates in the RemoteRig system
and is not that expensive.
http://www.remoterig.com/wp/?page_id=1793- For relays, there are lots of variations on the market and this would entail a longer discussion.
Certainly the Webswitch does a fine job here and is not expensive. The N8LP system is impressive,
but quite complex and maybe overkill. Larry uses Lantronix serial servers in his configuration (look
at his web site).
- Rotor software: any software will work. It just thinks the serial port is local, even if it is a virtual
remoted port. Same goes for any other serial control software (e.g. amplifier, wattmeter, etc.).
- If you have any further questions, you are welcome to write me directly at dj0qn (at) darc.de.
I will be on the road again the next few days, so I am not sure how often I can post here.
73,
Mitch DJ0QN / K7DX