Royaltek wireless gps receiver user manual bt gps mini (rbt-1000) (48 pages) GPS RoyalTek RCD-1100 User Manual. Bt gps speed camera warning device (22 pages). Software Data NMEA V2.2 Protocol It is the RS-232 interface:4800 bps, 8 bit data, 1 stop bit and no parity. NMEA Output Messages The Sapphire outputs the following messages as shown. 1 RoyalTek Bluetooth GPS Datalog Receiver RBT-2300 User Manual V1.0 SiRF Star III GPS Engine Inside Published on July, 2007 by RoyalTek Company Ltd. Found my GPS (RoyalTek). I was having trouble getting my GPS to work - the software I was trying to use it with just kept saying that the device didn't exist. Easy GPS Tester breaks the.
Twelve parallel channels
Support 2D/3D information
Cold/Warm/Hot start time: 45/38/8 seconds
MC Card connector for external GPS antenna
Support standard NMEA-0183 at 7,600 bps baud rate
Support standard SiRF binary at 4,800 bps
Compatible with Bluetooth devices with SPP (Serial Port Profile)
RoyalTek RTB 1000 connected to a Nokia 6600 running nmea_info.py
RoyalTek BT GPS x-mini RBT-2100
Same as RBT 1000, but this one has a SiRFstarIII chip. Replacable LiIon battery (Nokia compatible)
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Extreme fast TTFF at low signal level.
High sensitivity acquisition
WAAS/EGNOS Supported (turned off by default, need to be ON using command sended in Sirf protocol (Using for example sirfdemo software), There are no NMEA-compatible commands to turn it on, only Sirf)
RoyalTek Mini Xtreme RBT-2110
Bluetooth device with SiRFstarIII chipset. Works out of the box under Linux. Very small, fits everywhere. Has useful rubber feets so it doesn't slide around in your car. Mine came with a car power adapter but no AC adapter. LiIon battery is replaceable.
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Extreme fast TTFF at low signal level.
High sensitivity acquisition
RoyalTek GPS x-mini II RBT-2200/RBT-2210
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Extreme fast TTFF at low signal level.
High sensitivity acquisition
Power saving features
Industrial Standard
RoyalTek RBT-2300
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
650,000 trackpoints
Battery lasts 7 hours
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Bluetooth
Works with Linux (Jdatalog)
Pros
Very cheap
Huge memory
You can use standard Nokia BL-4C batteries, more capacity
Cons
No waypoint button
Downloading data requires some knowledge
No segmentation (all trackpoints are saved together by day, even if you switch off & on)
Its a configuration flag, you can append or create new trackpoints.
No on/off trackpoints switch
Only includes a car charger (but a 5 V 0.4 A charger is cheap)
In my case it also has a USB connector
RoyalTek BlueGPS RBT 3000
Bluetooth GPS data logger — no screen, minimal indicator lights. I don't have any experience of another GPS, so I really like it.
Good things
Massive memory capacity — apparently it stores over 30,000 records. I have used it for a few hours every day on holiday and after two weeks still had spare capacity. I think you can fit more records on if you reduce the type of info it logs (not the frequency but the detail; e.g., no altitude)
Bluetooth connectivity, no need for cables
Configuration software (Linux software too) allows you to change everything about logging, data correction, elevation masks, SBAS (I haven't tried all these options). The logging control is great, the frequency can be set to anything from 1 sec to many hours
Linux driver to extract data (I have never managed to build this on Mac OS X); Gentoo Ebuilds for Linux driver and config tool
Bad things
No Mac software!
No indication of full memory (so I have to keep track and often get it wrong)
Indicator lights are counter-intuitive — when the green led is lit constantly, it is not locked onto a GPS signal. When it is flashing it has locked on and is recording.
Can't change the battery (built-in lithium ion). But I have opened it up and it would be easy to swap them if you had a spare.
need very much time for GPS-look. It flashes the green light, but it hasn't locked. Be careful with tracking!
software for download the datas works not satisfactorily under Linux and Windows-Pocket-PC (what's the problem?)
two standard alkaline AAA cells for about 12 hrs runtime
two rechargeable NiMH AAA cells for about 9 hrs runtime (an option not mentioned in the manual but it's been tried and tested)
size 34×24×64 mm without strap/belt, weight 68 g/42 g (with/without battery)
not waterproof, but fits easily inside a condom.
NMEA0183 compliant output
Mini-USB Connection to PC
Works with Linux (rgm3800py (german description), Jdatalog or rtkgps).
Works with MacOS/Linux including old PPC-Platform, if USB-RS232-Driver for Profilec PL2303 is available via this python-script http://code.google.com/p/rgm3800py/
Works with PocketPC http://aeropic.free.fr/RBT_2300/ (German, Spanish, Catalan, Hungarian version available. Windows-Desktop-versions available as well in those languages)
64 MiB flash memory for trackdata. Logging can be set in 5 levels (earlier units only offer the first three options out-of-the-box: get the firmware upgrade!).
UTC Time, Longitude and Latitude
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude and Altitude
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude, Altitude and Velocity
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude, Altitude, Velocity and Distance
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude, Altitude, Velocity, Distance, Fixed Mode, Satellites, Fix, DOP and Course.
Comes with min. 5 sec interval - after an firmware upgrade 1 to 60 seconds interval is possible. In a car 1 sec. interval works fine, by foot or by bicycle better use longer intervals.
Recording interval and loglevel set by user. Defines range of memory.
Memory-Full Options: Stop / Overwrite
No button/key for marking waypoints, but each powercycling starts new track
Direct paththrough of live NMEA available :'GPS mouse mode' via USB-RS232.
See also: detailed german page for RGM 3800 at the OSM-wiki
Summary
Pro: tracks one of the best in SiRFstarIII-class (much better than RGM2300 or Garmin Etrex H family)
Pro: switch on, clip on and forget for the rest of the day.
Pro: standard batteries
Pro: big memory
Contra: no button for waypoints
Contra: downloading via USB can take several minutes
Contra: memory not expandable/no slot
Contra: No battery low warning
Contra: Under unknown rare conditions sometimes stops recording. After power cycling ok again.
RoyalTek RGM 2000
SiRFstarII Chipset USB2Serial Adapter. Can be programmed to output sirf-protocol or nmea with a terminal programm (windows = hyperterminal). A good Windows tool to programm the output is SiRFDemo. I use it with Linux, works fine for me.
RoyalTek MBT-1100
BT747 seems to be able to handle the RoyalTek MBT-1100 and it might be able to handle some of the other 'MBT'-devices too.The MBT devices are based on the MTK chipsets.
Retrieved from 'https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/w/index.php?title=Royaltek&oldid=1763251'
RoyalTek BT GPS mini RBT 1000
Twelve parallel channels
Support 2D/3D information
Cold/Warm/Hot start time: 45/38/8 seconds
MC Card connector for external GPS antenna
Support standard NMEA-0183 at 7,600 bps baud rate
Support standard SiRF binary at 4,800 bps
Compatible with Bluetooth devices with SPP (Serial Port Profile)
RoyalTek RTB 1000 connected to a Nokia 6600 running nmea_info.py
RoyalTek BT GPS x-mini RBT-2100
Same as RBT 1000, but this one has a SiRFstarIII chip. Replacable LiIon battery (Nokia compatible)
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Extreme fast TTFF at low signal level.
High sensitivity acquisition
WAAS/EGNOS Supported (turned off by default, need to be ON using command sended in Sirf protocol (Using for example sirfdemo software), There are no NMEA-compatible commands to turn it on, only Sirf)
RoyalTek Mini Xtreme RBT-2110
Bluetooth device with SiRFstarIII chipset. Works out of the box under Linux. Very small, fits everywhere. Has useful rubber feets so it doesn't slide around in your car. Mine came with a car power adapter but no AC adapter. LiIon battery is replaceable.
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Extreme fast TTFF at low signal level.
High sensitivity acquisition
RoyalTek GPS x-mini II RBT-2200/RBT-2210
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Extreme fast TTFF at low signal level.
High sensitivity acquisition
Power saving features
Industrial Standard
RoyalTek RBT-2300
SiRFstarIII GPS chipset
20 parallel channels
650,000 trackpoints
Battery lasts 7 hours
NMEA0183 compliant protocol
Bluetooth
Works with Linux (Jdatalog)
Pros
Very cheap
Huge memory
You can use standard Nokia BL-4C batteries, more capacity
Cons
No waypoint button
Downloading data requires some knowledge
No segmentation (all trackpoints are saved together by day, even if you switch off & on)
Its a configuration flag, you can append or create new trackpoints.
No on/off trackpoints switch
Only includes a car charger (but a 5 V 0.4 A charger is cheap)
In my case it also has a USB connector
RoyalTek BlueGPS RBT 3000
Bluetooth GPS data logger — no screen, minimal indicator lights. I don't have any experience of another GPS, so I really like it.
Good things
Massive memory capacity — apparently it stores over 30,000 records. I have used it for a few hours every day on holiday and after two weeks still had spare capacity. I think you can fit more records on if you reduce the type of info it logs (not the frequency but the detail; e.g., no altitude)
Bluetooth connectivity, no need for cables
Configuration software (Linux software too) allows you to change everything about logging, data correction, elevation masks, SBAS (I haven't tried all these options). The logging control is great, the frequency can be set to anything from 1 sec to many hours
Linux driver to extract data (I have never managed to build this on Mac OS X); Gentoo Ebuilds for Linux driver and config tool
Bad things
No Mac software!
No indication of full memory (so I have to keep track and often get it wrong)
Indicator lights are counter-intuitive — when the green led is lit constantly, it is not locked onto a GPS signal. When it is flashing it has locked on and is recording.
Can't change the battery (built-in lithium ion). But I have opened it up and it would be easy to swap them if you had a spare.
need very much time for GPS-look. It flashes the green light, but it hasn't locked. Be careful with tracking!
software for download the datas works not satisfactorily under Linux and Windows-Pocket-PC (what's the problem?)
two standard alkaline AAA cells for about 12 hrs runtime
two rechargeable NiMH AAA cells for about 9 hrs runtime (an option not mentioned in the manual but it's been tried and tested)
size 34×24×64 mm without strap/belt, weight 68 g/42 g (with/without battery)
not waterproof, but fits easily inside a condom.
NMEA0183 compliant output
Mini-USB Connection to PC
Works with Linux (rgm3800py (german description), Jdatalog or rtkgps).
Works with MacOS/Linux including old PPC-Platform, if USB-RS232-Driver for Profilec PL2303 is available via this python-script http://code.google.com/p/rgm3800py/
Works with PocketPC http://aeropic.free.fr/RBT_2300/ (German, Spanish, Catalan, Hungarian version available. Windows-Desktop-versions available as well in those languages)
64 MiB flash memory for trackdata. Logging can be set in 5 levels (earlier units only offer the first three options out-of-the-box: get the firmware upgrade!).
UTC Time, Longitude and Latitude
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude and Altitude
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude, Altitude and Velocity
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude, Altitude, Velocity and Distance
UTC Time, Longitude, Latitude, Altitude, Velocity, Distance, Fixed Mode, Satellites, Fix, DOP and Course.
Comes with min. 5 sec interval - after an firmware upgrade 1 to 60 seconds interval is possible. In a car 1 sec. interval works fine, by foot or by bicycle better use longer intervals.
Recording interval and loglevel set by user. Defines range of memory.
Memory-Full Options: Stop / Overwrite
No button/key for marking waypoints, but each powercycling starts new track
Direct paththrough of live NMEA available :'GPS mouse mode' via USB-RS232.
See also: detailed german page for RGM 3800 at the OSM-wiki
Royaltek Gps Receiver
Summary
Royaltek Gps Software Download
Pro: tracks one of the best in SiRFstarIII-class (much better than RGM2300 or Garmin Etrex H family)
Pro: switch on, clip on and forget for the rest of the day.
Pro: standard batteries
Pro: big memory
Contra: no button for waypoints
Contra: downloading via USB can take several minutes
Contra: memory not expandable/no slot
Contra: No battery low warning
Contra: Under unknown rare conditions sometimes stops recording. After power cycling ok again.
RoyalTek RGM 2000
SiRFstarII Chipset USB2Serial Adapter. Can be programmed to output sirf-protocol or nmea with a terminal programm (windows = hyperterminal). A good Windows tool to programm the output is SiRFDemo. I use it with Linux, works fine for me.
Royaltek Gps Software Updater
RoyalTek MBT-1100
Royaltek Gps Software Free
BT747 seems to be able to handle the RoyalTek MBT-1100 and it might be able to handle some of the other 'MBT'-devices too.The MBT devices are based on the MTK chipsets.
Retrieved from 'https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/w/index.php?title=Royaltek&oldid=1763251'