Telit Wireless Solutions GM862-GPS Manuel D’Utilisation

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GM862-GPS Hardware User Guide 
 
 1vv0300728 Rev. 0 - 27/04/06  
  
Reproduction forbidden without Telit Communications S.p.A. written authorization - All Right reserved 
 
page 21 of 55 
 
Signal GM862-
GPS Pin 
Number 
Name Usage 
RX_GPS 
41 
GPS Transmit line 
Output line of GPS serial Port (
NMEA 
protocol)
 
TX_GPS 
35 
GPS Receive line 
Input line of GPS serial Port (
NMEA 
protocol)
 
GND 2-4-6-8 
Ground 
ground 
 
The default configuration is 4800 bps, 8, n, 1 
 
GPS RX Lines and TX lines may need a dual supply isolation buffer like an FXLP34 to avoid CMOS 
high states while in POWER SAVING. 
4.1   level translation 
In order to interface the Telit GM862-GPS with a PC com port or a RS232 (EIA/TIA-232) application a 
level translator is required. This level translator must 
- invert the electrical signal in both directions 
- change the level from 0/3V to +15/-15V  
Actually, the RS232 UART 16450, 16550, 16650 & 16750 chipsets accept signals with lower levels on 
the RS232 side (EIA/TIA-562) , allowing for a lower voltage-multiplying ratio on the level translator. 
Note that the negative signal voltage must be less than 0V and hence some sort of level translation is 
always required.  
The simplest way to translate the levels and invert the signal is by using a single chip level translator. 
There are a multitude of them, differing in the number of driver and receiver and in the levels (be sure 
to get a true RS232 level translator not a RS485 or other standards). 
By convention the driver is the level translator from the 0-3V UART level to the RS232 level, while the 
receiver is the translator from RS232 level to 0-3V UART. 
 
In order to translate the whole set of control lines of the UART you will need: 
 - 5 driver 
- 3 receiver 
 
 
NOTE: The digital input lines working at 2.8VCMOS have an absolute maximum input voltage of 3,75V; therefore the 
level translator IC shall not be powered by the +3.8V supply of the module. Instead it shall be powered from a +2.8V / 
+3.0V (dedicated) power supply. 
This is because in this way the level translator IC outputs on the module side (i.e. GM862-GPS inputs) will work at 
+3.8V interface levels, stressing the module inputs at its maximum input voltage. 
This can be acceptable for evaluation purposes, but not on production devices.