[sci.electronics] easy to use RS232 chip

lpdjb@brahms.amd.com (Jerry Bemis) (02/01/91)

I am looking for a rs232 chip that can be connected to a PC/AT com port
that does not need a controler, procceser connected to it.  It will be used
for recieve only.  (data will pass from a PC to to this homemade device.)

Jerry Bemis { is there anyone in netland that went to school with me? }

lpdjb@brahms.amd.com (Jerry Bemis) (02/01/91)

In article <1991Feb1.003857.2775@amd.com> lpdjb@brahms.amd.com (Jerry Bemis) writes:
I am looking for a rs232 chip that can be connected to a PC/AT com port
that does not need a controler, procceser connected to it.  It will be used
for recieve only.  (data will pass from a PC to to this homemade device.)

{ is there anyone in netland that went to school with me? }
 
 LPDJB@brahms.amd.com                     
 Jerry Bemis  Sunnyvale, CA (408) 749-3327  (800) 538-8450 x43327 
 POB 3453 - 45, Sunnyvale CA 94086-3000
 from comuserve >INTERNET LPDJB@brahms.amd.com  (or 76326,2233--I never read it. It costs too much for me to play with.)
 

bender@oobleck.Eng.Sun.COM (Michael Bender) (02/04/91)

In article <-:-> lpdjb@brahms.amd.com (Jerry Bemis) writes:
=>I am looking for a rs232 chip that can be connected to a PC/AT com port
->that does not need a controler, procceser connected to it.  It will be used
->for recieve only.  (data will pass from a PC to to this homemade device.)

I think you mean that you want a device (chip) that you can connect to your
PC's serial port so that you can send serial data to this chip and have it
output the data as 8 parallel lines, right?  If this is what you mean, I've
found the big 40-pin UART that Radio Shack sells (sold??), an
AY-XX-something, to be really good for this type of application, since you
don't need a controller on the other end to set up the chip's parameters;
all of them are strappable via pins on the chip (that's one of the reasons
that it's a 40-pin vs. 28-pin UART!)

I used one a few years ago for a light controller - my computer sent a byte
to the AY-XX UART, the bits that were on corresponded to the lights that I
wanted on.  I think that the UART also provides a "data ready" signal to let
you know that a byte has just been received.

have fun!
mike
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