Radio/Kenwood/TS570S
From charlesreid1
Kenwood All-Mode Multi-Bander TS-570S radio:
TS-570 has a straight-through female 9-pin RS232 to female RS232 cable [1].
Manual
The following information is from the TS-570S manual.
Serial Port (Hardware)
Radio Serial Port Photo
There is an RS-232 serial port on the back of the radio, pictured below:
Radio Serial Port Pinout
The radio's manual gives the pinout for this port, and some information on how to communicate with the radio using the serial connection:
Here is a table with information about which pins go where, and the function of each pin. There are basically five pins used:
- Two pins are TX/RX pins for transferring data between the computer and the radio.
- Two pins are on/off switches for the TX/RX functionality (i.e., these have to be supplied with voltage for the radio and the computer to be able to transmit signals back and forth).
- One pin is a ground pin.
Computer Serial Port
I am connecting to the Kenwood radio's serial port using a MacBook Pro. I used a USB to RS-232 cable. Unfortunately, it was a USB to male RS232, and the radio also had a male RS232 connection in the back, so I used some tiny female-female wires to connect each of the individual pins:
On the MacBook, I will be using Python together with the pyserial library [2] to send serial commands out and over the wire.
Serial Communication (Software)
The pyserial library can be used to communicate with devices using a serial port/protocol. The pyserial library is available on Github: https://github.com/pyserial/pyserial
Serial Command Format
The Kenwood TS-570S manual details the pinout of the serial cable, and what hardware connections need to be made. But it also covers the specifics of how to send commands from a computer to the radio. The commands are classified as follows:
- Computer control commands
- Input command (input to the transceiver)
- Set command (sets particular condition)
- Read command (reads an answer)
- Output command (from the transceiver)
- Answer command (transmits a condition)
- Input command (input to the transceiver)
Command syntax is as follows:
FA 00007000000 ;
^^ ^^^^^^^^^^ ^^
Terminator
Parameters
Alphabetical command
For example, the following is a Set command:
FA00007000000;
The prefix FA will set the frequency (F) of variable frequency oscillator A (VFO A) to 7 MHz.
Likewise, the following is a corresponding Get (or Answer) command, asking for the frequency of VFO A:
FA;
When this command is sent, the radio will return the following:
FA00007000000;
This indicates that the frequency of VFO A is set to 7 MHz.
Alphabetical Commands
The following is a table of alphabetical commands given in the appendix of the TS-570S user manual:
A good "Hello World" command is the ID command, which returns the model number of the radio. I'll be using this to demonstrate basic serial communication with the TS-570S.
Pyserial Library
To install pyserial:
$ pip install pyserial
Now you can import pyserial by adding import serial to your Python code.
A basic tutorial is here: http://www.zilogic.com/blog/tutorial-pyserial.html
The next step is to connect to the serial device by creating a Serial object.
Finding the USB to Serial Device
To do this, we need to use syntax like ser = serial.Serial('/dev/ttyUSB0'). To do that, we need to know what file in /dev/ corresponds to our USB-RS232 adapter.
I started by unplugging the USB-RS232 cable from the laptop's USB port, shutting down the radio, and running the command /bin/ls -1 /dev/ > /tmp/noradio.
Next, I plugged the USB-RS232 cable into the laptop's USB port, turned on the radio, and ran the command /bin/ls -1 /dev/ > /tmp/withradio.
I then looked for any devices that showed up when I plugged in the USB-RS232 cable into the USB port:
$ vim -d /tmp/noradio /tmp/withradio
No luck - there were no devices that showed up when I plugged in the serial cable.
Installing Drivers
My next step was to try installing a driver for the USB-RS232 cable from the manufacturer (in this case, CableMatters). Their drivers page [3] provided a link to a Mac driver. Specifically, the page with the driver listed it as "Smart I/O > USB to UART/Serial/Printer > PL2303 Mac OS X Driver Download".
I downloaded version 1.6.0, which was a zipped up pkg file. It was only 94 KB, but required a restart. oooookay, annoying driver software, let's reboot.
ser = serial.Serial('/dev/ttyUSB0')
Finding the USB to Serial Device Redux
asdf
=Finding the Serial Device Redux
Twisted Library
The Twisted library also allows for asyncronous communication with a serial device. Twisted is an event-driven Python library. Examples are provided with the Twisted documentation.
Serial MouseMan example: https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/16.2.0/_downloads/mouse.py
Serial NMEA GPS example: https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/16.2.0/_downloads/gpsfix.py
All examples: https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/16.2.0/core/examples/index.html
Links
Manual for the TS-570S transceiver: http://www.manualslib.com/manual/86121/Kenwood-Ts-570d-Ts-570s.html
Flags
| radio all things radio.
Ham Radio: Notes on General class license: General · Mnemonics/General Class License Digital modes: Radio/Digital Modes
Ham Radio Hardware (Radios): Kenwood TS 440S: Radio/Kenwood/TS440S Kenwood TS 570S: Radio/Kenwood/TS570S Yaesu VX-6: Radio/Yaesu/VX-6 Digital Modes on Raspberry Pi: RaspberryPi/Digital Modes Digital Modes on Arduino: Arduino/Digital Modes DVB-T USB SDR Dongle: DVB-T USB SDR
Ham Radio Software: Software defined radio: SDR Comprehensive list of ham software: Andys Ham Radio Linux Direwolf (soundcard TNC/APRS modem): Direwolf Echolink (internet repeater system): Echolink Qsstv (Slow scan television): Qsstv Fldigi (fast light digital modes): Fldigi Xastir (APRS/AX25/TNC): Xastir RadioHead (packet library for microcontrollers): RadioHead
Category:Radio · Category:Kenwood · Category:Yaesu Flags · Template:RadioFlag · e |

