As discussed, the HUD cables have been produced and seem ok. I received a pair today, hot off the production line in China. Here is the specification: OVMS v3 HUD/OBDII-F Cable One end (DA26-M) connects to the OVMS v3 DIAG (expansion) connector. The other end provides an OBDII female (J1962-F) connector. Cable wiring is as follows: J1962-F DA26-M Signal 4 8 Chassis/Power GND 5 8 Chassis/Power GND 6 16 CAN-H (primary CAN) 14 6 CAN-L (primary CAN) 16 18 +12V Vehicle Power Cable includes a 120ohm resistor between DA26 pins 16 and 6. This provides for an OBDII expansion port for OVMS v3 and allows devices such as OBDII dongles, Heads-up-Displays (HUDs), etc, to be connected to OVMS using the ‘obd2ecu’ firmware module. They look really nice. Moulded, tough, and stubby. DA26 expansion connector to OVMS has screws to hold it in place, and they seem to work well. We had to make a MOQ (minimum order quantity) of 100, and they will go up on Fasttech over the next couple of days (along with stock replenishment for some other cables running low / out of stock). These are relatively expensive to make (moulded DA26 connectors, 120ohm resistor, etc), so will be US$14.50 each (including free shipping). Regards, Mark.
On the Roadster drive organized by spiderguy this past weekend, one of the participants mentioned that he had to remove his OVMS because he had installed a dashcam and needed to plug into the diagnostic connector to get +12V. I told him that OVMS v3 will have the ability to present an OBDII connector, which is what the camera really wants. Does the +12V Vehicle Power just come straight through from the diagnostic port connection? -- Steve On Wed, 23 May 2018, Mark Webb-Johnson wrote:
As discussed, the HUD cables have been produced and seem ok. I received a pair today, hot off the production line in China. Here is the specification:
OVMS v3 HUD/OBDII-F Cable
One end (DA26-M) connects to the OVMS v3 DIAG (expansion) connector. The other end provides an OBDII female (J1962-F) connector. Cable wiring is as follows:
J1962-F DA26-M Signal 4 8 Chassis/Power GND 5 8 Chassis/Power GND 6 16 CAN-H (primary CAN) 14 6 CAN-L (primary CAN) 16 18 +12V Vehicle Power Cable includes a 120ohm resistor between DA26 pins 16 and 6.
This provides for an OBDII expansion port for OVMS v3 and allows devices such as OBDII dongles, Heads-up-Displays (HUDs), etc, to be connected to OVMS using the ‘obd2ecu’ firmware module.
They look really nice. Moulded, tough, and stubby. DA26 expansion connector to OVMS has screws to hold it in place, and they seem to work well. We had to make a MOQ (minimum order quantity) of 100, and they will go up on Fasttech over the next couple of days (along with stock replenishment for some other cables running low / out of stock). These are relatively expensive to make (moulded DA26 connectors, 120ohm resistor, etc), so will be US$14.50 each (including free shipping).
Regards, Mark.
had to remove his OVMS because he had installed a dashcam and needed to plug into the diagnostic connector to get +12V.
I suggest he “T" it. If he can wire up a plug for that weird Roadster DIAG port, he can wire up a socket as well. :-) There are plenty of places in the roadster to tap into permanent 12v, but great care needs to be taken because drawing too much power constantly can trigger the switchpack to keep APS fully on all the time. People putting in audio head units commonly hit this issue.
Does the +12V Vehicle Power just come straight through from the diagnostic port connection?
No. It goes through a switched output so we can turn it on/off under program control. That might be useful to him. He could remotely turn on/off the dashcam power feed. OVMS v3 can also be configured to just switch it on automatically on boot. Regards, Mark.
On 23 May 2018, at 2:55 PM, Stephen Casner <casner@acm.org> wrote:
On the Roadster drive organized by spiderguy this past weekend, one of the participants mentioned that he had to remove his OVMS because he had installed a dashcam and needed to plug into the diagnostic connector to get +12V. I told him that OVMS v3 will have the ability to present an OBDII connector, which is what the camera really wants.
Does the +12V Vehicle Power just come straight through from the diagnostic port connection?
-- Steve
On Wed, 23 May 2018, Mark Webb-Johnson wrote:
As discussed, the HUD cables have been produced and seem ok. I received a pair today, hot off the production line in China. Here is the specification:
OVMS v3 HUD/OBDII-F Cable
One end (DA26-M) connects to the OVMS v3 DIAG (expansion) connector. The other end provides an OBDII female (J1962-F) connector. Cable wiring is as follows:
J1962-F DA26-M Signal 4 8 Chassis/Power GND 5 8 Chassis/Power GND 6 16 CAN-H (primary CAN) 14 6 CAN-L (primary CAN) 16 18 +12V Vehicle Power Cable includes a 120ohm resistor between DA26 pins 16 and 6.
This provides for an OBDII expansion port for OVMS v3 and allows devices such as OBDII dongles, Heads-up-Displays (HUDs), etc, to be connected to OVMS using the ‘obd2ecu’ firmware module.
They look really nice. Moulded, tough, and stubby. DA26 expansion connector to OVMS has screws to hold it in place, and they seem to work well. We had to make a MOQ (minimum order quantity) of 100, and they will go up on Fasttech over the next couple of days (along with stock replenishment for some other cables running low / out of stock). These are relatively expensive to make (moulded DA26 connectors, 120ohm resistor, etc), so will be US$14.50 each (including free shipping).
Regards, Mark.
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On Wed, 23 May 2018, Greg D. wrote:
Curious why he didn't use the regular OBDII connector under the driver's side dash? +12v is about the only thing it provides that's useful. I don't think it's switched off when the car sleeps, but could be wrong there.
That's exactly it -- the +12V turns off when the car sleeps. He said that was contrary to the ODBII spec, but I don't know whether that is correct. He wanted the camera to be always on. -- Steve
Stephen Casner wrote:
On Wed, 23 May 2018, Greg D. wrote:
Curious why he didn't use the regular OBDII connector under the driver's side dash? +12v is about the only thing it provides that's useful. I don't think it's switched off when the car sleeps, but could be wrong there. That's exactly it -- the +12V turns off when the car sleeps. He said that was contrary to the ODBII spec, but I don't know whether that is correct. He wanted the camera to be always on.
-- Steve
Ah, ok. Yes, OBDII ports are supposed to be always powered, and the Roadster's port was only put there (as I understand it) because it - the connector - was required, so I assumed it was also properly powered. If he wants the dashcam to be continually powered, teeing the diag port, or finding an upstream source that may be beefier is probably his best bet. As Mark notes, the Roadster can be a bit finicky with modifications to the electrical system. Greg
participants (3)
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Greg D. -
Mark Webb-Johnson -
Stephen Casner