Are you still looking for NitekQ sample logs? I just purchased a few to use on my technical dives, and a friend has a new one as well. No ‘real’ dives on them yet, but there should be some soon.
-Bill
On 2014-01-29 03:17, William Perry wrote:
Are you still looking for NitekQ sample logs? I just purchased a few to use on my technical dives, and a friend has a new one as well. No ‘real’ dives on them yet, but there should be some soon.
Yes, I'm still looking for Nitek Q data. The support for the Nitek Q is almost ready, but I'm still missing a few pieces of info here and there. I need some more data for that. A memory dump from a brand new unit, without any dives yet would also be interesting to have.
Download the nitekq test application here:
http://www.libdivecomputer.org/builds/experimental/
and run it with these options:
nitekq.exe -v -l nitekq.log -m nitekq.bin -b nitekq <serialport>
Jef
These were generated on my mac with the build from 06-Jan-2014.
./nitekq -v -l nitekq.log -m nitekq.bin -b nitekq /dev/cu.usbmodem1411
The computer shows a single dive on air to 275 ffw for 1 minute on 22-02-2012 06:36pm. From the graph in Workbench it looks like the sampling was:
80 ffw 260ish ffw surface surface
-bill
On Jan 29, 2014, at 2:39 AM, Jef Driesen jef@libdivecomputer.org wrote:
On 2014-01-29 03:17, William Perry wrote:
Are you still looking for NitekQ sample logs? I just purchased a few to use on my technical dives, and a friend has a new one as well. No ‘real’ dives on them yet, but there should be some soon.
Yes, I'm still looking for Nitek Q data. The support for the Nitek Q is almost ready, but I'm still missing a few pieces of info here and there. I need some more data for that. A memory dump from a brand new unit, without any dives yet would also be interesting to have.
Download the nitekq test application here:
http://www.libdivecomputer.org/builds/experimental/
and run it with these options:
nitekq.exe -v -l nitekq.log -m nitekq.bin -b nitekq <serialport>
Jef
On 29-01-14 18:24, William Perry wrote:
These were generated on my mac with the build from 06-Jan-2014.
./nitekq -v -l nitekq.log -m nitekq.bin -b nitekq /dev/cu.usbmodem1411
The computer shows a single dive on air to 275 ffw for 1 minute on 22-02-2012 06:36pm. From the graph in Workbench it looks like the sampling was:
80 ffw 260ish ffw surface surface
Great, I already discovered a bug in my code with your data. Since you are reporting depths in feet, I assume your nitek is also set to imperial? It seems the data is stored in the configured units (metric or imperial), so I need to find out how the units are stored.
Can you send me the workbench data files. On my system they are located in this directory:
C:\Documents and Settings<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\DiveRite\db
There should be *.log files, one per dive.
Can you also send me an new memory dump once you have done one or more new dives?
Jef
Cannot seem to find the *.bin files on the mac - I will do another download under dtruss and see where it might be hiding them. Failing that I will fire up a windows VM and grab them that way. Tried to get in a few dives with it yesterday but our local quarry has 4-6 inches of ice covering it and I didn’t have all of my proper gear or buddies for ice diving.
When I do get to throw it in the water, would it help if I did some dives in metric and some in imperial?
-Bill
On Jan 30, 2014, at 4:58 PM, Jef Driesen jef@libdivecomputer.org wrote:
On 29-01-14 18:24, William Perry wrote:
These were generated on my mac with the build from 06-Jan-2014.
./nitekq -v -l nitekq.log -m nitekq.bin -b nitekq /dev/cu.usbmodem1411
The computer shows a single dive on air to 275 ffw for 1 minute on 22-02-2012 06:36pm. From the graph in Workbench it looks like the sampling was:
80 ffw 260ish ffw surface surface
Great, I already discovered a bug in my code with your data. Since you are reporting depths in feet, I assume your nitek is also set to imperial? It seems the data is stored in the configured units (metric or imperial), so I need to find out how the units are stored.
Can you send me the workbench data files. On my system they are located in this directory:
C:\Documents and Settings<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\DiveRite\db
There should be *.log files, one per dive.
Can you also send me an new memory dump once you have done one or more new dives?
Jef
On 2014-02-02 17:12, William Perry wrote:
Cannot seem to find the *.bin files on the mac - I will do another download under dtruss and see where it might be hiding them. Failing that I will fire up a windows VM and grab them that way. Tried to get in a few dives with it yesterday but our local quarry has 4-6 inches of ice covering it and I didn’t have all of my proper gear or buddies for ice diving.
I'm not sure it's a typo, but on my windows XP system (also a VM), they are stored as *.log files, not *.bin files. I have no idea if the Mac version of the Workbench is different in that regard. It's a java application, so I suspect not.
When I do get to throw it in the water, would it help if I did some dives in metric and some in imperial?
Yes, that would help. I have some mixed metric/imperial dives on my nitek, but for some reason I'm unable to download it with the workbench application. It just doesn't detect the device. I only got it to download dives once. That one transfer happened to be enough to reverse engineer the protocol. But now I need those workbench files to find the metric/imperial flag. That's the last missing piece of information at the moment.
Jef
Sorry, not sure how I read *.bin in your original message. Here is the sample dive that came on the unit. Hoping to hear from the other ice-certified folks at the shop this week about hopping under sometime soon. Will try to at least get some pool dives in the next week or two.
-Bill
On Feb 3, 2014, at 2:44 AM, Jef Driesen jef@libdivecomputer.org wrote:
On 2014-02-02 17:12, William Perry wrote:
Cannot seem to find the *.bin files on the mac - I will do another download under dtruss and see where it might be hiding them. Failing that I will fire up a windows VM and grab them that way. Tried to get in a few dives with it yesterday but our local quarry has 4-6 inches of ice covering it and I didn’t have all of my proper gear or buddies for ice diving.
I'm not sure it's a typo, but on my windows XP system (also a VM), they are stored as *.log files, not *.bin files. I have no idea if the Mac version of the Workbench is different in that regard. It's a java application, so I suspect not.
When I do get to throw it in the water, would it help if I did some dives in metric and some in imperial?
Yes, that would help. I have some mixed metric/imperial dives on my nitek, but for some reason I'm unable to download it with the workbench application. It just doesn't detect the device. I only got it to download dives once. That one transfer happened to be enough to reverse engineer the protocol. But now I need those workbench files to find the metric/imperial flag. That's the last missing piece of information at the moment.
Jef
On Feb 3, 2014, at 7:58 AM, William Perry wmperry@kadath.us wrote:
Sorry, not sure how I read *.bin in your original message. Here is the sample dive that came on the unit. Hoping to hear from the other ice-certified folks at the shop this week about hopping under sometime soon. Will try to at least get some pool dives in the next week or two.
-Bill <0000099F_2012-02-22-18-36-40.log>
On Feb 3, 2014, at 2:44 AM, Jef Driesen jef@libdivecomputer.org wrote:
On 2014-02-02 17:12, William Perry wrote:
Cannot seem to find the *.bin files on the mac - I will do another download under dtruss and see where it might be hiding them. Failing that I will fire up a windows VM and grab them that way. Tried to get in a few dives with it yesterday but our local quarry has 4-6 inches of ice covering it and I didn’t have all of my proper gear or buddies for ice diving.
I'm not sure it's a typo, but on my windows XP system (also a VM), they are stored as *.log files, not *.bin files. I have no idea if the Mac version of the Workbench is different in that regard. It's a java application, so I suspect not.
When I do get to throw it in the water, would it help if I did some dives in metric and some in imperial?
Yes, that would help. I have some mixed metric/imperial dives on my nitek, but for some reason I'm unable to download it with the workbench application. It just doesn't detect the device. I only got it to download dives once. That one transfer happened to be enough to reverse engineer the protocol. But now I need those workbench files to find the metric/imperial flag. That's the last missing piece of information at the moment.
Sorry for the delay — here is a set of 10 dives from my recent trip to the bahamas. Should be an ascent alarm in there for the 7th dive, not sure if the nitek keeps those. The ‘Washing Machine’ drift dive really throws you around in the half-pipe between those islands. I had done some dives in metric, but did not realize the nitek only stored 10 dives so they fell off the end during the trip.
-Bill
On Mar 24, 2014, at 8:09 AM, William Perry wmperry@kadath.us wrote:
On Feb 3, 2014, at 7:58 AM, William Perry wmperry@kadath.us wrote:
Sorry, not sure how I read *.bin in your original message. Here is the sample dive that came on the unit. Hoping to hear from the other ice-certified folks at the shop this week about hopping under sometime soon. Will try to at least get some pool dives in the next week or two.
-Bill <0000099F_2012-02-22-18-36-40.log>
On Feb 3, 2014, at 2:44 AM, Jef Driesen jef@libdivecomputer.org wrote:
On 2014-02-02 17:12, William Perry wrote:
Cannot seem to find the *.bin files on the mac - I will do another download under dtruss and see where it might be hiding them. Failing that I will fire up a windows VM and grab them that way. Tried to get in a few dives with it yesterday but our local quarry has 4-6 inches of ice covering it and I didn’t have all of my proper gear or buddies for ice diving.
I'm not sure it's a typo, but on my windows XP system (also a VM), they are stored as *.log files, not *.bin files. I have no idea if the Mac version of the Workbench is different in that regard. It's a java application, so I suspect not.
When I do get to throw it in the water, would it help if I did some dives in metric and some in imperial?
Yes, that would help. I have some mixed metric/imperial dives on my nitek, but for some reason I'm unable to download it with the workbench application. It just doesn't detect the device. I only got it to download dives once. That one transfer happened to be enough to reverse engineer the protocol. But now I need those workbench files to find the metric/imperial flag. That's the last missing piece of information at the moment.
Sorry for the delay — here is a set of 10 dives from my recent trip to the bahamas. Should be an ascent alarm in there for the 7th dive, not sure if the nitek keeps those. The ‘Washing Machine’ drift dive really throws you around in the half-pipe between those islands. I had done some dives in metric, but did not realize the nitek only stored 10 dives so they fell off the end during the trip.
-Bill
<nitekq-second-import.tar.gz>
For some reason gmail would not let me send this along with the other .tar.gz file — these are the Workbench files for the same dives.
-Bill Perry
On 2014-03-24 13:13, William Perry wrote:
On Mar 24, 2014, at 8:09 AM, William Perry wmperry@kadath.us wrote:
Sorry for the delay — here is a set of 10 dives from my recent trip to the bahamas. Should be an ascent alarm in there for the 7th dive, not sure if the nitek keeps those. The ‘Washing Machine’ drift dive really throws you around in the half-pipe between those islands. I had done some dives in metric, but did not realize the nitek only stored 10 dives so they fell off the end during the trip.
For some reason gmail would not let me send this along with the other .tar.gz file — these are the Workbench files for the same dives.
Thanks for your contribution. From a quick glance at your data, everything seems to parse correctly now. If I missed something, and you still spot some errors, just let me know.
Jef