19 KiB
Discovery Notes
This file records hands-on observations separately from manual-derived facts. Treat these as bench notes: useful and current, but still worth rechecking with photos, continuity tests, and instrument captures.
2026-05-13 - RCP-TX7 10-Pin Power and Cable
Observed on the RCP-TX7 10-pin remote connector/cable during restoration work:
- Pin 9 confirmed as ground / DC return.
- Pin 10 confirmed as power input.
- Cable color for pin 9 / ground: brown.
- Cable color for pin 10 / +12 V power: brown-white.
- Cable colors for pins 1-8 have been continuity-mapped; see the working cable map below.
- Yellow and yellow-white conductors are present in the cable but did not map to connector pins during continuity testing.
- Multimeter reading from pin 9 ground to pin 4 serial data: about -9 V.
- Multimeter reading from pin 9 ground to pin 7 serial data: about +0.037 V.
- Pins 4 and 7 were the only serial-related combinations that produced a meaningful multimeter result during this check.
- With power present on pins 9 and 10, the panel shows a green
PANEL ACTIVElight. - The inside of the 10-pin cable contains 12 wires total.
- Three of those wire groups are twisted pairs.
Immediate implications:
- The bench result agrees with the RCP-TX7 and CCU-TX7 manual pinout for pins 9 and 10.
- The 12-conductor cable construction suggests not every conductor maps one-to-one to the 10 connector pins; shielding/drain, duplicated grounds, or paired signal returns may be present.
- The three twisted pairs are likely important candidates for serial data, composite video, and/or power/ground pairing, but this should be confirmed by continuity testing rather than color or twist assumptions.
- Pin 4 measuring around -9 V relative to pin 9 strongly suggests true RS-232 level idle on at least the RCP-to-CCU/camera data line.
- Pin 7 near 0 V may be inactive/floating until a CCU or camera drives the return data line.
Working Cable Map
This table combines the manual-derived pin purpose with hands-on color mapping.
Rows marked confirmed have been checked on the current cable/panel under test.
| Pin | Purpose | Cable color | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Spare / unused | red | confirmed | No function shown in service manual. |
| 2 | VBS / composite video X | black | confirmed | 1.0 Vp-p composite video input to RCP. |
| 3 | VBS / composite video ground | green | confirmed | Video reference/ground. |
| 4 | Serial data, RCP to CCU/camera | orange | confirmed | RS-232C-based data direction. |
| 5 | Serial/data ground | blue | confirmed | One of two serial/data grounds. |
| 6 | Serial/data ground | grey | confirmed | One of two serial/data grounds. |
| 7 | Serial data, CCU/camera to RCP | purple | confirmed | RS-232C-based data direction. |
| 8 | Spare / unused | purple-white | confirmed | No function shown in service manual. |
| 9 | DC return / ground | brown | confirmed | Confirmed as ground on current cable. |
| 10 | +12 V remote power input | brown-white | confirmed | Confirmed as power input on current cable. |
Unmapped Cable Conductors
The cable contains two additional conductors that did not show continuity to the 10 connector pins during the current test:
| Conductor color | Current status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| yellow | unmapped | May be shield/drain-related, spare, broken, or connected only at one end. |
| yellow-white | unmapped | May be shield/drain-related, spare, broken, or connected only at one end. |
Recheck these against connector shells, shield braid/drain, cable strain relief hardware, and both ends of the cable if accessible.
Suggested next observations to capture:
- Connector orientation photo showing pin numbering reference.
- Wire color list, including which colors form each twisted pair.
- Confirm whether yellow and yellow-white connect to shield, shell, or one end only.
- Resistance between pins 5, 6, and 9 with the cable disconnected.
- Scope idle voltage and activity on pins 4 and 7 relative to pins 5/6 and pin 9 while pressing panel controls and, later, while connected to a CCU or camera.
Serial Capture Setup
Initial USB serial adapter wiring for passive listening:
| Adapter terminal | RCP-TX7 cable pin | Cable color | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
GND |
9 | brown | Shared reference / DC return |
RXD |
4 | orange | Listen to RCP-to-CCU/camera serial data |
Do not connect adapter TXD during the first capture pass. Pin 4 measured about
-9 V relative to pin 9, so use the adapter's RS-232 side, not TTL UART mode.
Capture helper:
python -m pip install pyserial
python scripts/serial_sniff.py --list
python scripts/serial_sniff.py --port COM3 --baud 38400 --ascii
python scripts/serial_sniff.py --port COM3 --baud 38400 --frame-size 6 --log captures/rcp-pin4.txt
Replace COM3 with the adapter port shown by --list or Windows Device
Manager. While the script is running, press simple RCP controls and watch for
new hex bytes.
2026-05-13 Initial Pin 4 Capture
With the adapter in RS-232 mode, adapter RXD connected to RCP pin 4, and
adapter GND connected to pin 9, the stream produced repeating 6-byte patterns:
00 00 00 00 80 DA
00 00 07 80 00 DD
Observed behavior:
- Frames repeat roughly every 200 ms during the sample.
- The stream sometimes appeared split as
00followed by five bytes, which is likely a read-timeout/chunking artifact rather than a protocol feature. - Button presses did not obviously correlate with a visible byte change in the first capture.
Current interpretation:
- This looks like a regular RCP-origin heartbeat/status transmission on pin 4, not random noise.
- Because only pin 4 is connected, this may be the panel repeatedly trying to announce itself or poll a missing CCU/camera.
- Pin 7 measured near 0 V and is probably quiet until a CCU/camera drives the return channel.
Next capture passes:
- Use
--frame-size 6to avoid misleading1 + 5packet splits. - Capture a quiet baseline for 30 seconds.
- Capture separate files while pressing one control repeatedly, naming the action in the filename.
- Later, capture pin 7 when connected to a real CCU/camera or a controlled test transmitter.
2026-05-13 Baseline vs CAM POWER Capture
Capture files:
captures/rcp-pin4-baseline.txtcaptures/rcp-pin4-cam-power.txtcaptures/rcp-pin4-call.txt
Frame counts from the available logs:
| Capture | Frame | Count | Current label |
|---|---|---|---|
| baseline | 00 00 00 00 80 DA |
67 | idle heartbeat |
| CAM POWER | 00 00 00 00 80 DA |
23 | idle heartbeat |
| CAM POWER | 00 00 07 80 00 DD |
4 | CAM POWER candidate |
| CALL | 00 00 00 00 80 DA |
17 | idle heartbeat |
| CALL | 00 00 15 80 00 CF |
4 | CALL candidate, state/high bit set |
| CALL | 00 00 15 00 00 4F |
4 | CALL candidate, state/high bit clear |
Current interpretation:
- The baseline capture contains only
00 00 00 00 80 DA. - Pressing
CAM POWERintroduces00 00 07 80 00 DD. - Pressing
CALLintroduces00 00 15 80 00 CFand00 00 15 00 00 4F. - Other tested buttons did not obviously produce unique frames while the panel was not connected to a CCU/camera.
CAM POWERandCALLmay be among the few controls the panel transmits even without a completed host/CCU session.- The CALL frames differ by byte 4 (
80vs00) and final byte (CFvs4F), suggesting a state bit plus checksum or complement-style trailing byte. - Current checksum hypothesis: byte 6 is XOR checksum with seed
0x5Aover the first five bytes. Examples:5A xor 00 xor 00 xor 00 xor 00 xor 80 = DA5A xor 00 xor 00 xor 07 xor 80 xor 00 = DD5A xor 00 xor 00 xor 15 xor 80 xor 00 = CF5A xor 00 xor 00 xor 15 xor 00 xor 00 = 4F
Helper for future captures:
python scripts/analyze_capture.py captures/rcp-pin4-baseline.txt captures/rcp-pin4-cam-power.txt captures/rcp-pin4-call.txt
Host Response Experiments
The RCP currently appears to be in an offline heartbeat state. With no CCU/camera
response present, only CAM POWER and CALL have been observed to send unique
frames beyond the heartbeat. The next protocol step is to learn what the RCP
expects on pin 7 (CCU/camera -> RCP).
Important wiring for host-response tests:
| Adapter terminal | RCP-TX7 cable pin | Cable color | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
GND |
9 | brown | Shared reference / DC return |
TXD |
7 | purple | Candidate host-to-RCP transmit line |
Suggested safety precautions:
- Use the adapter's RS-232 side, not TTL UART.
- Keep adapter
RXDon pin 4 if possible so the RCP output is still logged. - Add a series resistor, for example 1 k to 4.7 k, between adapter
TXDand pin 7 for early experiments. - Send one candidate frame at a time or repeat at a slow cadence. Avoid brute forcing unknown byte ranges.
- Watch for changes in heartbeat, LCD state, panel lock state, or new frames on pin 4.
Frame sender:
python scripts/serial_send_frame.py --port COM3 --dry-run
python scripts/serial_send_frame.py --port COM3 --frame "00 00 00 00 80 DA" --repeat 5 --interval 0.2
On Windows, a COM port is usually exclusive, so the sniffer and sender cannot open the same adapter at the same time. Use the combined probe script when RXD is connected to pin 4 and TXD is connected to pin 7:
python scripts/serial_probe_response.py --port COM3 --tx-frame "00 00 00 00 80 DA" --repeat 5 --interval 0.2 --log captures/rcp-response-test.txt
This listens first, sends the candidate response from the same serial session, then keeps listening for changes on pin 4.
Candidate first response:
00 00 00 00 80 DA- mirror the observed heartbeat as a possible no-op/ack.
If mirroring the heartbeat changes nothing, the next low-risk approach is to capture a real CCU/camera response rather than guessing. If no host is available, try only checksum-valid, documented-frame-shape candidates and record every attempt in a separate capture log.
2026-05-13 Heartbeat Mirror Response Result
Experiment:
- Adapter
TXDconnected to RCP pin 7. - Sent
00 00 00 00 80 DAon the host-to-RCP line as a mirrored heartbeat / possible no-op acknowledgement. - Capture file:
captures/rcp-response-heartbeat-mirror.txt.
Observed result:
- The RCP screen changed to
CONNECT: NOT ACT. - During this capture, pin 4 still transmitted only
00 00 00 00 80 DA. - Frame count: 59 received heartbeat frames, 10 transmitted mirrored heartbeat frames.
- Pin 4 heartbeat timing became more frequent during the response window, then returned to the slower baseline cadence afterward.
Current interpretation:
- The RCP is detecting return-channel traffic on pin 7.
- Mirroring the heartbeat is enough to move the panel out of the simple offline state, but it does not complete active host/CCU negotiation.
NOT ACTlikely means connected/not active, connected/not activated, or a similar state where the link is electrically/protocol-visible but no valid control session has been established.- The RCP did not emit a new command/status frame on pin 4 in response to the mirrored heartbeat, so the next handshake step is probably not simply an echo of its heartbeat.
Additional checksum-valid response tests:
| Capture | TX frame | RX result on pin 4 | Screen result |
|---|---|---|---|
captures/rcp-response-zero-state.txt |
00 00 00 00 00 5A |
heartbeat only | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
captures/rcp-response-state-byte4.txt |
00 00 00 80 00 DA |
heartbeat only | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
captures/rcp-response-invalid-checksum.txt |
00 00 00 00 80 00 |
heartbeat only | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| TXD connected, no transmitted bytes | RS-232 idle only | heartbeat only | no CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| Single-byte test | 00 |
heartbeat only | no CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| Single-byte test | FF |
heartbeat only | no CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| Short-frame test | 00 00 00 |
heartbeat only | no CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| Frame-length test | 00 00 00 00 |
heartbeat only | no CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| Frame-length test | 00 00 00 00 80 |
heartbeat only | no CONNECT: NOT ACT |
| Frame-length test | 00 00 00 00 80 DA 00 |
heartbeat only | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
Updated interpretation:
CONNECT: NOT ACTis probably a link-present state, not proof of a correct CCU handshake.- The RCP reacts to several checksum-valid 6-byte frames on pin 7, but continues sending only the pin 4 heartbeat.
- An intentionally invalid checksum frame also produced
CONNECT: NOT ACT, so that display state does not prove checksum acceptance. - The response needed to enter an active control session likely needs a specific status/identity/activation frame, not just a valid no-op frame shape.
- TXD connected at idle without transmitted bytes did not produce
CONNECT: NOT ACT, so the display state appears to require received byte activity on pin 7, not merely a driven RS-232 idle level. - Single-byte and three-byte transmissions did not produce
CONNECT: NOT ACT, so the RCP is likely recognizing a minimum frame length or parser shape rather than arbitrary serial bytes. - Four-byte and five-byte transmissions did not produce
CONNECT: NOT ACT, but a seven-byte transmission beginning with the known six-byte heartbeat did. This suggests the first six bytes are enough to trigger the parser/link state, and the seventh byte may be ignored, buffered for a later frame, or treated as extra data after the recognized packet. - None of the tested host frames have caused the RCP to emit anything on pin 4 except the heartbeat.
Command-field response tests, using frame shape 00 00 CMD 00 80 CHECKSUM:
| Capture | TX frame | Checksum | Screen result | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
captures/rcp-response-cmd01.txt |
00 00 01 00 80 DB |
valid | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
6-byte command-shaped frame accepted enough to change display. |
captures/rcp-response-cmd02.txt |
00 00 02 00 80 DB |
invalid | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
Bad checksum still changed display. |
captures/rcp-response-cmd02.txt |
00 00 02 00 80 D8 |
valid | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
Valid checksum also changed display. |
captures/rcp-response-cmd03.txt |
00 00 03 00 80 D9 |
valid | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
6-byte command-shaped frame accepted enough to change display. |
captures/rcp-response-cmd04.txt |
00 00 7F 00 80 A5 |
valid | no screen change | First observed checksum-valid 6-byte frame that does not trigger CONNECT: NOT ACT. |
captures/rcp-response-cmd05.txt |
00 00 80 00 80 5A |
valid | CONNECT: NOT ACT |
6-byte command-shaped frame accepted enough to change display. |
Implications from command-field tests:
- Screen change is not simply based on frame length or checksum validity.
- The command/status byte matters:
0x7Fappears ignored or treated as non-link-establishing, despite a valid checksum. - Tested commands
0x00,0x01,0x02,0x03, and0x80can triggerCONNECT: NOT ACT;0x7Fdid not. - The RCP operating manual notes that
CAM POWER,MASTER/SLAVE, and some monitor functions are available only when connected to a CCU, so active state may depend on CCU identity/status bits.
Next low-risk response experiments:
- Repeat the same test with logging enabled so the pin 4 output before, during,
and after
CONNECT: NOT ACTis captured. - Try sending the mirrored heartbeat continuously at a cadence close to the RCP heartbeat, for example every 0.6 seconds, and watch whether the display state changes.
- Probe semantic fields within the six-byte frame shape, changing one byte at a time and logging both screen state and pin 4 output. Prioritize small command values and avoid broad brute-force sweeps.
- Prefer capturing a real CCU/camera pin 7 response before broad guessing.
Command Sweep Helper
A cautious command-byte sweep helper is available at
scripts/serial_sweep_commands.py. It sends only checksum-valid six-byte frames
using the current frame/checksum hypothesis and marks any RCP output that is not
the known heartbeat.
Recommended first sweep:
python scripts/serial_sweep_commands.py --port COM5 --start 0x00 --end 0x20 --after-each 1.0 --log captures/rcp-sweep-cmd-00-20.txt
Optional dry run:
python scripts/serial_sweep_commands.py --port COM5 --start 0x00 --end 0x20 --dry-run
Use small ranges and keep watching the RCP screen while the sweep runs. The log captures TX/RX bytes, but it cannot record screen messages unless they are noted manually afterward.
The 0x00-0x20 sweep produced CONNECT: NOT ACT roughly halfway through the
run, but the exact command was not recorded in the log. Rerun a narrower range
with manual screen prompts:
python scripts/serial_sweep_commands.py --port COM5 --start 0x0C --end 0x14 --after-each 1.2 --prompt-screen --log captures/rcp-sweep-cmd-0c-14-screen.txt
At each prompt, press Enter for no screen change, type CONNECT: NOT ACT when
that appears, or type q to stop.
Prompted sweep result:
- Capture:
captures/rcp-sweep-cmd-0c-14-screen.txt. - The RCP was reset after each screen trigger to clear its state, so recorded triggers should be treated as independent fresh observations.
- First recorded screen marker: after command
0x0C, frame00 00 0C 00 80 D6, screenCONNECT: NOT ACT. - Later manual screen markers were recorded after
0x0D,0x10,0x11,0x12,0x13, and0x14. - No manual screen markers were recorded after
0x0Eor0x0F. - Pin 4 output remained the heartbeat
00 00 00 00 80 DAthroughout.
Interpretation:
- Commands
0x0C,0x0D,0x10,0x11,0x12,0x13, and0x14have independent evidence of triggeringCONNECT: NOT ACTin this sweep. - Commands
0x0Eand0x0Fdid not have a screen marker recorded in this sweep and are current non-trigger candidates. - Because pin 4 stayed heartbeat-only, this state change is visible on the LCD but does not yet produce a new RCP-to-host serial response.
Second prompted sweep result:
- Capture:
captures/rcp-sweep-cmd-15-30-screen.txt. - The log includes one partial/restarted pass at the beginning, then a fuller
prompted sweep through
0x30. - Pin 4 output remained the heartbeat
00 00 00 00 80 DAthroughout.
Commands with recorded CONNECT: NOT ACT screen markers:
| Command | TX frame |
|---|---|
0x15 |
00 00 15 00 80 CF |
0x16 |
00 00 16 00 80 CC |
0x17 |
00 00 17 00 80 CD |
0x18 |
00 00 18 00 80 C2 |
0x19 |
00 00 19 00 80 C3 |
0x1A |
00 00 1A 00 80 C0 |
0x1B |
00 00 1B 00 80 C1 |
0x1C |
00 00 1C 00 80 C6 |
0x1D |
00 00 1D 00 80 C7 |
0x28 |
00 00 28 00 80 F2 |
0x29 |
00 00 29 00 80 F3 |
0x2C |
00 00 2C 00 80 F6 |
0x2D |
00 00 2D 00 80 F7 |
0x30 |
00 00 30 00 80 EA |
Commands with no recorded screen marker in this sweep:
0x1E 0x1F 0x20 0x21 0x22 0x23 0x24 0x25
0x26 0x27 0x2A 0x2B 0x2E 0x2F
Emerging pattern:
- Some command byte ranges trigger
CONNECT: NOT ACTwhile nearby checksum-valid commands do not. - Triggering still does not make the RCP transmit anything except the heartbeat.
CONNECT: NOT ACTappears to be a parser-recognized but not session-active state. It may indicate the RCP recognizes the command class as CCU-like, but the remaining status/identity/activation fields are wrong or incomplete.