Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Im trying to find out what protocol an R32 gts-t OBD would use? does anyone know, or know where i can find out?

Also can anyone tell me what information is available from the OBD, or any good sites where i can find this information in detail?

I need this info for an engineering project i am currently building.

Thanks

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/281363-r32-obd-protocol/
Share on other sites

Signal protocols

There are five signalling protocols currently in use with the OBD-II interface. Any given vehicle will likely only implement one of the protocols. Often it is possible to make an educated guess about the protocol in use based on which pins are present on the J1962 connector:

* SAE J1850 PWM (pulse-width modulation - 41.6 kbaud, standard of the Ford Motor Company)

o pin 2: Bus+

o pin 10: Bus–

o High voltage is +5 V

o Message length is restricted to 12 bytes, including CRC

o Employs a multi-master arbitration scheme called 'Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Non-Destructive Arbitration' (CSMA/NDA)

* SAE J1850 VPW (variable pulse width - 10.4/41.6 kbaud, standard of General Motors)

o pin 2: Bus+

o Bus idles low

o High voltage is +7 V

o Decision point is +3.5 V

o Message length is restricted to 12 bytes, including CRC

o Employs CSMA/NDA

* ISO 9141-2. This protocol has a data rate of 10.4 kbaud, and is similar to RS-232. ISO 9141-2 is primarily used in Chrysler, European, and Asian vehicles.

o pin 7: K-line

o pin 15: L-line (optional)

o UART signaling (though not RS-232 voltage levels)

o K-line idles high

o High voltage is Vbatt

o Message length is restricted to 12 bytes, including CRC

* ISO 14230 KWP2000 (Keyword Protocol 2000)

o pin 7: K-line

o pin 15: L-line (optional)

o Physical layer identical to ISO 9141-2

o Data rate 1.2 to 10.4 kbaud

o Message may contain up to 255 bytes in the data field

* ISO 15764 CAN (250 kbit/s or 500 kbit/s). The CAN protocol is a popular standard outside of the US automotive industry and is making significant in-roads into the OBD-II market share. By 2008, all vehicles sold in the US will be required to implement CAN, thus eliminating the ambiguity of the existing five signalling protocols.

o pin 6: CAN High

o pin 14: CAN Low

Signal protocols

There are five signalling protocols currently in use with the OBD-II interface. Any given vehicle will likely only implement one of the protocols. Often it is possible to make an educated guess about the protocol in use based on which pins are present on the J1962 connector:

* SAE J1850 PWM (pulse-width modulation - 41.6 kbaud, standard of the Ford Motor Company)

o pin 2: Bus+

o pin 10: Bus–

o High voltage is +5 V

o Message length is restricted to 12 bytes, including CRC

o Employs a multi-master arbitration scheme called 'Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Non-Destructive Arbitration' (CSMA/NDA)

* SAE J1850 VPW (variable pulse width - 10.4/41.6 kbaud, standard of General Motors)

o pin 2: Bus+

o Bus idles low

o High voltage is +7 V

o Decision point is +3.5 V

o Message length is restricted to 12 bytes, including CRC

o Employs CSMA/NDA

* ISO 9141-2. This protocol has a data rate of 10.4 kbaud, and is similar to RS-232. ISO 9141-2 is primarily used in Chrysler, European, and Asian vehicles.

o pin 7: K-line

o pin 15: L-line (optional)

o UART signaling (though not RS-232 voltage levels)

o K-line idles high

o High voltage is Vbatt

o Message length is restricted to 12 bytes, including CRC

* ISO 14230 KWP2000 (Keyword Protocol 2000)

o pin 7: K-line

o pin 15: L-line (optional)

o Physical layer identical to ISO 9141-2

o Data rate 1.2 to 10.4 kbaud

o Message may contain up to 255 bytes in the data field

* ISO 15764 CAN (250 kbit/s or 500 kbit/s). The CAN protocol is a popular standard outside of the US automotive industry and is making significant in-roads into the OBD-II market share. By 2008, all vehicles sold in the US will be required to implement CAN, thus eliminating the ambiguity of the existing five signalling protocols.

o pin 6: CAN High

o pin 14: CAN Low

thanks for the infor, R32's are OBDI Correct?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Yes the gear for the R33/34 is different, it is red and has a different number of teeth. My part didn't come with that gear though, so I don't know how many teeth are on the red one. You'd have to reuse the 260RS/R33 gear, as long as it's not destroyed.   Haha, as unfortunate as that might be it was working fine for about the first 1500km I've had the car for now.
    • Update all   thanks to the workshop manual, it lead me back to checking fuses as mentioned central locking and door open lights worked when acc was switched on. diagram attached shows two points of power 1. ACC and 2.  Batt with the later being fused (#28) I did check the fuses using a multimeter but I must have stuffed that up also. Went back and checked the batt fuse in interior fuse box and you wouldn’t believe it… a blown fuse. replaced fuse and everything is now working as it should including the climate control   thank you all with your positive insight and knowledge.    
    • Where is the warning "That this thread is super old"   I just went into a 5 year old thread, went to do a reply, and couldn't see anywhere obvious a warning of it being super old
    • Duncan is correct. Pitwork (and Toyota's own cheap brand "Drive Joy") were primarily created as brands to sell other manufacturers car parts. It would be weird if Nissan sold parts for Toyota vehicles with a Nissan logo on it, so they created Pitwork to sell parts for other brans Toyota, Honda etc. They are not the same as Nissan genuine parts, although they *do* meet Nissan's standards for replacement parts. They aren't supposed to be a substitute for genuine parts, but a cheaper alternative that is better than Ebay fake parts from you-know-where.
    • Thanks GTSBoy, much easier to work with it now it's free!  
×
×
  • Create New...