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duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped

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  • undefined
    droftarts administrators @imrj
    last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 14:56

    @imrj Can you post good, high res images of both sides of the board? How is the board mounted? Could it be sat on anything that is shorting it?

    Ian

    Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

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    • undefined
      imrj
      last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 15:06

      the board is totally unmounted from everything and nothing connected except VIN...I posted two pics, there is no visible damage or burnt smell or anything anywhere that I can see!!20200214_100329.jpg 20200214_100319.jpg

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      • undefined
        imrj
        last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 15:08

        no SD Card connected, nothing at all.....if i try to connect any of those two fuses missing, it immediately shorts but nothing has yet seem to have burned or puff or anything

        undefined 1 Reply Last reply 14 Feb 2020, 15:09 Reply Quote 0
        • undefined
          imrj @imrj
          last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 15:09

          @imrj i will try the idea of using low voltage first starting at 3.3v upwards and see how it goes

          ? 1 Reply Last reply 14 Feb 2020, 15:19 Reply Quote 0
          • undefined
            imrj
            last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 15:12

            ok the highest i could try was 2.0V...if I short the top fuse block ALL the motor drivers get hot in a hurry.....if I short the botton block the PWM FAN2 gets got......

            so wth could have happened here? am totally at a loss

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            • ?
              A Former User @imrj
              last edited by A Former User 14 Feb 2020, 15:19

              @imrj said in duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped:

              @imrj i will try the idea of using low voltage first starting at 3.3v upwards and see how it goes

              just to be pedantic, low current was the idea; but never the less I think you have the answer of what is wrong - but I'll leave the rest to Ian and/or David to decide what to do for now.

              edit: mabe a closer look at the area between the daughterboard connector and the expansion connector just below and to the left of the cpu in your picture? were you using a thermocouple/pt-100 board?

              undefined 1 Reply Last reply 14 Feb 2020, 16:47 Reply Quote 0
              • undefined
                imrj @A Former User
                last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 16:47

                @bearer no PT100 board, is a Duet Ethernet, thats the module u see there, but ethernet works fine when using 5V USB VIN...i looked there and all over but man just cant see anything wrong at all, i mean the board looks like brand new

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                • ?
                  A Former User
                  last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 17:17

                  5203795e-00a1-4175-8e0e-2f221099eb7b-image.png

                  that part i meant? maybe its just a reflection or something, but as I can't see anything else

                  undefined 1 Reply Last reply 14 Feb 2020, 21:31 Reply Quote 0
                  • undefined
                    imrj @A Former User
                    last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 21:31

                    @bearer nah is just bad reflection, is clean as new there

                    2020-02-14.jpg

                    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 14 Feb 2020, 22:01 Reply Quote 0
                    • ?
                      A Former User
                      last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 21:44

                      Mkay, well, I still think your first and best choice is to check if the board is still under warranty; and then see if the failure would be covered by that.

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                      • undefined
                        droftarts administrators @imrj
                        last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 22:01

                        @imrj Is it possible that you have applied 24V power with VIN and GND swapped? This would generally have the effect of destroying the stepper drivers; see https://duet3d.dozuki.com/Wiki/How_to_destroy_your_Duet_2#Section_Methods_that_might_work_or_only_impact_some_functions_of_your_Duet
                        Then applying power the correct way around would cause the shorted stepper drivers to blow the fuse. Not sure why the fan fuse would blow too. 5V is protected by a diode, which is why it works with the voltage the correct way around.

                        @dc42?

                        Ian

                        Bed-slinger - Mini5+ WiFi/1LC | RRP Fisher v1 - D2 WiFi | Polargraph - D2 WiFi | TronXY X5S - 6HC/Roto | CNC router - 6HC | Tractus3D T1250 - D2 Eth

                        ? undefined 2 Replies Last reply 14 Feb 2020, 22:37 Reply Quote 1
                        • undefined
                          arhi
                          last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 22:17

                          This type of issue is why I purchased a thermal camera. If you have access to one, get a power source that can go into the constant current mode, slowly increase the current and look at the board trough thermal camera. You will quickly find out where the short is.

                          If you can't get access to a thermal camera, you can try using a milliohm meter and try to find a short using it.

                          If you don't even have a milliohm meter you can try making one but fixing of the board is most probably outside your capacity and you should just find a way to get it to someone who can fix it for you.

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                          • ?
                            A Former User @droftarts
                            last edited by 14 Feb 2020, 22:37

                            @droftarts said in duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped:

                            Not sure why the fan fuse would blow too

                            and presumably causing both TR1 and D21 to fail?

                            imrj said in duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped:

                            .if I short the botton block the PWM FAN2 gets got.....

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                            • undefined
                              dc42 administrators @droftarts
                              last edited by 15 Feb 2020, 08:09

                              @droftarts said in duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped:

                              @imrj Is it possible that you have applied 24V power with VIN and GND swapped? This would generally have the effect of destroying the stepper drivers; see https://duet3d.dozuki.com/Wiki/How_to_destroy_your_Duet_2#Section_Methods_that_might_work_or_only_impact_some_functions_of_your_Duet
                              Then applying power the correct way around would cause the shorted stepper drivers to blow the fuse. Not sure why the fan fuse would blow too. 5V is protected by a diode, which is why it works with the voltage the correct way around.

                              @dc42?

                              Ian

                              I agree, I suspect that either you are applying VIN and ground the wrong way round now, or you have done so in the past.

                              btw applying reverse polarity doesn't always blow the drivers, it depends on the current limit of the PSU. I have got away with it in the past.

                              Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                              Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                              http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                              undefined 1 Reply Last reply 17 Feb 2020, 23:30 Reply Quote 0
                              • ?
                                A Former User
                                last edited by 17 Feb 2020, 22:39

                                without more information on the what happened prior to the failure I'm hesitant to suggest what to replace, but its pretty clear at a minimum you'll need to replace the parts you identified as getting warm TR1, D21, U5, U6, U7, U8 and U9 + U3 and D1 i'd recon. Almost $40 worth of parts, and a bit of work.

                                if this is caused by wrong polarity that may well be it. if its caused by over voltage/transient there could be more damage. having the 5v regulator and fan2 output fail is a bit concerning in that respect.

                                what was the printer doing before it failed?

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                                • undefined
                                  arhi @dc42
                                  last edited by 17 Feb 2020, 23:30

                                  @dc42 said in duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped:

                                  I agree, I suspect that either you are applying VIN and ground the wrong way round now, or you have done so in the past.

                                  I find a beefy fast diode across Vdd and Vss immediately after the main fuse tends to protect the board in most cases. Adding a low drop / schottky trough diode after that for the low current side of things tends to increase the chance of everything surviving reverse polarity sky high as high current stuff usually can survive reverse polarity for the short period till fuse is blown due to current flowing through the fast diode across Vdd/Vss and the low drop will completely protect the low current parts from negative voltage.

                                  undefined 1 Reply Last reply 18 Feb 2020, 07:47 Reply Quote 0
                                  • undefined
                                    dc42 administrators @arhi
                                    last edited by 18 Feb 2020, 07:47

                                    There is already a diode protecting the 5V regulator.

                                    If you apply reverse polarity then the body diodes in the output mosfets of the stepper drivers will conduct. Each driver has 2 pairs of series connected mosfets. So that's 10 pairs sharing the short circuit current of the PSU.

                                    Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                    Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                    http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                                    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 18 Feb 2020, 11:34 Reply Quote 1
                                    • undefined
                                      arhi @dc42
                                      last edited by 18 Feb 2020, 11:34

                                      @dc42 great, so the fuse should blow before the big damage

                                      undefined 1 Reply Last reply 18 Feb 2020, 15:50 Reply Quote 0
                                      • undefined
                                        dc42 administrators @arhi
                                        last edited by 18 Feb 2020, 15:50

                                        @arhi said in duet ethernet blew both fuses, replacing hasnt helped:

                                        @dc42 great, so the fuse should blow before the big damage

                                        It depends on the short circuit current of the PSU. If the PSU supplies 20A continuously into the Duet, then I think it's likely that the drivers will blow, because that's 2A * 2 * about 2V per driver, which is about 8W per driver, and the 15A fuse will probably take a minute or two to blow. If the PSU has short circuit protection then it will probably go into hiccup mode, resulting in much less average current and the fuse remaining intact. That's what happened when I connected VIN the wrong way round.

                                        If the fuse blows instantly when you connect VIN then it's likely that your PSU is providing a lot more than 20A.

                                        Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                        Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                        http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                                        undefined 1 Reply Last reply 18 Feb 2020, 16:29 Reply Quote 0
                                        • undefined
                                          arhi @dc42
                                          last edited by 18 Feb 2020, 16:29

                                          @dc42 interesting, I don't have much experience with these "blade" type fuses. I never used them in my projects. Minutes sounds too long. I like to use polyfuses and the glass ones for "lower" current setup and efuse for high current ones. For low current stuff, I never measured response time but it's kinda "instant". E-fuse will trip faster then millisecond depending on the schematic. I never considered that fuse will take "minutes".

                                          Polluting the topic, but maybe useful, some military stuff I designed some years back had interesting power protection. We controlled a lot of heavy stuff (over 40kW in total) and the guy who designed the power input part of the controller (remember, this can and will be, "serviced" by a 19yo soldier in the mud somewhere far from a service station) used a delayed circuit with a relay (big chunky ones) so when you connect power, the system does a "diagnostic" checking if power is ok (voltage levels, polarity, stability) and after a second or two if everything is ok it will turn on the relay and power the rest of the board. Normally we'd put there a beefy rectifier so input polarity gets irrelevant but we are pulling over 100A from those 48V sources

                                          ? 1 Reply Last reply 18 Feb 2020, 16:35 Reply Quote 0
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