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External 5V source through duet3?

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Duet Hardware and wiring
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  • undefined
    oliof
    last edited by oliof 11 Sept 2020, 21:08 9 Nov 2020, 21:07

    @oozeBot thanks for the link! Can you provide a schematic drawing of the full SSR circuit? Is it to switch the 24PSU for VIN which is not in the picture?

    <>RatRig V-Minion Fly Super5Pro RRF<> V-Core 3.1 IDEX k*****r <> RatRig V-Minion SKR 2 Marlin<>

    undefined 1 Reply Last reply 9 Nov 2020, 21:22 Reply Quote 0
    • undefined
      oozeBot @oliof
      last edited by 9 Nov 2020, 21:22

      @oliof Yes, the SSR toggles the 24v power supply (which is not in the photo). I'll see how soon I can whip up the schematics, but briefly, the positive SSR terminal is wired to the positive terminal on the 5v power supply. Ground is wired to PSON (between +5v and GRD in the EXT 5V header). It is toggled by gCode M80.

      Check out the power toggle script we are using here:

      https://forum.duet3d.com/topic/18848/duet-3-rpi-power-toggle-script

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      • undefined
        oliof
        last edited by 9 Nov 2020, 21:23

        Awesome, thanks! This will likely make the effort worth adding the extra PSU.

        <>RatRig V-Minion Fly Super5Pro RRF<> V-Core 3.1 IDEX k*****r <> RatRig V-Minion SKR 2 Marlin<>

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        • undefined
          oliof @dc42
          last edited by oliof 15 Nov 2020, 11:25

          With a MeanWell LRS-50-5 powering the Duet board at 5.25V, and the Duet board powering a Raspberry Pi 3B+, I still get undervoltage alerts from the Raspberry Pi. the voltage at the ribbon end plugging into the Pi is 5.17v.

          Since the ribbon cable blocks the power pins I could use for direct powering of the Pi, does this mean I am stuck with using the Micro USB port to power the Pi? Or could I modify my ribbon cable (disconnecting the 5V wires from the Duet3, and splicing in the external PSU there)?

          <>RatRig V-Minion Fly Super5Pro RRF<> V-Core 3.1 IDEX k*****r <> RatRig V-Minion SKR 2 Marlin<>

          undefined 1 Reply Last reply 15 Nov 2020, 11:55 Reply Quote 0
          • undefined
            jay_s_uk @oliof
            last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 11:55

            @oliof you could always solder to the underside of the pi near the USB cable to inject 5v. That's what I do

            Owns various duet boards and is the main wiki maintainer for the Teamgloomy LPC/STM32 port of RRF. Assume I'm running whatever the latest beta/stable build is

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            • undefined
              oliof
              last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 11:57

              @jay_s_uk thanks for the suggestion! I'll think about it. Of course, now after having acquired and built the external PSU, and not getting any good results from it, powering from the duet3 seems to work again. Maybe disconnecting all the things for measuring voltages and reconnecting them helped with surfaces mating better ... it's too early to call this solved, but I will give it another test print.

              <>RatRig V-Minion Fly Super5Pro RRF<> V-Core 3.1 IDEX k*****r <> RatRig V-Minion SKR 2 Marlin<>

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              • ?
                A Former User
                last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 13:09

                Might be easier to solder to the 5V pins on the GPIO header if you go that route.

                You could just add a IDC connector to the ribbon cable and T off that; or I opted for making a custom ribbon cable that extends past the Pi to the PSU in an earlier iteration.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • undefined
                  gloomyandy
                  last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 13:33

                  There is some additional protection (and possibly conditioning?) if you supply 5V via the USB connector though.

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                  • ?
                    A Former User
                    last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 13:58

                    Hm, 3b+ still has a PTC 4b does not. Have 0 faith the pmic won't pack it before the the PTC so don't think I'd care and it's unlikely to help with voltage drops in the first place.

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                    • undefined
                      gloomyandy
                      last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 14:14

                      I was thinking more about the DMG2305UX and associated circuitry on the 3B+ but that all seems to be gone on the 4. I powered my Pi 4 directly via the GPIO pins, but I did have a lot of low voltage events. I suspect that was the dodgy buck converter I was using as much as anything though.

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                      • ?
                        A Former User
                        last edited by A Former User 15 Nov 2020, 14:52

                        Can't say I saw much but the fuse?
                        93141b1c-4754-4afc-8d6c-eef1ab8b8ede-image.png
                        https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/hardware/raspberrypi/schematics/rpi_SCH_3bplus_1p0_reduced.pdf

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                        • undefined
                          gloomyandy
                          last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 15:02

                          @bearer Take a look at the rev1.2 version...
                          https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/hardware/raspberrypi/schematics/rpi_SCH_1bplus_1p2_reduced.pdf

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                          • ?
                            A Former User
                            last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 15:05

                            Google-fail; but still not seeing the value if not using the micro USB port you don't need to prevent back feeding 5V to USB and if one need reverse polarity protection then I guess one might already be in dangerous waters.

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                            • undefined
                              gloomyandy
                              last edited by 15 Nov 2020, 15:16

                              Oh I'm not arguing after all I didn't use it either, but having said that the direct gpio connection didn't work particularly well for me either! The same pi with a (not particularly good USB) power supply runs without any voltage warnings, I'm not really sure why, dodgy buck converter, dodgy gpio connector, or dodgy wiring (well relatively thin ribbon cable wiring), take your pick!

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