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Tantalum

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Posts posted by Tantalum

  1. Hello

     

    I'm using armbian on a Neo 2 board and I wanted to use a Quectel EM05 or EC25 LTE modem with it. Actually only need the serial port to send AT-commands.

    My question is, are Quectel modems natively supported by armbian (QMI? MBMI? ), or do I need to add the driver manually and rebuild the image???

     

    Thank you

     

    (Yeah, it's a noob question :D )

     

     

    Edit:

    Ok, I connected to modem to the board and realized that a wwan0 interface was created. That's fine, but I actually needed the serial port ttySx in order to sen AT-commands, but there is not one available... that's actually very strange.

  2. Quote

    Err:35 http://cdn-fastly.deb.debian.org/debian buster-backports/main armhf Contents (deb)
      Hash Sum mismatch
      Hashes of expected file:
       - Filesize:2795533 [weak]
       - SHA256:15f530a047e49a52284cce318630a8acb7879ebab95ecd28b8b660ba17dcbb94
      Hashes of received file:
       - SHA256:8c74979f1ac7600e494d33fda829dd2b5081b095f4c25889435c247247f8a549
       - Filesize:2795533 [weak]
      Last modification reported: Sat, 16 Nov 2019 14:01:28 +0000
      Release file created at: Sat, 16 Nov 2019 14:29:08 +0000

     

  3. Hello

     

    I having some issues with the Armbian Buster image for Nano Pi Neo 2.

    https://www.armbian.com/nanopi-neo-2/

     

    When I launch the command sudo apt update, I'm getting the following error:

     

    The package cache file is corrupted, it has the wrong hash

     

    I already downloaded the image several times, I still getting the same error.

    My SD card is ok, I have tried with 2 different ones.

     

    I can remember having the same issue with a preview version.

     

    What's wrong???

     

    Thank you

  4. On 9/15/2018 at 11:39 AM, hjc said:

    Not yet, recently I'm trying to use M4 (with mainline kernel) as a network router & gateway (connect 2-3 RTL8153, set up VLAN, routing, NAT, and site to site VPN), and still trying to resolve some USB related issues. Currently with mainline kernel the USB hub must be manually reset (USBDEVFS_RESET) after reboot, or it wouldn't be usable.

     

    With OpenWRT, by any chance? :)

    I'm searching for someone who would make the M4 and Neo4 compatible with OpenWRT (ideal board for LTE M.2 modems which uses USB3 or PCIe)

  5. On 2/14/2019 at 6:49 PM, NicoD said:

    The board started smelling burned. I'm not going to try it again. That's why you need to raise the heatsink so air can flow underneath it.

     

    On 2/14/2019 at 7:29 PM, TonyMac32 said:

    Heatsink over is better than heatsink under due to basic physics.

    Well, the basic physics also allows you to flip the board by 180° like this:

    https://reho.st/self/dbe8a2f2236732bc929bedb89fd627a5bf0d2bac.jpg

     

    I also replaced the original thermal sheet, by a 1.5mm copper sheett + thermal grease.

    40min to reach 80° at full load. Never smelled burned.

    https://reho.st/self/028b5abe980510d83950ceb82cf36153e44f91d3.png

     

    On 2/14/2019 at 3:10 PM, balbes150 said:

    Do not understand the rejection of PCi (NVME) and the use of non-standard eMMC modules that have reduced speed and reliability.

     

    The reason is simple, the Amlogic S922 doesn't support PCIe:

    hardkernel_odroidn2_block.jpg

     

     

     

     

    About the N2, the SoC seems to be very interesting, the lack of PCIe is indeed disturbing, but except for storage, there is no really need for it, USB 3 can do the job.

    Personally I never liked the board design of the N- series. The boards are too big, they are huge, they are as big as an Intel NUC.

     

    Do you think that FriendlyArm may release a board using the same SoC in the near future? Because I like the compact format of their M4 and Neo's.

  6. 14 hours ago, NicoD said:

    You've got an undervoltage before it goes into the board.
    I wonder what your USB voltage is?

    IDLE :

    VDD_5V : 5.05V

    VCC5V0_SYS : 5.03V

     

    FULL:

    VDD_5V : 4.85V

    VCC5V0_SYS : 4.80V

     

    Powered with a Meanwell GS25E-05, 16AWG wires (12.5mOhm/m).

     

    The VDD_5V goes through the AO3415A mosfet. According to the specs it has a 42mOhm Rds(on). That mean a loss of 0.02V@idle and 0.1V@load.

    I haven't measured the USB 5V voltage, but it's directly connected to VDD_5V over a RT9724GQW load switch I think (Rds(on): 100mOhm),

  7. dbe8a2f2236732bc929bedb89fd627a5bf0d2bac

     

    Consumption test:

    (Wifi off. With Gigabit LAN connection)

     

    Idle: 2.30W    

    1-Core: 4.40W    

    2-Core: 6.70W    

    4-Core: 7.75W    

    6-Core: 8.85W

    6-Core + IO : 9.50W

     

    Idle:

    d0d553740b23a79d9115dae985a18c6b46bf3781

     

    Full+IO:

    80c097d26fe68f4fcccca369aab98a3298c448dd

  8. mmh

    I think there are some major misunderstanding here about the USB-C power supply.

     

    1. The problem about the under voltage at the input of the board are the thin wires of the USB cable...

    Solution?

    Do not use USB cable to power the M4 board, just use a descent barrel Jack DC power supply (for example: Meanwell)

     

    2. Do we have to power the board over the pin header?

    No, not necessary.

    The USB-C connector is rated for 5A, physically! Not 3A. The 3A limitation is a question of wiring limitation of the standard USB-C cable, not the connector itself (and hypothetically the PCB traces of the board)

    The missing support for USB-PD isn't an issue either. Don't use USB-C power supplies, it's that simple as that. Again, just use a descent barrel Jack DC power supply! And if possible a 5.1V or 5.2V one.

     

    You only need a cheap USB-C DC jack adapter (which causes also probably a weak voltage drop):

    s-l1600.jpg

    https://www.ebay.com/itm/DC-5-5mm-x-2-1mm-Female-To-USB-3-1-Type-C-Male-Right-Angle-Power-Supply-Adapter/302779342823

     

     

    Now, about the USB 3.0 connectors. Well indeed, at load there is a voltage drop on the board, especially on heavy load, and they are partially caused by the mosfets on the power rail on the board I think.

     

    edit:

    VDD_5V goes through the AO3415A mosfet to power the board. It has a 42mOhm Rds(on). which caused alone a 0.1V drop at full load of the M4 board (2A).

    The USB 3.0 port uses a RT9724GQW load switch which has a Rds(on) of 100mOhm. That causes another 0.1V loss at 1A load.

  9. Hello

     

    Can someone explain me the purpose of the PWR_KEY on the M4/NEO board please?

    Even after checking the schema and the PMIC datasheet I still don't fully understand how it works exactly.

     

    Does it act as an reset?

    Or does it act like a regular power button on a PC, in other words, it tells the OS to properly shutdown, to avoid data corruption.

     

    Thank you

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