Jump to content

Meta

Members
  • Posts

    3
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  1. @TonyMac32 Fair enough, I guess my grievance is more with it lacking the polish in many of the areas you're talking about. On the note of the power options, I've been looking for ways to power various Orange Pi devices via GPIO instead of their barrel (with the goal of being able to power it from a USB hub instead of a wall wart), and it made me curious about the TinkerBoard too. I think I've come up with an okay method for the OPi, using a little circuit to filter out noise from USB power sources, and it would appear the same circuit would work on the TinkerBoard as well. Would that give it any more stability, powering the USB host through the rails instead of drawing it all from the micro-USB input? The power HAT idea you mentioned sounds like it would be really useful for a lot of situations. Are you thinking of just posting schematics, or actually manufacturing it yourself?
  2. @TonyMac32 So with these complications in mind, is there another board with comparable power that doesn't need the same "hacked-together" support and can actually run as advertised?
  3. I've got a fresh Orange Pi PC Plus 2 with the relevant Armbian loaded onto a new card. It seems to output just fine to HDMI on my workbench at home, using a relatively new monitor and a direct HDMI cable, but when I try other monitors I get inconsistent results. One is a Quimat 7-inch display that just shows a white backlight when connected to the OPi. However that display has issues with other boards so I'm not entirely worried about it. But the other display is a fairly modern ViewSonic monitor that exhibits a more confusing behavior. The monitor only has DVI/VGA so I'm connecting to it through a passive HDMI-DVI adapter. When I boot the board, the POST screen shows up just fine and displays exactly what I would expect for the board and OS. But after a second when it would normally launch the GUI, it just loses the signal completely. If I re-seat the connection it detects that something has been connected, but then goes back to saying "no signal". The board appears to be working normally and responds to inputs, but I can't get it to display anything. Also this monitor works perfectly with any other device, and the cable/adapter also function perfectly with other devices, so I don't think it's a hardware issue. The fact that I can see the POST screen on it is the other puzzling part, because if it were an incompatible display or if the adapter were the problem, I'd think that the monitor wouldn't work at all. Is there something I'm missing here? I don't believe there are any special drivers or configurations needed for this monitor, it's just a bog-standard screen for general computer use, absolutely no frills or anything. Why isn't the OS able to use it after POST? Bonus points if you can give insight into the Quimat 7-inch display too, but that one is quirky enough I might just give up on it. *Edit* I should also mention that the only thing I've done on this install of Armbian is update, upgrade, and dist-upgrade. Literally no other actions have been performed.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use - Privacy Policy - Guidelines