> New X-stop cable, though I may have had it in X-Min instead of X-Max.
> But that would mean no cable on the X-Min at the time of failure, so no
> chance of shorting there.
Wrong slot wouldn't do it.
Regarding the stop cable, they recommended to me to replace my X Stop
too
cable which I did. I pulled the old cable apart to see if I could
find any fault in it.
It was 4 conductors, 3 sheathed, and one bare. The bare one has
shrink on the end
at the connector, so it's not obvious it's bare inside until you pull
the connector apart.
There was no fault in the cable.
However I could see how it could happen on some bots, the cable has
one point of
failure, if one of the sheaths breaks through flexing or rubbing, you
get a short to
GND (potentially 5V to GND).
Obviously your X is okay, so next check the other stop cables. Z in
particular has
2 points where moving parts can rub against the cable and wear it over
time.
Top left hand corner of the back Y rod, and against the center of the
Y rod where the cable
exits the X stop.
When the regulator blows it tends to put 24V on the 5V line on the
board momentarily, which
will take out much of the board. I attempted to repair my board when
the reg blew, and it powered
up kind of, but the ATMega 1280 had been blown when the reg blew.
The A4982 on the stepper boards takes logic inputs
which are rated to 5.5V, so although the stepper drivers will handle
35V output to the steppers, they
won't handle 35V on the logic side.
So the fact that the 2nd board blew almost immediately could be due to
nuked stepper
drivers being placed on a new board, something up with the 24V power
supply (check it's
24V) or a short or intermittent short in something external to the
board.
The last 2 are fairly easy to check. (FYI steppers themselves you can
exclude, as the A4982
is protected from shorts on the output side, and the thermocouple you
can ignore too.)
I concluded that my issue wasn't due to the X stop cable but was due
to the FETS driving
the RGB LED wearing down the inverters over time due to gate
capacitance. Can't be
100% sure, but it seemed reasonable from the damage I saw on the
board and the schematic.
But ultimately, MBI will have a better idea of what's going on with
your bot because they have
a lot more information about failed boards due to the larger sample
set.