Howdy,
The fact that you can remove it to restore speed and that you received a low volt warning suggests
the RS232 adapter is overloading the power supply. Which could result in all sorts of bad behavior
(possibly slowing the CPU - not sure I heard of that, but). What is weird is that normally, that
sort of chip doesn't put much of a load at all on the power - few millis, but that is it.
What you might want to do to rule it out is try a larger power supply. So if you had, for example,
a 2A, 5V power supply, try a 2.5A or even 3A power supply. You may need to consider bypassing the
normal Micro USB connector too for power (although up to 2.5A should be fine).
That said, I'd review the schematic of the new RS232 driver closely - it really should only one a
few milliamps and the fact that its pushing the power supply over is a little suspicious. It is
possible you were right on the edge with the power supply before this, but that seems almost too
coincidental to me. You might have a bad chip drawing too much power or miswired adapter or bad caps.
If you do try a larger PS, if you have the ability, using a multimeter to test the amperage draw of
your RS232 adapter might be really useful. Anything over about 20ma would be suspect to me.
But pretty strong indicators that this is a either weak power supply, bad/power-hungry adapter or both.
Gerry
On 10/25/23 04:27,
minc...@gmail.com wrote:
> Thanks for the reply... I don't think so -- I've tried disconnecting the cables from the USB-TTL
> transceivers and get the same problem.
>
> I've been asked what capacitors I'm using — they're just ceramic ones, so I think unpolarised —
> these:
https://www.farnell.com/datasheets/2305633.pdf — the MAX3232 datasheet doesn't say any
> particular type is needed.
>
> On Wednesday, 25 October 2023 at 00:54:19 UTC+1 [PiDP-11] wrote:
>
> I have no real idea what you might be facing, but I hope you haven't
> managed to get the serial ports in such a way that the system things
> there is data coming in all the time on the ports...
>
> Johnny
>
> On 2023-10-25 01:35,
minc...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Hi — I could do with some help adding serial ports to my PiDP-11.
> >
> > I built my PiDP-11 and set it up and everything was running hunky dory —
> > blinkenlights flashing, switches and knobs working, lamp test, everything.
> >
> > I wanted to add some real serial ports, though, and bought a couple of
> > CH340G USB-TTL adapters and added a couple of Maxim MAX3232CPE+ (note
> > 3232 and not 232, if that makes any difference) RS-232 transceivers. I
> > used 50V 0.1µF capacitors for C1 and 0.47µF for C2-4: I picked these
> > values from the datasheet
> > at
https://www.farnell.com/datasheets/1913103.pdf
> <
https://www.farnell.com/datasheets/1913103.pdf>, given that Vcc is 5V.
>
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> --
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