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Thanks for the response William,I followed the directions online to put in a formatted uSD card with firmware, held the boot button down (it's a momentary push button, not an on/off switch) while plugging in a 3S Lipo (12V). No booting from uSD happens . To double check I viewed the process on YouTube (for BB Black) to make sure I was doing what was expected.
What do you think? I realize these boards are new (says Beaglebone Blue Rev A2 on back) but I hope there isn't some sort of defect with them. I used a DMM to verify that the push buttons are shorted when depressed.Anything obvious I'm missing?
For instance, if you had any IO connected to this board through any of the GPIO, or other periphery pins while you powered the board up, or down. You could have damaged the processor. So all the pins need to be isolated in that case. Ethernet, USB, and the serial debug port are exceptions to this rule. But are not what I'd exactly consider "periphery" in the context of embedded systems.
Thanks so much for all your help William!I went into purchasing the BB Blue with eyes wide open, knowing it's brand new. When the board was working I was very impressed with the cloud9 IDE and the capability to even use a terminal directly from a web browser. I only worked with the onboard IMU and barometer and didn't connect any other external devices yet.
I contacted the vendor I bought this from (Newark/Element 14) and they provided me a full refund within 2 days! Great customer support! I'll wait awhile to see if others have success with their batch of the board and give the Beaglebone Blue a try again in the future. (I also entertained buying one of the more well used versions, but I really like the integrated IMU so I'll wait)
I'm seeing a problem that may be related. We have now fried 3 BeagleBone Blues Rev A2.
We started using ours with a 15V 2.6A supply without connecting a LiPo battery. After only a couple of power cycles, the battery charging IC gets very hot and pops with a puff of smoke and a burned trace on the board. I've not seen any similar/related posts.
Are the posted docs incomplete or incorrect? Is 12V the max?
Is it required to have a LiPo battery attached at all times when powered?
On Thursday, March 30, 2017 at 10:53:30 AM UTC-4, Ted Carancho wrote:Help! My BBBL just arrived Monday and was in the middle of porting my quadcopter code to it. I was able to get 9DOF measurements from it and decided to take it to the library with me, so I put it back into the static bag it came with, placed it in the original box in between the ESD foam it came with and placed it into my backpack. When I took it out, I found that it was unresponsive. I thought maybe I somehow bricked it by not doing a shutdown -h before unplugging it, so I tried to follow online directions on booting from an external uSD card.If I power the board from USB or an external 3S Lipo, all I see is the blue ON LED, the LIPO status LED stuck at 75, and the G and R LED's on (picture below). If I press the SD button with the uSD already plugged in and apply power, I don't see any blinking lights that tell me it's booting from the uSD card.I've tried the Debian 8.7 2017-03-19 IoT and Debian 8.7 2017-03-19 LXQT firmware, I tried a 8GB and a 32GB uSDHC card, I tried 2 different USB cables. When plugged into a USB port, I can't find the network access point to be able to login using 192.168.7.2, and also I can't ping the device over it's wireless network after I had configured the wifi using connman.I'm starting to think that the hardware was somehow damaged (but I felt I took appropriate ESD considerations, and transported it in its box).This is my first beagle bone product ever (but have used many Arduino's, RPI and Intel Edison). Is there some newbie mistake I'm making? Thanks for your help in advance!
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WilliamIf I power my IO through the 3.3V bus on the BB Blue, which turns on as the BB Blue turns on, will that be sufficient to protect the GPIO?