operating temperature range of Beaglebone Black

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George Lu

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May 14, 2013, 10:56:29 AM5/14/13
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Hi,

I could not find in SRM discussion of the rated operating temperature of the BBB as a whole.  Is this information available somewhere?

In SRM Rev A5A I see that the AM3359 processor is rated for -40 to 90 degrees C.  Micro's page says mtfc2gmtea-wt is rated for -25 to 85 degrees C. I suppose there might be tighter constraints from other components.

Thanks in advance!

George

Gerald Coley

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May 14, 2013, 11:16:26 AM5/14/13
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0 to 50 degrees C based on those other components.


Gerald


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keeskwe...@gmail.com

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Sep 25, 2013, 10:11:16 AM9/25/13
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Did someone test it with higher temperatures?

I tried with 70 degrees and a small application, which frequently stores data on an USB stick. No problems experienced. Also fsck and dosfsck do not reveal any memory corruption.

Best,

Kees

Maxim Podbereznyy

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Sep 25, 2013, 10:26:04 AM9/25/13
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it is able to work in heat but not guaranteed

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Gerald Coley

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Sep 25, 2013, 10:33:20 AM9/25/13
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Parts vary by lot. So, 90% of the boards could work at higher voltages. But, not guaranteed. So, you spec what all the parts on the board are guaranteed to work at as documented by the manufacturer of those parts..

kaustu...@gmail.com

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May 13, 2014, 9:21:10 AM5/13/14
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Can you point out exact components which are rated below 70 degree?

Gerald Coley

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May 13, 2014, 9:48:30 AM5/13/14
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I don't know them off the top of my head. The BOM is available if you want to check the parts.

Gerald


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woodjm...@gmail.com

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Nov 19, 2014, 9:39:20 AM11/19/14
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Gerald, can you point us to the *exact* BOM for BBB-C? We see a *general* BOM on the wiki that lists a few different p/n's for many designators (e.g. Y1), but each of those p/n's may have a different temperature range. Makes it tough to know *which* parts are holding the BBB-C back from (say) good low temp reliability.

M

Gerald Coley

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Nov 19, 2014, 1:35:59 PM11/19/14
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That is the BOM we publish. Those are the real part numbers. You need to go a look them up to find the datasheets. Every part number used was commercial grade.

Gerald

Michael Wood

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Nov 19, 2014, 3:35:40 PM11/19/14
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Gerald, thank you for distinguishing between real and non-real (divide by -1?) part numbers and for explaining how google ("[p/n] datasheet") finds datasheets :) But that doesn't answer my question.

E.g. Y4 has three different part number options
1. ASDMB-24.576MHZ-LC-T (-40 to 85 C)
2. ECS-2033-24.576-B (-10 to 70 C)
3. ISM95-3161BH-24.576 (0 to 70 C)

If I want to modify my BBB-C for operation down to -40 C do I replace Y4 or not? I don't know, because I don't know *which* Y4 is on the board. If no one knows (or you're not telling) what exact parts CircuitCo sent through the reflow oven, please just say so. Thats a fine answer. 

Sorry for the snark, but stating the obvious is discourteous and a waste of our time.

On 19 November 2014 14:10, Michael Wood <woodjm...@gmail.com> wrote:
Gerald, thank you for distinguishing between real part numbers and non-real part numbers (those divided by -1?) and for explaining how google works ("[p/n] datasheet"). But that doesn't answer my question.

E.g. Y4 has three different part number options
1. ASDMB-24.576MHZ-LC-T (-40 to 85 C)
2. ECS-2033-24.576-B (-10 to 70 C)
3. ISM95-3161BH-24.576 (0 to 70 C). 

If I want to modify my BBB-C for operation down to -40 C do I replace Y4 or not? I don't know, because I don't know *which* Y4 is on the board. If no one knows (or you're not telling) what exact parts CircuitCo sent through the reflow oven, then just say so. Thats a fine answer.

Sorry for the snark, but stating the obvious is discourteous and a waste of time.

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Robert Nelson

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Nov 19, 2014, 3:40:16 PM11/19/14
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On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 1:16 PM, Michael Wood <woodjm...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Gerald, thank you for distinguishing between real and non-real (divide by
> -1?) part numbers and for explaining how google ("[p/n] datasheet") finds
> datasheets :) But that doesn't answer my question.
>
> E.g. Y4 has three different part number options
> 1. ASDMB-24.576MHZ-LC-T (-40 to 85 C)
> 2. ECS-2033-24.576-B (-10 to 70 C)
> 3. ISM95-3161BH-24.576 (0 to 70 C)
>
> If I want to modify my BBB-C for operation down to -40 C do I replace Y4 or
> not? I don't know, because I don't know *which* Y4 is on the board. If no
> one knows (or you're not telling) what exact parts CircuitCo sent through
> the reflow oven, please just say so. Thats a fine answer.

Probably the one that was in the reel at production time of the board in hand

> Sorry for the snark, but stating the obvious is discourteous and a waste of
> our time.

The "board" was not built for your "environment". The BOM is
available, go thru it and update all the components you need for the
temp rating and go spin your own board.

Otherwise, just pop off that oscillator and replace it with one that
meets your temp..

Regards,

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Robert Nelson
http://www.rcn-ee.com/

Gerald Coley

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Nov 19, 2014, 3:41:43 PM11/19/14
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Yes, it has three different parts numbers. All meet the commercial requirement. If you are asking which ones are mounted on the board, any of those can be mounted at any time on any build based on availability

The way you know is to read the part number on the parts on the board. There is no other way to tell. They are all acceptable parts to meet the commercial requiremnt.

So to be sure, read it or just plan to replace it automatically..

Gerald

David Funk

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Nov 19, 2014, 7:27:19 PM11/19/14
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What are the markings on the part???  That's what I look at when I determine what parts are installed.

You may have to dig through all the data sheets on all the allowable parts in the BOM for that part to find what you want, but you are the one that wants to change things, you need to do the due diligence. 



-david
.

Michael Wood

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Nov 19, 2014, 8:16:48 PM11/19/14
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On 19 November 2014 15:41, Gerald Coley <ger...@beagleboard.org> wrote:
If you are asking which ones are mounted on the board, any of those can be mounted at any time on any build based on availability

Bingo. This is just what I needed.

FYI, and as we all know, some parts are pretty tough to read anything off of, and even if you get something it might only be a batch/date code.

Robert this is just for development of course, trying to figure how to leverage the fantastic open source design while modifying it to our specs (low temp, obvi) before spinning off our own board. I wouldn't ask a consumer/hobbyist dev board to be industrial grade by any definition. 

Thanks both!

Gerald Coley

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Nov 19, 2014, 8:19:48 PM11/19/14
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Good luck!

BTW, someone has already done this and have a BOM already done. They have actually built and shipped an industrial version of the board.

Gerald


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Michael Wood

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Nov 20, 2014, 10:34:24 AM11/20/14
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David, I fully understand. I previously went through the markings on the parts I can read with 10x magnification, but a few elude me (hence my original question). Y4 markings read:

0245760 (freq)
DCP1423 (?)
2643 (date/batch code?)

The ASDMB datasheet suggests an "ASDMB," and the ILSI datasheet clearly shows an "ILSI" on the part. So the only part left is the ECS-2033-24.576-B? Seems odd.

Thanks guys. I'm not worried, this shouldn't be hard to figure out.

M

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Michael Wood

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Nov 20, 2014, 10:35:04 AM11/20/14
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Gerald, do you have any more info on that? Occasionally I'll see someone who's trying to do it, but rarely someone who *has.*

FYI for the community, CircuitCo sales offered me a BBB clone with all components rated to -40 C except the LEDs which are rated to -20 C, for $89 in low qty. Actually getting one may be the challenge. 

Thanks again.

Maxim Podbereznyy

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Nov 20, 2014, 10:47:31 AM11/20/14
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Michael,

here is a module based on BBB schematics except for HDMI and eMMC. It was tested in a Temperature Chamber to comply with industrial requirements:
http://www.mentorel.com/product/usomiq-am335x/
fully -40 +85 C compatible!

Michael Wood

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Nov 20, 2014, 10:51:08 AM11/20/14
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Very cool, thanks.

keene...@gmail.com

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Aug 26, 2015, 10:15:21 PM8/26/15
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I have a BBB that works fine in the den but when I move it the garage it eventually fails to maintain connectivity and by the looks of the lights, it is failing internally - but there's no way to see.
The garage does get up to the 90s F. could that be the problem?

Gerald Coley

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Aug 26, 2015, 10:20:25 PM8/26/15
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It should not be. But you need to capture what the failure is by monitoring the terminal output continuously...

It could be the power supply. Current rating? 
Is it in a box?
Is it running from a SD card?
What is the connectivity method, RJ45? WIFI?
Is there a cape?

More information will help.


Gerald


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maxmike

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Mar 20, 2017, 1:39:11 PM3/20/17
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I have now ordered extended temp. BBB's from two different sources and both failed to work.
We use them by first loading Debian 3.8.13-bone50 via the USB stick.
In one case it failed to boot (just power light on), in the other it sometimes power boots, sometimes not and
even if it boots, it doesn't load the drivers for the USB stick consistently.

Never had any problems with the std. units, even loading a 2GB OS and then running resize2fs.
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