Hey all,
I recently ordered two mbeds from Farnell, and one has conked out after I tried to get it to drive an LCD using the TextLCD interface (http://mbed.org/projects/cookbook/wiki/TextLCD).
As soon as I connected my LCD up and hit the power, I noticed it was pulling an awful lot of current: 1A at 4.8v. I turned the power off and double checked my connections - everything's in order.
Disconnecting everything and running the mbed with only +5v and GND connected (same story on USB) results in it pulling an amp and not lighting up whatsoever. One of the large 3-pin surface mount components I presume is a regulator (LD33 C749, nearest pin 1) is heating up like crazy - but this isn't new, as this got pretty hot when the mbed was running normally.
Have I fried my mbed, and if so - how? Surely there's overcurrent protection on the +3.3v line, and all the data lines (pin 24 to 30) can handle getting 3.3v dumped into them, worst case - right?
It just seems a little infeasible for me to have cooked this thing just from pulling too much current from the 3.3v line.
Maybe someone can enlighten me?
Varka
Hey all,
I recently ordered two mbeds from Farnell, and one has conked out after I tried to get it to drive an LCD using the TextLCD interface (http://mbed.org/projects/cookbook/wiki/TextLCD).
As soon as I connected my LCD up and hit the power, I noticed it was pulling an awful lot of current: 1A at 4.8v. I turned the power off and double checked my connections - everything's in order.
Disconnecting everything and running the mbed with only +5v and GND connected (same story on USB) results in it pulling an amp and not lighting up whatsoever. One of the large 3-pin surface mount components I presume is a regulator (LD33 C749, nearest pin 1) is heating up like crazy - but this isn't new, as this got pretty hot when the mbed was running normally.
Have I fried my mbed, and if so - how? Surely there's overcurrent protection on the +3.3v line, and all the data lines (pin 24 to 30) can handle getting 3.3v dumped into them, worst case - right?
It just seems a little infeasible for me to have cooked this thing just from pulling too much current from the 3.3v line.
Maybe someone can enlighten me?
Varka