Sujet : Re: Waking up a serial port
De : bp (at) *nospam* www.zefox.net
Groupes : sci.electronics.repairDate : 16. Mar 2025, 03:42:54
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vr5drd$peat$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : tin/2.6.4-20241224 ("Helmsdale") (FreeBSD/14.2-STABLE (arm64))
Jeff Liebermann <
jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:
Board images are at
zefox.net/~bp/ampinvt/2nd_inverter/board_photos
<https://zefox.net/~bp/ampinvt/2nd_inverter/board_photos>
The web server or load balancer is returning "Server not found".
I tried various variations with no improvement. Please check the URL.
The URL is
http://www.zefox.net/~bp/ampinvt/2nd_inverter/and the pics are in board_photos, _not_ https://....
The server does not encrypt connections.
The photos show markings on the board that might be related
to the manufacturer, but I couldn't find any online references.
I need some time to chase the vague references to the possible maker
of the inverter (Ampinvt and Sigineer). Got any better info? Photo?
The inverter is sold by Ampinvt as model HT80112 on Amazon. The idea that
it's a clone of a Sigineer design is something picked off the web and
worth no more than I paid for it. The board photos might offer more
clues, but I couldn't make anything of them.
If the inverter was working (strangely), I suspect you might get some
clues by looking at the output waveform with your oscilloscope (in
differential mode). You can do some amazing things with software, but
trashing the AC output waveform is not one of them. However, acting
strangely (whatever that means) is possible.
The oddity was battery charging behavior, the output behavior seemed
perfectly fine. One LED flashed to indicate charging and should become
steady when charging completed, but instead it kept flashing. Eventually
the LED simply went off permanently, at which point I replaced the unit.
Far as I could tell the actual battery charging behavior was correct.
It made me think a PID controller might be mistuned, when it went off
that seemed more serious.
There's a jack for an RS485 remote control panel, I was hoping the
apparent serial port might expose configuration parameters if it
runs a Linux kernel with a serial console.
Thanks for writing!
bob prohaska