Sujet : Re: Waking up a serial port
De : legg (at) *nospam* nospam.magma.ca (legg)
Groupes : sci.electronics.repairDate : 20. Mar 2025, 17:55:24
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <2rhotj9nh33pvndlbqq5akqu0o4m2c493c@4ax.com>
References : 1
User-Agent : Forte Agent 4.2/32.1118
On Sat, 15 Mar 2025 17:30:03 -0000 (UTC), bp@
www.zefox.net wrote:
While looking around inside a 12 volt to 120 volt inverter charger
I noticed a pin header labeled "5v Rx Tx Gnd" near the edge of the
main circuit board. This piqued my curiosity, so I connect a 'scope
to the Tx pin and Gnd, then tried power-cycling the inverter a few
times. Several power cycles later I could find no hint of a signal
anywhere near the usual 9600 baud rate that I believed customary.
>
Are there any customary tricks to making a diagnostic serial port
active? Most of the silkscreen is in English, so there might be
an enable/disable jumper position if I could recognize it.
>
The manufacturer is actively unhelpful on sincere questions, so
this kind of inquiry won't be taken kindly. Some sources indicate
the inverter brand (ampinvt) is a knockoff of a Sigineer design.
I was unable to locate technical information of either of them.
>
The inverter-charger works acceptably but sometimes behaves oddly,
I'd like to explore the control parameters if it's possible.
>
Thanks for reading, and any ideas.
>
bob prohaska
Inverter/chargers are often provided with a basic communications
method, if only to turn off and on remotely.
These can use any com hardware or protocol mixed and matched
to do the job - usb sockets spouting rst232, network connectors
doing the same.
Really popular and annoying are bluetooth dongles that will
only talk through an 'app.
RL