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#721 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Hawthorn East, Vic
Posts: 857
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Quote:
Speaking of which... of all these Debian/XBMC/Ubuntu mergers (and there has been like 5)... how the hell has no one come up with XBuntuMC. Seriously, say it aloud... it sounds excellent. |
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#722 | |
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Grumpy Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: /dev/null
Posts: 9,303
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Each of the two USB host ports on the RPi has a 140 mA PPTC in series with its 5V rail (F1 and F2), which I think is the main problem. You can only draw a maximum of 140 mA out each port.
F3, which is the one in series with the microUSB input socket, is 750 mA. Personally I think I'll replace F1 and F2 with 500 mA PPTCs on mine and replace F3 with a 1.1A (it's actually listed as 1.1A on the schematic but loaded with a 750 mA part on my RPi board). There's no real need to use a powered USB hub to use USB peripherals which are within the 500 mA USB spec in my opinion, that's just an added layer of complexity and cost and cable mess. The PPTCs should be rated higher, there's no reason why they can't be, as long as the user understands that it's their own responsibility to provide a 5V power supply with appropriate current capacity to run the RPi plus peripheral devices. The RPi's onboard linear regulators provide its 3.3V and 1.8V rails, you provide the 5V rail externally and there is no 5V regulator on board. Quote:
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"How is anyone supposed to know that this isn't just a bunch of crap?" - Richard Feynman.
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#723 | |||||
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Hawthorn East, Vic
Posts: 857
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Quote:
I knew they had the fuses, I didn't realise they were only 140 mA. It makes sense I suppose. When you're only working with 750 mA (well, realistically the fuse won't drop the voltage low enough until around 800-900), and between the ethernet controller and the SoC you can pull up to 300-400, you want to make sure the USB doesn't bring the whole system down. Unfortunately polyfuses suck. And always have. Quote:
. I'd also replace the LDO for a switch mode to gain some more of that input current back.Quote:
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Last edited by IzzehO; 10th August 2012 at 5:23 PM. |
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#724 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Melbourne, 3134
Posts: 206
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Quote:
your case printed ok. see... ![]() IMG_7975.jpg by Scorpia21, on Flickr ![]() IMG_7974.jpg by Scorpia21, on Flickr ![]() IMG_7973.jpg by Scorpia21, on Flickr if your happy then let me know and ill pass on acct number etc. daehenoc, im about to have another go at your case. see if i cant get it better.
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Main Box: CPU: AMD Phenom II 940 BE M/B: G-B MA790GX-UD4 Ram: 8GB HDD: Patriot INFERNO 2.5" 120GB SSD + 2TB Seagate LP Video: Zotac GTX680 Case/PS: Antec Sonata III + 650W PS |
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#725 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 8,024
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Looks good! Hopefully the non-fishbone type covers (those angled grill ones) made it easier to print. PM incoming.
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#726 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Northern Beaches, Sydney
Posts: 6,140
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Quote:
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System Specs: i7 3770K, Noctua NH-U12P SE2, 32GB Corsair Vengeance LP DDR3-1600, ASUS P8Z77-V Premium, 2048MB Zotac GTX680, ASUS Xonar Essence One, 120GB/240GB Samsung 840 SSDs, 2x 3TB Toshiba HDDs [RAID1], 2x Zalman ZMMFC-1 Plus, Dell U3011 30" LCD, Creative T-40 Series II 2.0, LianLi PC-A71B, 8x Scythe SFF21G, 1kW Silverstone ST1000P. Over 50 Trades. |
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#727 |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 2,601
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I did a pilot print of my case in PLA today.
Click to view full size! Click to view full size! Click to view full size! It doesn't look anywhere as good as the CAD though The black bit on the cover is a bit of renegade ABS that came off the bed :/Click to view full size! I gotta tweak a couple of details and print it in ABS eventually, the snap fits really don't work in PLA at all but it still snaps together regardless.The CAD models they have on the rpi wiki are a bit off, there seems to have been a couple of material substitutions and design adjustments between the CAD and the actual thing you get. |
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#728 |
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OCAU Sponsor
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Newcastle
Posts: 4,299
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I've just (well, last week) received my Pi, at this stage playing with XBMC.
I'm running it from an iPhone charger I had lying around. I've tried RaspBMC and Xbian (www.xbian.org), Xbian seems to be a bit snappier, but fiddling with both. Streaming 720P MKV's from the network isn't 100% yet (using SMB), but I'm working on it. |
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#729 | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Melbourne, 3134
Posts: 206
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Quote:
but you did prompt me to install the latest firmware which should help it once i fiddle a bit more . see... ![]() IMG_7976.jpg by Scorpia21, on Flickr
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Main Box: CPU: AMD Phenom II 940 BE M/B: G-B MA790GX-UD4 Ram: 8GB HDD: Patriot INFERNO 2.5" 120GB SSD + 2TB Seagate LP Video: Zotac GTX680 Case/PS: Antec Sonata III + 650W PS |
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#730 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Northern Beaches, Sydney
Posts: 6,140
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Quote:
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System Specs: i7 3770K, Noctua NH-U12P SE2, 32GB Corsair Vengeance LP DDR3-1600, ASUS P8Z77-V Premium, 2048MB Zotac GTX680, ASUS Xonar Essence One, 120GB/240GB Samsung 840 SSDs, 2x 3TB Toshiba HDDs [RAID1], 2x Zalman ZMMFC-1 Plus, Dell U3011 30" LCD, Creative T-40 Series II 2.0, LianLi PC-A71B, 8x Scythe SFF21G, 1kW Silverstone ST1000P. Over 50 Trades. |
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#731 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 8,024
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#732 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Melbourne, 3134
Posts: 206
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nope, perfectly serious.
its based on a wolfstrap on the reprap site from about 2 years ago. I couldnt afford to buy the printed parts at the time as they were running at about $500-$600 a set just for the plastic. so i built the frame you see in the pic. its not the best pic. if you like i can post more details in the reprap thread as this is getting this thread a bit off topic. but having said that. the prompt you gave me made me update the firmware and i think with a full calibration it will work better than it was. I still have some physical issues with the frame but its not bad considering the whole thing is about $400 total
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Main Box: CPU: AMD Phenom II 940 BE M/B: G-B MA790GX-UD4 Ram: 8GB HDD: Patriot INFERNO 2.5" 120GB SSD + 2TB Seagate LP Video: Zotac GTX680 Case/PS: Antec Sonata III + 650W PS |
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#733 | |
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Member
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,632
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Quote:
that is fucking fantastic! |
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#734 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 265
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I've been having heaps of awesome fun with my Pi lately. Getting more and more familiar with the terminal & ssh along the way. Really should get a few more SD's so I don't need to remember to make a backup image.
One thing that is really a massive bummer is that there's no flash support. I know people have been whining about it, but its literally the only thing stopping me from using it as my daily/internet machine since I watch a fair bit of youtube. Are there any browsers for the pi that support HTML5 yet?
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My Rig - Core i7 930 @ 3.6GHz - Watercooled - ASRock x58 Extreme - 6GB Corsair XMS3 @ 1600MHz - ASUS GTX570 - 120GB SSD - 3TB Storage |
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#735 |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Melbourne, 3134
Posts: 206
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support html 5 or support it well?
![]() either way i think i remember reading that iceweasel supports html5. worth a try at least
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Main Box: CPU: AMD Phenom II 940 BE M/B: G-B MA790GX-UD4 Ram: 8GB HDD: Patriot INFERNO 2.5" 120GB SSD + 2TB Seagate LP Video: Zotac GTX680 Case/PS: Antec Sonata III + 650W PS |
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