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No big difference in active mode. |
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If the serial chip is power from the regulator instead of the usb-5v (before the usb diode), then that 4.3v threshold may be when the LDO runs out of headroom. |
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Maybe my description was a bit misleading. I have connected the power supply to the 5V pin which is VCC otf the LGT8F328P. So, I am not going through VIN and the LDO. This is not recommended, but only for safety reason and you need a stable power supply. So why am I doing this all? It's a nice feature of the LGT8F328P that you can run it at 32 MHz down to 1.8 V. Therefore you can directly supply it e.g. with a Li-Ion battery. I have sacrifed one of the green Nano LQFP32 MiniEVBs by cutting the GND of the HT42B534-2. With this setup the power consumption goes down 16-17 mA at 5 V power supply through the 5V pin. Overall this is not very surprising since it is effectively the same configuration as you have on a Pro Mini style MiniEVB. And according to the table: OK, so far this all makes sense but still there is the question why the purple Nano LQFP32 MiniEVB behaves differently. But I think I have found the answer myself. According to the data sheet of the CH9340 the power consumption is very low when disconnected from USB: On the other hand, according to the HT42B534-2 datasheet it should also use low power when disconnected from USB: So, somehow that not working. However, to complete the confusion, there is a way to significantly reduce the power consumption of the green LQFP32 MiniEVB. If you power it up with a low voltage supply (e.g. 5V to VIN or 3V to the 5V pin/VCC) and then increase the voltage to let's say 8V at VIN or 5V at the 5V pin the power consumption (still at 32 MHz) is roughly 22 mA. This is reproducible. For the LQFP48 MiniEVB I found the same behavior like for the purple LQFP32 MiniEVB, which means relatively low power consumption at 5V power supply directly to 5V / VCC. This makes sense again because it uses a CH340 (without the "9"). In its data sheet I found: So, in summary my conclusion is: there is an issue with the HT42B534-2 (at least with the boards I tested) when disconnected from USB. It's still active although it shouldn't. People who want to use the Nano LQFP32 MiniEVB with battery power supply should either use the purple version or use a voltage below ~4.4 V. I hope you can follow my trains of thought! |
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I will try to remove the voltage regulator. Good point. I am current looking into the sleep modes and will make some measurements. Moreover, the results of the purple Nano could be added. Will need a bit to complete. |
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Hi , |
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I close this discussion. The issue and how solve it is described here: |
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I am currently testing different LGT8F328P boards and found a strange behavior of the green Nano style LQFP32 MiniEVB. I uploaded the bare minimum sketch and chose 32 MHz clock speed without clock divider. Then I disconnected the board from USB and connected it board via GND / VCC with 5V using a stable and potent power supply.
Since I found this quite strange, I conducted a further test with the green board. Again, I supplied it with 5 V via GND / VCC. Then I reduced the voltage stepwise and measured the current. I found:
5.0V - 32.0 mA
4.9 V - 31.4 mA
4.8 V - 30.9 mA
4.7 V - 30.4 mA
4.6 V - 30.1 mA
4.5 V - 29.9 mA
4.4. V - 29.5 mA
4.3 V - 20.2 mA (!)
4.2 V - 19.9 mA
4.1 V - 19.6 mA
.....
Any idea what's happening between 4.4 V and 4.3 V? And why does the purple board behave so much different. Could the reason be related to different USB to TTL chips? The green one uses a HT42B534-2 and the purple one a CH9340C. Does the HT42B534-2 consume much more power than the CH9340C and switches off a 4.3 V? Very much speculation.
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