MS Testing Help
#1
MS Testing Help
Hi all, have searched and found nothing on this along side no advice of what to check if you don't get the reading you're looking for basically: i have build up my ms and only just got the stim plugged it and started carrying out the 'serial commucations testing'. I can get a cicuit at the U6 by bridging, however when i try and complete the circuit between pin 12-13 on the 40pin processor socket i'm getting nothing? so far as i can see these two pins (on U6 and U1) are connected by a track directly on the pcb so i don't quite know how to check it? there is continuity between them but still can't get the charactor to repeat itself on hyperterminal?
any help very welcome - Cheers. Jack
edit - its a ms1 with the 3.0 board as per the guide on here
any help very welcome - Cheers. Jack
edit - its a ms1 with the 3.0 board as per the guide on here
#4
Boost Pope
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Heh. This is an interesting question. I also no longer use the assembly guide- Once you've got some experience doing these, it's a lot quicker and easier to just build off the schematic.
(With the exception of the MS3, since they won't publish the gods-damn, motherfucking, ***-raping, ****-eating, nerf-herding, ********-shitting schematics for those. Not that I'm angry about that or anything.)
So I'm having to guess a bit as to which steps you're doing here.
I'm not sure what you're bridging here. If you are bridging pins 13 and 14 of U6, that doesn't tell us much. U6 could be missing and you'd still get loopback on the serial port. (Actually, I'm not sure if that test would even work with U6 present.) If you're bridging pins 12 and 11 at U6, that's a valid test of the chip.
Perhaps you have mis-identified pins 12 and 13 at the CPU socket? It is, if I recall correctly, oriented upside down on the board (such that pin 1 is at the bottom right, rather than the top left.)
Frankly, I don't even bother doing these tests anymore. It's a damned simple circuit, so I typically just go all the way to having the CPU in and powered up before I bother connecting a serial cable to it. I'm not suggesting you start skimping if this is your first build, just explaining that a lot of us who have built a bunch of these aren't familiar with the "proper" test procedures.
(With the exception of the MS3, since they won't publish the gods-damn, motherfucking, ***-raping, ****-eating, nerf-herding, ********-shitting schematics for those. Not that I'm angry about that or anything.)
So I'm having to guess a bit as to which steps you're doing here.
I can get a cicuit at the U6 by bridging
Perhaps you have mis-identified pins 12 and 13 at the CPU socket? It is, if I recall correctly, oriented upside down on the board (such that pin 1 is at the bottom right, rather than the top left.)
Frankly, I don't even bother doing these tests anymore. It's a damned simple circuit, so I typically just go all the way to having the CPU in and powered up before I bother connecting a serial cable to it. I'm not suggesting you start skimping if this is your first build, just explaining that a lot of us who have built a bunch of these aren't familiar with the "proper" test procedures.
#6
cheers joe perez, i think i'm doing the bits it suggests, i'm pretty sure its all on there right, i think i am just over testing, i thought that pin 1 was top left, maybe i'm bridging the wrong ones on the cpu socket then, It's step26 on the megamanual. i'll start trying to get a map sorted and onto it then, just miss out the tests, its all soldered in and not shorted so it should be fine. Cheers for all the help. oh and am in England mate.
Cheers, Jack
Cheers, Jack
#11
Boost Pope
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No, I was just curious as to how accurate the IP back-tracing was for folks in the UK. A bit of light stalking from your friendly local moderator.
Hard to say. The fact that you said you had continuity from pins on U6 to the wrong pins on the CPU socket is kinda weird, but on the other hand, there is next to nothing that you can do wrong in that part of the circuit (short of installing chips backwards.)
I'd suggest you get the board finished down to step 40, at which point you can actually load software onto the CPU and have meaningful communications with it. That's sort of the point in the build where, if you're going step-by-step, you start to get into the custom circuit modifications for cam/crank inputs, ignition outputs, running leads across the board, etc.
back on topic worth just manning up and getting it mapped? forget the little checks
I'd suggest you get the board finished down to step 40, at which point you can actually load software onto the CPU and have meaningful communications with it. That's sort of the point in the build where, if you're going step-by-step, you start to get into the custom circuit modifications for cam/crank inputs, ignition outputs, running leads across the board, etc.
#12
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When I built mine I went through the loopback test in the megamanual because I was a paranoid noob. I don't think it's critical for testing the MS itself, because it's simple to build if you can solder and follow directions. But it was useful as a check that my USB-serial adapter was playing nice with my laptop and MS. I did have to install the adapter drivers a couple of times for that to work, so...... yeah.
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