Difference between revisions of "DIY Ninjas Section"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Realizator (talk | contribs) m (→Device tree (DTS and dt-blob.bin)) |
Realizator (talk | contribs) m (→CM1 support (how to change power mode)) |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
To change powering for CM1 you need: | To change powering for CM1 you need: | ||
− | + | # Unsolder R15 (0 Ohm) resistor here: | |
[[File:R15-stereopi-bottom.jpg|none|300px|R15 resistor StereoPi]] | [[File:R15-stereopi-bottom.jpg|none|300px|R15 resistor StereoPi]] | ||
− | + | # Solder R17 (0 Ohm) resistor or piece of wire here: | |
[[File:R17-stereopi-top.jpg|none|300px|R17 resistor StereoPi]] | [[File:R17-stereopi-top.jpg|none|300px|R17 resistor StereoPi]] |
Revision as of 15:56, 19 February 2019
Contents
CM1 support (how to change power mode)
Compute Module 1 needs 5V VBAT power for kernel, and CM3/CM3+ needs 3.3V VBAT.
By default StereoPi tuned to provide 5V voltage for CM3 series support.
To change powering for CM1 you need:
- Unsolder R15 (0 Ohm) resistor here:
- Solder R17 (0 Ohm) resistor or piece of wire here:
[One secret undeclared feature]
Device tree (DTS and dt-blob.bin)
Ready to use dt-blob.bin file:
Download mirror 1 (Wiki hosting)
Download mirror 2 (website hosting)
DTS source file
Download mirror 1 (Wiki hosting)
Download mirror 2 (website hosting)
Schematic of the StereoPi board
Original StereoPi schematic was created in Altium, and now we're trying to choose appropriate open source tool. At this moment we like KiCad. If you have some ideas what tool should we use for schematic, please let us know in out twitter here: