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How to Match USB Ports & Controllers? Very Confused Rate Topic: -----

#21 User is offline   dencorso 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 03:39 AM

The new USB ports would be attached either to one (or two) rear bay-bracket(s) or to a front-panel blind drive-placeholder, if there is one such placeholder still free.

Any El-Cheapo Multimeter will do. This is the one I use. It has good enough voltmeter and ohmmeter capabilities, which is all we'll need, and some more nice capabilities, and a very nice price.

BTW, I'll move this thread to the hardware forum now, I ought to have done it much sooner, already.

And yes, a 1TB Seagate WS110 Black Armor seems quite good. Go for it! :thumbup:


#22 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 08:51 AM

dencorso,

Thanks for the endorsement for the Black Armor, I'll get it.

The multimeter -- will I need any accessories to go along with it? (Unbelievable price on Amazon, BTW.) When I clicked on the link, Amazon also offered me a clip test lead set, among oher things.

Now that we're in a new neighborhood (the hardware forum), I'll walk around and see what there is. For some reason I'd never wandered into this section before.

--JorgeA

#23 User is online   jaclaz 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 09:02 AM

View PostJorgeA, on 18 July 2010 - 08:51 AM, said:

For some reason I'd never wandered into this section before.

Wait a minute... :whistle:
You need a helmet AND insulating gloves to be allowed here....;)

BTW, El-Cheaper:
http://www.multimete...DT830BMinif.htm

jaclaz

This post has been edited by jaclaz: 18 July 2010 - 09:05 AM


#24 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 09:28 AM

View Postjaclaz, on 18 July 2010 - 09:02 AM, said:


Whoa, incredible! I get the feeling that if I shop hard enough, I might find somebody who'll pay ME to accept their multimeter! :D

Quote

Wait a minute... :whistle:
You need a helmet AND insulating gloves to be allowed here....;)

So, can I get those through Amazon.com, too? :angel

--JorgeA

#25 User is online   jaclaz 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 10:12 AM

View PostJorgeA, on 18 July 2010 - 09:28 AM, said:

Whoa, incredible! I get the feeling that if I shop hard enough, I might find somebody who'll pay ME to accept their multimeter! :D

Don't forget to ask for a complimentary weekend in Las Vegas for two people, while you are at it. ;)

:lol:
jaclaz

#26 User is offline   dencorso 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 12:52 PM

View PostJorgeA, on 18 July 2010 - 08:51 AM, said:

The multimeter -- will I need any accessories to go along with it?

Not really. It comes complete with a pair of probe points. I guess it'll be enough.
However, you might ask for bundled chips for a full casino night... After all gambling at no expense is a must, too.

#27 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 18 July 2010 - 09:14 PM

Thanks, dencorso!

I'll get back to you to pick up on this when I get the multimeter. (I may order it for cheap, in which case it'll take a few days to arrive in the mail, or I might just run out to the store and get one for more money, but have it right away.)

BTW, in case it helps the diagnostics -- tonight I ran a regular backup on the Signature Mini, and left it connected for a couple of hours afterward. When I picked it up to disconnect, the front end near where the AC adapter cable would go (I don't use one) felt VERY hot to the touch.

@jaclaz: LOL -- wouldn't that be nice!

--JorgeA

#28 User is offline   dencorso 

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Posted 20 July 2010 - 03:40 PM

Meanwhile, get yourself also a piece of electric wire 6-8 in. long. One of the insulated conductors from inside the garden-variety 8-conductor ethernet cable would be perfect, but any other similar cable will do. What we want with this is to use the plastic tubing insulator without the internal metal conductor, to insulate securely three of the four conductors in the USB headers, in order for you to safely measure the remaining one, without the risk of short-circuiting it with the one(s) next to it, for they are much thinner than the multimeters probe-points, and we dont want to take any chances, now, do we?

#29 User is offline   puntoMX 

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Posted 21 July 2010 - 11:54 AM

Now, that was a long read :wacko: .

So, if it's not the OS that is messing up the things (Jaclaz suggested it I saw), than is must be indeed something with the voltage. It's not needed to check every pin directly, I would just start to check the 5VSB on the PSU:
Posted Image
Disconnect the PSU form every thing inside the PC and connect pin PS_ON# (The only green that you will have) and the COM pin (any black line) next to it to power up the PSU. Check voltage over pin 5VSB and any COM pin.

I think that the USB got overloaded many times before. I have seen this on many i845 chipset based systems, especial from Dell and HP, and I would not rule out that it could happen on other chipsets too. On older PSUs the 5VSB would be rated at 2.0A and on newer CPUs it would be rated at 2.5A (current standard). If you have another PSU, just plug that one in to see what it does.

#30 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 21 July 2010 - 12:15 PM

View Postdencorso, on 20 July 2010 - 03:40 PM, said:

Meanwhile, get yourself also a piece of electric wire 6-8 in. long. One of the insulated conductors from inside the garden-variety 8-conductor ethernet cable would be perfect, but any other similar cable will do. What we want with this is to use the plastic tubing insulator without the internal metal conductor, to inulate securely three of the four conductors in the USB headers, in order for you to safely measure the remaining one, without the risk of short-circuiting it with the one(s) next to it, for thye are much thinner than the multimeters probe-points, and we dont want to take any chances, now, do we?

dencorso,

Thanks for the tip.

I have a multimeter.

Not sure what kind of wire I should be looking to get. In this area I know less than nothing. :ph34r: Should I just buy like a 3-foot Ethernet cable and open it up?

FWIW, I do have a steady hand...

--JorgeA

puntoMX,

Great to meet you. :hello:

Wow, I have a Developer and two Super Moderators helping with this! Who could ask for better than that?

But I have a real sense that I'm getting in over my head here. I do have a steady hand, as I said to dencorso, but otherwise when it comes to manual work, I'm all thumbs.

--JorgeA

#31 User is offline   puntoMX 

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Posted 21 July 2010 - 01:44 PM

View PostJorgeA, on 21 July 2010 - 12:21 PM, said:

Wow, I have a Developer and two Super Moderators helping with this! Who could ask for better than that?

But I have a real sense that I'm getting in over my head here. I do have a steady hand, as I said to dencorso, but otherwise when it comes to manual work, I'm all thumbs.
We are just people that love our job ;).

Now, you know how to use a multimeter, and the Power Supply Unit has way larger pins to test on. :lol: To make a contact between the green and black wire (power"OK"/power"ON") you can use just a simple paperclip. it's really easy even for some one that never did it before.

#32 User is offline   dencorso 

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Posted 21 July 2010 - 04:46 PM

Great! :thumbup

And before doing anything, always do 3 sanity checks to get confortable with the multimeter (the manual leaflet is here for all to see):
1) Do the Continuity Check.
2) Set it to ohmmeter 10 and touch the test leads together: if you don't read zero, correct it with the resistance zero adjust.
3) Set it to DCV 10 and measure a brand-new common lantern battery. You should read 1.5V or slightly less.
Now, with this out of the way, set it to DCV 25 and proceed the tests puntoMX suggested.

#33 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 21 July 2010 - 07:29 PM

View PostpuntoMX, on 21 July 2010 - 01:44 PM, said:

Now, you know how to use a multimeter, and the Power Supply Unit has way larger pins to test on. :lol: To make a contact between the green and black wire (power"OK"/power"ON") you can use just a simple paperclip. it's really easy even for some one that never did it before.

puntoMX,

Umm, ahh, well -- nope, I don't know how to use a multimeter! I just purchased it on Monday for this project, but it's fast becoming clear to me that I am getting in WAY over my head here.

When I was in the 8th grade, we took a series of "aptitude" tests to measure our abilities in a wide range of areas: language, math, logic, mechanical, and so on. While I scored very well in all the "academic" subjects, I finished in the 3rd percentile :o for mechanical ability. The test consisted of about 400 sets of drawings of cardboard boxes with flaps of various shapes, including one that was put together and four that were disassembled. The task was to look at the disassembled boxes and select the one that, when put together, would look like the whole box nearby.

The drawings got more and more complicated as we got further into the test. After doing the first 25 boxes or so, I could no longer make heads or tails out of the drawings. They just didn't make any sense to me. I guessed on about the next 50, and then I decided to use the remaining time on that test to go back to previous tests and finish them (which was permitted). I ended up scoring lower in mechanical ability than 97 percent of all the students who took that test nationwide that year. :(

Prudence is the better part of valor, so I think that the wise thing for me to do at this point is to thank you and dencorso, and step back from this particular project for the time being, while I study the subject. This project concerns my main PC, and given the jungle of wires and cables that I saw in there the other day, I'm not sure that I could put everything back together at the end, even with a schematic. (Remember, drawings don't tell me anything!) At least till I get a better grasp of the concepts involved and the terminology.

I'm not rejecting the project -- I just need to think before plunging in!

Thanks very much (gracias mil) for the kind offer to help. Hopefully I'll be in a better position to accept it soon.

--JorgeA

#34 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 21 July 2010 - 07:47 PM

View Postdencorso, on 21 July 2010 - 04:46 PM, said:

Great! :thumbup

And before doing anything, always do 3 sanity checks to get confortable with the multimeter (the manual leaflet is here for all to see):
1) Do the Continuity Check.
2) Set it to ohmmeter 10 and touch the test leads together: if you don't read zero, correct it with the resistance zero adjust.
3) Set it to DCV 10 and measure a brand-new common lantern battery. You should read 1.5V or slightly less.
Now, with this out of the way, set it to DCV 25 and proceed the tests puntoMX suggested.

dencorso,

Your reply and that of puntoMX convinced me that I constitute an immense risk to the health of my most important computer. There's a lot of new terminology in those posts whose meaning I don't know.

This tells me that I have no preparation or understanding to do this project, nor is my mind geared to easily grasp the underlying (mechanical/electrical) concepts. (See my reply to puntoMX.) It's going to take some studying of the concepts and the vocabulary before it's safe for me to actually work on the PC's insides, as opposed to just peeking in.

Not that I'm against stretching my mind. Not at all. In recent months I've done things with computers that a year ago I'd never have imagined possible for me -- putting in a new hard disk, partitioning it, installing a new operating system, setting up a home network. With your help and that of the other great folks here, I've been able to do these things.

And I'm still working in that direction (see my post in the Win98 section). But getting into testing electrical connections is a whole different animal, and one that I need to get to understand first before playing with it.

So let me research this for a bit so that I can come back when it all doesn't look so unfamiliar and dangerous. :w00t:

Thanks very, very much for your help on this, as on so many other issues. I look forward to picking it back up.

--JorgeA

#35 User is offline   dencorso 

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Posted 22 July 2010 - 02:31 AM

OK! Take your time, JorgeA. It should be a pleasure, not an ordeal.

#36 User is offline   puntoMX 

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Posted 22 July 2010 - 11:06 AM

View PostJorgeA, on 21 July 2010 - 07:29 PM, said:

When I was in the 8th grade, we took a series of "aptitude" tests to measure our abilities in a wide range of areas: language, math, logic, mechanical, and so on. While I scored very well in all the "academic" subjects, I finished in the 3rd percentile :o for mechanical ability.
Don't let you drag down because of this; you are just lacking a bit of imagination and creativity. It's also not easy what you have learned to apply well in life. If you are open for it you will even build your next PC! For real, a lot of people never touched the inner hardware before and just started doing it with or without the help of us. You will see ;).

Don't forget to thank jaclaz, remember, he is the guy that always posts a lot of links in his replies and we love him for that. :lol:

#37 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 22 July 2010 - 12:40 PM

Quote

Don't let you drag down because of this; you are just lacking a bit of imagination and creativity. It's also not easy what you have learned to apply well in life. If you are open for it you will even build your next PC! For real, a lot of people never touched the inner hardware before and just started doing it with or without the help of us. You will see ;).

puntoMX,

Part of what's going on is that I've been learning a lot of new computing stuff in other directions. I'm setting up a home network including PCs from three different Windows versions, which presents some challenges. So another reason to pause here is so that I can focus on that project.

I think I do have my share of imagination and creativity :) , but obviously I haven't yet applied it to electronics. I do intend to come back to this, but first I want to get this other project out of the way -- and especially to learn how to work inside the computer safely.

Quote

Don't forget to thank jaclaz, remember, he is the guy that always posts a lot of links in his replies and we love him for that. :lol:

jaclaz has indeed given a lot of help here and in other threads, so if you are reading this:

@jaclaz: Thank you. :yes:

--JorgeA

#38 User is online   jaclaz 

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Posted 22 July 2010 - 01:40 PM

View PostpuntoMX, on 21 July 2010 - 01:44 PM, said:

Now, you know how to use a multimeter, and the Power Supply Unit has way larger pins to test on. :lol: To make a contact between the green and black wire (power"OK"/power"ON") you can use just a simple paperclip. it's really easy even for some one that never did it before.

Please take note that some older/cheaper PSU did/do not handle correctly being powered on without an even minimal amount of power being drawn from the 5V or 12V lines (or both).

The paper clip is of course valid for ATX PSU ONLYand NOT for AT, since you mentioned having some "vintage" machines, be aware of the problems that you may find.

With all due respect for the advice given before, DO NOT power on a PSU NOT connected to something, of be ready and VERY quick in switching it off if needed (typically they would make a whistling sound) if you keep them powered on and they "whistle" they will simply BLOW :ph34r: in a matter of several seconds.

Mind you I am not trying to put you down or scare you, and I am not saying that your PSU will be one of those, but it may be.

The "old school" trick was to use a car tail lamp, 5W+21W:
http://www.msfn.org/...s-desktop-dead/

Measuring the voltage of a "disconnected" switching power supply may anyway give "false" results, I've seen too many seemingly good PSU's that simply failed to work when some power was drawn from them to trust anyone, in any sense, a test of a PSU not connected to "anything" may be a waste of time.

For the record, you might want to notice how both of us advised you to buy a digital multimeter and you ended up buying an analog one. :whistle:

Actually analog ones ARE better IMHO, though they are somewhat more difficult to be operated "properly".

Since you all were missing a nice link :unsure:, here it is ;):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallax

Finding the reason why there is a mirroring surface on the scale is left as an exercise to the reader. :lol:


jaclaz

#39 User is offline   puntoMX 

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Posted 22 July 2010 - 07:35 PM

View Postjaclaz, on 22 July 2010 - 01:40 PM, said:

Please take note that some older/cheaper PSU did/do not handle correctly being powered on without an even minimal amount of power being drawn from the 5V or 12V lines (or both).
Now I must say that I never got a PSU in my hands that didn't power up unless it was bad, read, already going out or a very bad design.

View Postjaclaz, on 22 July 2010 - 01:40 PM, said:

The paper clip is of course valid for ATX PSU ONLYand NOT for AT, since you mentioned having some "vintage" machines, be aware of the problems that you may find.
Well, there are exceptions for sure, but when we talk about onboard USB 2.0 I don't believe I have seen anything not using ATX power :P.

View Postjaclaz, on 22 July 2010 - 01:40 PM, said:

With all due respect for the advice given before, DO NOT power on a PSU NOT connected to something, of be ready and VERY quick in switching it off if needed (typically they would make a whistling sound) if you keep them powered on and they "whistle" they will simply BLOW :ph34r: in a matter of several seconds.
The whistling sound you are talking about you hear when there is a short circuit or a bad circuit, again, I still have to find a PSU that blows up by itself if there is no load.

View Postjaclaz, on 22 July 2010 - 01:40 PM, said:

Measuring the voltage of a "disconnected" switching power supply may anyway give "false" results, I've seen too many seemingly good PSU's that simply failed to work when some power was drawn from them to trust anyone, in any sense, a test of a PSU not connected to "anything" may be a waste of time.
Correct, but we are talking about the 5VSB line and that should be around 5V, always, even when there is no load on the USB.

Just my 0.02, but I could have been wrong with the last 2000 different brand and model PSUs I tested :sneaky: . Ow, by the way, PSU testers are cheap these days.

View Postjaclaz, on 18 July 2010 - 09:02 AM, said:

Cool stuff, and cheap!.

#40 User is offline   JorgeA 

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Posted 22 July 2010 - 08:41 PM

Uh-oh -- When even the experts disagree as to what should be done and what the risks involved are, am I glad that I stopped myself before jumping into the abyss! :ph34r: :unsure: :( :w00t: :ph34r:

Nonetheless, I have every confidence that you guys will sort this out to a clearcut solution. :)

--JorgeA

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