J
John Popelish
Guest
Danny T wrote:
that you are really getting a continuous logic high out of the pins,
and not a train of slim pulses. You might connect a small capacitor
in series with your meter, set to AC volts, and see if you get no AC
(steady voltage) on the logic high test. If you measure more than a
few millivolts AC, you are not getting a steady state output.
You are troubleshooting both software and hardware, simultaneously.
--
John Popelish
Without a scope to look at these outputs, you have little assuranceAndrew Holme wrote:
Have you got the source and drain the right way round now? There's no point
checking the gate-source voltage until this is sorted out. Source should be
connected to ground.
I believe all my problems come down to the one thing - my pic "high"
isn't really high.
I've got two chips, both with the same program burnt (I can post, it it
helps).
They sit "high" until an input goes low, then they go low too.
Using my meter, is seems these outputs are:
GP4 0.3V (way below the min the datasheet says!)
GP5 0.6V
When I make the input low, they go:
GP4 0V
GP5 0V
Both chips do the same, and I can't find anything in the datasheet to
suggest even if I had something silly enabled/disabled, this would happen.
Any ideas?
--
Danny
that you are really getting a continuous logic high out of the pins,
and not a train of slim pulses. You might connect a small capacitor
in series with your meter, set to AC volts, and see if you get no AC
(steady voltage) on the logic high test. If you measure more than a
few millivolts AC, you are not getting a steady state output.
You are troubleshooting both software and hardware, simultaneously.
--
John Popelish