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crio help
hey we need help we were making some tryouts an practices for drivers, we hit a wall and the negative current cable of the crio was disconnected an now our crio isnt getting energy
what can we doooo???? |
Re: crio help
Did you reconnect the cable?
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Re: crio help
yes, was that a bad idea????
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Re: crio help
Not necessarily. Can you take a multimeter and probe the power wires going to the cRIO? You should see 24 volts.
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Re: crio help
we just made that and the multimiters mark the 24V
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Re: crio help
rhp,
You measure 24 volts at the connector when it is connected to the Crio? Just to be sure, the Crio must be isolated from the chassis of your robot. The case of the Crio is connected to the black power lead. If there is any other short on your robot, the power to the Crio will be affected. Does the LED on the Crio turn on when the robot is powered? Does the 24 volt LED on the PD come on when you power the robot? If all seems normal, there is a fuse internal to the Crio that may have opened or broke off the board in your crash. Most often the wire at the Crio connector has been pulled out of the connector and simply needs to be reterminated. |
Re: crio help
we have already try that, the PD LED of 24V is on, but none of the Crio is on, we tried with the multimeter is marking the 24V and continuity, we have made sure any other cable touch the Crio, we didnt turn anything and let rest the Crio about 8 hours and when w tried nothing worked!!!
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Re: crio help
Another possibility is debris inside the cRIO chassis that shifted when you hit the wall causing an internal short circuit.
That can often be fixed by carefully opening up the cRIO chassis (screws on back) and cleaning out metal dust and fragments that have collected inside the case. |
Re: crio help
rhp,
You were able to measure 24 volts with the connector plugged into the Crio? If so, try opening the case and inspecting for debris as Mark has suggested. If you still can find nothing, do you have a team close by that you can visit? Try your Crio on their robot and see if it changes. You may have to arrange for a repair/exchange of your Crio. |
Re: crio help
We've seen the cRIO malfunction when the power distribution board's 24v output is noisy. The output still read 24vdc on a multimeter but the cRIO worked fine on a different power distrib. board. You can try 24vdc from two batteries wired in series, or 12v for the 4-slot cRIO since its input voltage is 9-30 VDC (written next to the power connector).
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Re: crio help
Uhm, I have a question too... Our robot is way too heavy so we swiss cheesed our cRio... It still runs the code but we can't put any more code onto it. And it smokes when the battery is plugged in... But it still runs the code that's on it... Help!!
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Re: crio help
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Re: crio help
Flustered is not a rookie, nor is s/he particularly flustered as a troll. :rolleyes:
I suspect. :p |
Re: crio help
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*Facepalm* Please tell me this is a troll. |
Re: crio help
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