Phil Lynch
New member
Hi all,
I built a HeaterMeter v4.0 a couple of years ago (great project, BTW - many thanks to Bryan and all involved). Everything worked nicely until last week when I had the unit powered up but out of its case and then managed to drag one of the braided probe cables over the assembly; it probably hit the Pi, but it may have been the HM itself. Needless to say, some of the "magic smoke" escaped and everything stopped working.
The Pi wouldn't boot at all and was generating a lot of heat on D17 and RG2, so it's scrap.
I temporarily installed the MCP1700 voltage regulator (it was optional on the 4.0) and the HeaterMeter itself works fine. I even did a couple of cooks using it like this. I've now bought an identical replacement Pi but I can't get it to talk to the HeaterMeter. I tried with the original software on the sd card and then with the latest 4.x software. I've also re-flashed the firmware, the process of which worked fine but made no difference to the communication between HM and Pi.
The error message on the LinkMeter->Configuration page says "HeaterMeter serial communication can not be established."
Getting the multimeter out reveals some strange voltages (i.e. not 3.3v or 5v). I've done my best to annotate these on the diagram below. It seems that the whacky voltages on the UART pins would explain the serial communication failure but I'm at a loss to trace this problem to source. If anyone can point me in the direction of what to check next I'd be very grateful.
Cheers,
Phil
I built a HeaterMeter v4.0 a couple of years ago (great project, BTW - many thanks to Bryan and all involved). Everything worked nicely until last week when I had the unit powered up but out of its case and then managed to drag one of the braided probe cables over the assembly; it probably hit the Pi, but it may have been the HM itself. Needless to say, some of the "magic smoke" escaped and everything stopped working.
The Pi wouldn't boot at all and was generating a lot of heat on D17 and RG2, so it's scrap.
I temporarily installed the MCP1700 voltage regulator (it was optional on the 4.0) and the HeaterMeter itself works fine. I even did a couple of cooks using it like this. I've now bought an identical replacement Pi but I can't get it to talk to the HeaterMeter. I tried with the original software on the sd card and then with the latest 4.x software. I've also re-flashed the firmware, the process of which worked fine but made no difference to the communication between HM and Pi.
The error message on the LinkMeter->Configuration page says "HeaterMeter serial communication can not be established."
Getting the multimeter out reveals some strange voltages (i.e. not 3.3v or 5v). I've done my best to annotate these on the diagram below. It seems that the whacky voltages on the UART pins would explain the serial communication failure but I'm at a loss to trace this problem to source. If anyone can point me in the direction of what to check next I'd be very grateful.

Cheers,
Phil