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Raspberry Pi Forum Capacitor to smooth out Raspberry Pi power dips?
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  • usb power
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Related

Capacitor to smooth out Raspberry Pi power dips?

ntewinkel
ntewinkel over 8 years ago

I recently was trying to do a few things with a Pi3, and it consistently hung when I tried to update the system (sudo apt-get update/upgrade). It did everything else well enough, so I wonder if that's power related, with the upgrade making the WiFi work extra hard - maybe not, but I thought I'd look into it.

 

I've also noticed that my older Pi1 will hang once in a while (every few months), and that's a bit of an issue now that I'm using it as my sprinkler controller - reliability has become much more important.

 

While searching for help online, I noticed Robert Peter Oakes did some research and made a nice blog entry explaining the role the USB cables have in the power issues. (Thanks Peter!)

 

In a nutshell, some cables cause a voltage drop that puts the supply too far below the ideal 5v voltage level for the Pi.

The problem is that once in a while the Pi draws enough power to make the voltage dip into the danger zone.

(Some places sell adapters with a higher voltage to compensate. AdaFruit, for example sells a 5.25v adapter for the RPi, and notes that 5.25v is still within the specifications for USB, so even with a perfect no-loss USB cable that should be safe.)

 

One notable item, to me, was that the Pi has some serious power dips on a regular basis, regardless of the cables - just that the better supplies+cables start with higher levels at the Pi and the dips don't take it down too far.

 

So here's my thought - capacitors are supposed to help against dips and spikes, right?

 

Is there a way to add some really big capacitor at the Pi side to help avoid such dips (and maybe spikes too) ?

 

I'm thinking VIN-GND with a 1,000+ uF cap? I have one rated 1,000 at 10v, also I see 1,800 at 16v, both should handle 5v-ish well.

 

Otherwise, maybe splice a USB cable to add the large cap near the micro-USB plug end?

 

Will that cause trouble? Will it help at all?

 

Thanks!

-Nico

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 8 years ago

    Hi Nico!

     

    I'm not sure that an update/upgrade would consume a lot of power, the things that would do that would be all four cores processing, and all four NEON processors working away too. Then the Pi consumes around 7W or more. It could still be a power issue however, especially if you're running a long USB cable and not using the official Pi 3 supply (which has very fat cables and slightly higher than 5V as you say). A big capacitor might help, if the demand really is for short bursts. Any of the ones you suggest would be fine.

    If you do need to run it from a long distance, then a good solution is to have a power supply local to the Pi, e.g. a 12V to 5V DC-DC converter, so that you can power it from a higher voltage from a distance.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 8 years ago

    Hi Nico!

     

    I'm not sure that an update/upgrade would consume a lot of power, the things that would do that would be all four cores processing, and all four NEON processors working away too. Then the Pi consumes around 7W or more. It could still be a power issue however, especially if you're running a long USB cable and not using the official Pi 3 supply (which has very fat cables and slightly higher than 5V as you say). A big capacitor might help, if the demand really is for short bursts. Any of the ones you suggest would be fine.

    If you do need to run it from a long distance, then a good solution is to have a power supply local to the Pi, e.g. a 12V to 5V DC-DC converter, so that you can power it from a higher voltage from a distance.

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