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Raspberry Pi Forum under voltage detection - Raspberry Pi 3 B+
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Related

under voltage detection - Raspberry Pi 3 B+

y2010x
y2010x over 7 years ago

There seems to be a serious issue with the power regulator on the Raspberry Pi 3 B+, e.g.: I tried the recommended power supply, but the Pi still indicates that under voltage detected, and it keeps failing (not able to initiate anything, e.g.: sudo raspi-config, sudo apt-get update, etc.)

 

I bought another power supply with 5V, 3A rating, and the issues remain the same!

 

Can you recommend a method that I can overcome such issue(s)? Please kindly advise. Thank you.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 7 years ago

    Hi Si Le,

    It sounds like a faulty Pi, if you've already tried the recommended 2.5A supply and you're running the Pi with just a keyboard and mouse attached (and no other USB devices).

    If you can check with another Pi 3B+, you can confirm if it is the Pi, or the supply that is faulty.

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 7 years ago in reply to shabaz

    As I stated on my original post, power supply with 5V, 3A is my third power supply. Haven't tried another 3B+ yet, but I thought I should seek for your help first, before running back to the store.

     

    Thanks for your response.

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  • jw0752
    0 jw0752 over 7 years ago

    Hi Si Le,

    Do you have a meter that you can use to verify that the voltage to the Pi is 5 volts? If possible you could also measure the current draw using the meter's ammeter. This would give you some definite ideas about where the problem lies.

    John

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  • fmilburn
    0 fmilburn over 7 years ago

    I picked up an inexpensive USB meters similar to the one in the link at a trade show for a couple of dollars.  I've noticed them in one of the local electronics stores as well.  They are accurate enough to get a reasonable idea of voltage and current and are handy at times.

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  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 7 years ago in reply to fmilburn

    I picked up an inexpensive USB meters

    That reminds me ... I'm sure I had one of those on order some time ago ....

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 7 years ago in reply to mcb1

    Hi,

    I had the same problem. I checked on two different power supplies. This is a cable issue! It was not until I used a short and thick cable that the error stopped. I checked three different cables.

     

    rpi

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  • luislabmo
    0 luislabmo over 7 years ago

    What is the "recommended" power supply you've tried?. I've tried few good reputation power supplies in my experiments -incuding adapters for tablets which are around 2.1A-, when the Pi was running with the Touch display, I was getting the low-power notification icon until I started using the official Raspberry Pi Universal Power Supply.

     

    Another thing that may affecting the power delivery to your RPi is you USB cable. I personally would check those before concluding it is a faulty RPi case.

     

    Luis

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  • fmilburn
    0 fmilburn over 7 years ago in reply to luislabmo

    I agree on the USB cables - I have had problems with them in past and I think they are sometimes overlooked.  Avoid the long cheap ones in particular.  There is an informative video on the topic here: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=n70N_sBYepQ&t=14s

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  • y2010x
    0 y2010x over 7 years ago

    Thank you all very much for your suggestions.

     

    I tried them all, but the yellow lighting bolt still showed up, and the voltage drop for most cases is about -0.4 volt. The unit is functional (not trying to reboot) in one of the power supply with the yellow thunderbolt; I ordered 3 more units to see if this is a bad unit - I will let you know the results when I have a chance to test them.

     

    Thank you all again very much.

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  • keillrandor
    0 keillrandor over 7 years ago

    I have a PI 3B +, had similar under voltage warnings, both in Debian Stretch syslog and yellow flash icon on my connected official 7" screen (I don't use any GPIO voltage bridging). I use an iFi power 2.5A rated switching PSU with micro usb connected to the PI. I also fed the screen with another separate micro usb power source. With this setup I had voltage underruns every now and then during the boot sequence.

     

    PI<----angled micro USB cable/USB-A male 0.5m---> <----micro iFi USB female A adapter/DC pin cable 0.1m---> <--DC PIN cable to iFi PSU 1.5m? ---> wall DC 230V/50Hz

     

    I resorted to solder the angled micro USB connector to the DC-pin adapter, removing about 0.5 meter of cabling and a possibly weak USB A female adapter used above.

    It resolved the issue. It would have been interesting to use an oscilloscope, which I don't have, to monitor the improved voltage stability.

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