FreeCalypso > hg > fc-small-hw
diff duart28/design-spec @ 35:846ebd21db8e
duart28/design-spec: minor fixes in the so-far-written section
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Tue, 14 Jul 2020 19:01:29 +0000 |
parents | 0eca5449abd7 |
children | 40e2106a0500 |
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--- a/duart28/design-spec Tue Jul 14 07:40:42 2020 +0000 +++ b/duart28/design-spec Tue Jul 14 19:01:29 2020 +0000 @@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ * When the Calypso+Iota chipset enters superdeep sleep (our shorthand term for Calypso deep sleep combined with Iota ABB sleep mode), the chipset's VRIO -regulator (the one that produces the 2.8V V-IO raill) switches into sleep mode, +regulator (the one that produces the 2.8V V-IO rail) switches into sleep mode, which has much looser regulation than in the regular Active mode. In this condition external 3.3V can feed into the V-IO rail through pull-up resistors and pull the rail itself a little higher than where the chipset's own regulators @@ -170,10 +170,10 @@ 2) When a Calypso device is connected to the USB DUART adapter, the Calypso device is up and running (VRPC Active state), but there is no USB host -connected, current can flow from Calypso outputs into a powered-down FT2232D or -other chips in the USB DUART adapter. With our current raw FT2232D-to-Calypso -arrangement we have about 5 mA of current flowing per pin under the described -condition, which is a little too much. +connected, current can flow from Calypso outputs into a powered-down FT2232D +(or other front-end chips) in the USB DUART adapter. With our current raw +FT2232D-to-Calypso arrangement we have about 5 mA of current flowing per pin +under the described condition, which is a little too much. If we replace the generic FT2232D breakout with our own custom adapter board design, we can solve the second partial power-down problem (the case of Calypso