Thank you so much for your help!
I'm just going to make it now, I don't really care anymore about antenna or a reset button, I just want the chip to work normally.
Design aside, do you have any suggestions with the soldering or anything else?
ESP32-S3 PCB Design Problems
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- Posts: 9730
- Joined: Thu Nov 26, 2015 4:08 am
Re: ESP32-S3 PCB Design Problems
Don't burn your ESP32 but seriously, if that was how your many-times reworked PCB looks, I think you should do fine.
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- Posts: 4
- Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2022 8:27 am
Re: ESP32-S3 PCB Design Problems
i have checked your schematic, you will need a USB to UART converter IC like CP2102N also for auto programming you will need a transistor combination connecting to the DTR and RTS pin of the CP2102N chip.
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- Joined: Wed Jun 01, 2022 11:41 pm
Re: ESP32-S3 PCB Design Problems
Thanks for the tip, but I already have made the board, plus the MCP2221 (USB to UART Converter) should work fine and I don't need auto reset.
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- Posts: 10
- Joined: Wed Jun 01, 2022 11:41 pm
Re: ESP32-S3 PCB Design Problems
Ok I'm back!
I received the board a few days ago, got the power supply, LEDs and the USB to UART converter working. I had a fight with the Micro USB port, so its a little crispy , but I got it to work eventually. But the chip still doesn't work, I sometimes get something back on the RX line but ESP-IDF identifies it as serial noise. So here is what I think could be a problem:
1. Diffrent Baud rate
2. Bad Soldering (large possiblity)
3. Melted chip (I thought ahead this time and got 2)
At this point a simple module is going to be cheaper...
So you guys have any ideas?
I want this board to work, but If it doesn't, I am just going to start to use easy modules.
I received the board a few days ago, got the power supply, LEDs and the USB to UART converter working. I had a fight with the Micro USB port, so its a little crispy , but I got it to work eventually. But the chip still doesn't work, I sometimes get something back on the RX line but ESP-IDF identifies it as serial noise. So here is what I think could be a problem:
1. Diffrent Baud rate
2. Bad Soldering (large possiblity)
3. Melted chip (I thought ahead this time and got 2)
At this point a simple module is going to be cheaper...
So you guys have any ideas?
I want this board to work, but If it doesn't, I am just going to start to use easy modules.
-
- Posts: 9730
- Joined: Thu Nov 26, 2015 4:08 am
Re: ESP32-S3 PCB Design Problems
Standard debugging steps apply here, I'd say
- Check voltages. Do you have 3.3V on all rails that need it?
- Check current use. An ESP32S3 eating up 2A is not healthy
- Check if the 40MHz crystal does something. A scope on one of the pins should show a weak, but noticable 40MHz-ish sine.
- Check if you get a bootstrap message on the UARTs TX pin if you reset the ESP32S3 using a terminal emulator
If you get to the last point, post that message here and we'll see if there's anything that points at.
- Check voltages. Do you have 3.3V on all rails that need it?
- Check current use. An ESP32S3 eating up 2A is not healthy
- Check if the 40MHz crystal does something. A scope on one of the pins should show a weak, but noticable 40MHz-ish sine.
- Check if you get a bootstrap message on the UARTs TX pin if you reset the ESP32S3 using a terminal emulator
If you get to the last point, post that message here and we'll see if there's anything that points at.
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