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  1. Home
  2. Troubleshooting
  3. NRF24L01+PA+LNA power consumption

NRF24L01+PA+LNA power consumption

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Troubleshooting
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  • Mark SwiftM Mark Swift

    @parachutesj

    Strange, how are you driving them, what volt control line, 5v?

    parachutesjP Offline
    parachutesjP Offline
    parachutesj
    wrote on last edited by
    #35

    @Mark-Swift
    no 3.3V.
    However as said, it is an original Uno. I have clones which deliver no clean or reliable signal. I measured it before but don't remember exactly but was quite off.

    Mark SwiftM 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • parachutesjP parachutesj

      @Mark-Swift
      no 3.3V.
      However as said, it is an original Uno. I have clones which deliver no clean or reliable signal. I measured it before but don't remember exactly but was quite off.

      Mark SwiftM Offline
      Mark SwiftM Offline
      Mark Swift
      wrote on last edited by
      #36

      @parachutesj said:

      @Mark-Swift
      no 3.3V.
      However as said, it is an original Uno. I have clones which deliver no clean or reliable signal. I measured it before but don't remember exactly but was quite off.

      The Uno has 5v control lines doesn't it?

      parachutesjP 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Mark SwiftM Mark Swift

        @parachutesj said:

        @Mark-Swift
        no 3.3V.
        However as said, it is an original Uno. I have clones which deliver no clean or reliable signal. I measured it before but don't remember exactly but was quite off.

        The Uno has 5v control lines doesn't it?

        parachutesjP Offline
        parachutesjP Offline
        parachutesj
        wrote on last edited by
        #37

        @Mark-Swift
        the digital ports? AFAIK yes.
        the radio VCC is connected to 3.3 (all to the pins as in the tutorial GND, VCC 3.3, D9-D13)
        The other setup is via external power (ipad USB-Adapter) to a breadboard, VIN directly from 5V to the Arduino and another line via 3.3V regulator to the NRF24 radio. all other lines again directly connected to the arduino.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • AWIA AWI

          @Mark-Swift The ones you refer are shielded.. as far as I can see.
          0_1464696145069_upload-6475afd2-f07a-496f-be95-a8f71187f6cd

          So next level in debugging... how is you ground connected,. You can try to power the adapter plate from the supply of your UNO. The on board LM1117 should be able to accept upto 20V.

          Mark SwiftM Offline
          Mark SwiftM Offline
          Mark Swift
          wrote on last edited by
          #38

          @AWI Ground is connected from the baseboard back to the Uno, along with the VCC. That's how I'm currently powering it, 5V from uno into the adaptor plate. All other control lines directly into the Uno.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • OitzuO Offline
            OitzuO Offline
            Oitzu
            wrote on last edited by
            #39

            hackaday caught wind on the tinfoil method.
            http://hackaday.com/2016/05/31/fixing-the-terrible-range-of-your-cheap-nrf24l01-palna-module/
            Maybe there also some points hidden in the comments that would help?

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • Mark SwiftM Offline
              Mark SwiftM Offline
              Mark Swift
              wrote on last edited by
              #40

              I saw this on Hackaday, could we make this change in MySensors?

              "Don’t use polling over SPI to check if there is a received packet like most of the libs out there do. This increases the noise. Use the IRQ pin"

              @hek

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • hekH Offline
                hekH Offline
                hek
                Admin
                wrote on last edited by
                #41

                In the development branch we do use irq nowadays, if you define

                #define MY_RF24_IRQ_PIN xx

                It also de-queues messages from the NRF24 quickly, which reduces missed messages.

                Mark SwiftM GertSandersG 2 Replies Last reply
                0
                • hekH hek

                  In the development branch we do use irq nowadays, if you define

                  #define MY_RF24_IRQ_PIN xx

                  It also de-queues messages from the NRF24 quickly, which reduces missed messages.

                  Mark SwiftM Offline
                  Mark SwiftM Offline
                  Mark Swift
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #42

                  @hek amazing, I never knew that.

                  So all I would do is define this line in my sketch and connect up the IRQ line?

                  I presume I can use this on both my gateway (ESP8266) and my nodes (Nano / Uno)?

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • hekH Offline
                    hekH Offline
                    hek
                    Admin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #43

                    The ESP still doesn't support this feature due to lack of SPI transaction support (if I remember correctly? @Yveaux ).

                    YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • hekH hek

                      The ESP still doesn't support this feature due to lack of SPI transaction support (if I remember correctly? @Yveaux ).

                      YveauxY Offline
                      YveauxY Offline
                      Yveaux
                      Mod
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #44

                      @hek @Mark-Swift More precisely, it misses the interrupt protection for SPI transfers. Ref https://github.com/esp8266/Arduino/issues/1943.

                      But the queueing is not yet in development, as far as I know -- it is in my personan testing branch https://github.com/Yveaux/Arduino/tree/development_rxqueue

                      http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • OitzuO Offline
                        OitzuO Offline
                        Oitzu
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #45

                        @Mark-Swift there are basicly effects that could occur while you holding the module:
                        1.) You are forming a very small capacitor between you and the module.
                        Much unlikely to be the reason.
                        2.) You are functioning as an antenna for the module.
                        Also much unlikely, you would probably bring more noise then signal in the system.
                        3.) You function as a shield to the module.
                        More likely. I got the same behavior with insufficient shielding.
                        The shielding works ungrounded in low noise environment but needs to be grounded in a high noise environment.
                        This happens, as example, if a insufficient shielded switching power supply is nearby.

                        Please make absolutely sure that your shield is properly grounded!

                        Mark SwiftM 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • OitzuO Oitzu

                          @Mark-Swift there are basicly effects that could occur while you holding the module:
                          1.) You are forming a very small capacitor between you and the module.
                          Much unlikely to be the reason.
                          2.) You are functioning as an antenna for the module.
                          Also much unlikely, you would probably bring more noise then signal in the system.
                          3.) You function as a shield to the module.
                          More likely. I got the same behavior with insufficient shielding.
                          The shielding works ungrounded in low noise environment but needs to be grounded in a high noise environment.
                          This happens, as example, if a insufficient shielded switching power supply is nearby.

                          Please make absolutely sure that your shield is properly grounded!

                          Mark SwiftM Offline
                          Mark SwiftM Offline
                          Mark Swift
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #46

                          @Oitzu The shielded modules appear to have the shield well grounded?

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • OitzuO Offline
                            OitzuO Offline
                            Oitzu
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #47

                            @Mark-Swift does "appear" mean you actually measured it all the way to ground or that you believe that it should be well grounded?

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                            • hekH hek

                              In the development branch we do use irq nowadays, if you define

                              #define MY_RF24_IRQ_PIN xx

                              It also de-queues messages from the NRF24 quickly, which reduces missed messages.

                              GertSandersG Offline
                              GertSandersG Offline
                              GertSanders
                              Hardware Contributor
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #48

                              @hek
                              So it would make sense to connect the IRQ pin of the radio to the processor ? Any pin ? Or is it meant for INT0/INT1 pins only ?

                              karl261K 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • GertSandersG GertSanders

                                @hek
                                So it would make sense to connect the IRQ pin of the radio to the processor ? Any pin ? Or is it meant for INT0/INT1 pins only ?

                                karl261K Offline
                                karl261K Offline
                                karl261
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #49

                                @GertSanders Did you find an answer to this? With 2.0.0 would it be better to use IRQ now? Just connecting the pin and adding the IRQ line?

                                YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • karl261K karl261

                                  @GertSanders Did you find an answer to this? With 2.0.0 would it be better to use IRQ now? Just connecting the pin and adding the IRQ line?

                                  YveauxY Offline
                                  YveauxY Offline
                                  Yveaux
                                  Mod
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #50

                                  @karl261 It isn't used by default in 2.0.0, but can be used in the 2.0.1 development brach. I would advise you to connect the nRF irq pin to into (pin 2), to be prepared for later usage.

                                  http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

                                  karl261K 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • YveauxY Yveaux

                                    @karl261 It isn't used by default in 2.0.0, but can be used in the 2.0.1 development brach. I would advise you to connect the nRF irq pin to into (pin 2), to be prepared for later usage.

                                    karl261K Offline
                                    karl261K Offline
                                    karl261
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #51

                                    @Yveaux So, basically this means that in the future we can have the arduino sleeping and when a message comes in it wakes up from the interrupt? Sounds like repeaters could run on battery then. If there is not too much traffic.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • hekH Offline
                                      hekH Offline
                                      hek
                                      Admin
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #52

                                      No, running repeaters on battery is probably not possible. Keeping radio in listening-mode takes too much juice.

                                      karl261K 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • hekH hek

                                        No, running repeaters on battery is probably not possible. Keeping radio in listening-mode takes too much juice.

                                        karl261K Offline
                                        karl261K Offline
                                        karl261
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #53

                                        @hek Ah yes, that's right. The radio needs to be on. I forgot about that. We need an over the air interrupt... ;-)

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