Car Stereo update !
Thanks again to everyone for all your comments while I was asleep
I worked some more on the thing... I traced the GND and B+ pins from the input connector at the back , to the beefy looking through-hole power supply components on the mother board. A big coil, big Electrolytic cap, big diode. Found that GND is an uninterruipted path, so it's alwyas on so to speak. Well you would expect that...
Then I traced B+... and it TOO sneaked its way onto the board without interruption ! Nothing to cut the power path !
So then it was clear I SHOULD get my B+ voltage on the fucking board NO MATTER WHAT ! But I was not !
So I was onto something eh !
Eventually found it was just operator error ! The 12V from my lab power supply was getting to the stereo, but GND was not !
Turend out the alligator clip I shoved inside the back of the banana cable from the power supply, was NOT making contact, eventhough it was firmly gripping the jack !
I moved the alligator clip a bit, turning it 90° so as to grabv the side of the jack rather than the top of it, and now I get perfect electrical contact, power is getting to the stereo !!!
Fuck me, can't believe it, how stupid, ridiculous !!!
To my defense, I was using a new banana cable of a different model than I used before.. the old cable I could put the alligator clip in any orientation it would work fine, but somehow on the new cables it only works in one particular position ?!
Anyway, now I have juice going to the board and I can play with it !
- With the ACC wire disconnected, it draws 5mA.
- With the ACC wire connected, current ramps up as the CPU "boots" I guess (an ARM STM32), and after 3 seconds or so it stays at roughly 500mA, fluctuating a few tens of mA, it's not perfectly steady... which I find good. Means the operating system in this thing is actually alive and taking care of things.
Then I spent a bit of time looking at the board to try to identify all the power suppy stuff, so I can try and measure the various rails, see if it's looking or not.
See picture attached of the board with my annotations / findings.
Basically there is a beefy DC/DC converter that takes a lot of space, that takes B+ from the power plug and produces 5V.
Then I found lots of linear 3 pin regulators that provides lower voltages all over the board. Circled on my picture.
Other than the main DC/DC converter that provides the bulk of the power in this thing, I found at least 5 other regulators, small/ local, 3 pin linear chips, basic stuff. 3 big D-PAK looking 78XX regulators (one 5V and two 9V), and two more but in tiny packages, each giving 3.3V for a couple tiny wireless third-party boards/modules. One of the has a thin coax cable going to a little antenna at the back of the stereo. The other module has a built-in / printed antenna. I guess one if for BT the other for WIfi... I don't know my wireless stuff.
They all output the expected voltage, with low ripple so that's fine... BUT ONE !
There is one regulator, a 7809 that ouptus absolute zero. Granted I didn't expect otherwise given that at its input I see only 300mV !
So either something is kakput here, or it's a supply that gets switched by the CPU nly in certain circumstances. So I can say as it stands, if it's normal or not. However, I find it interesting to note WHERE this 9V regulator is located on the board : as you can see, it's right next to one of the two falt flex connectors that interface to the front panel assembly, hence the LCD too ! And if you look at the traces and measure with the DMM, you can easily confirm that this 9V is connected to pads on this connector.
So I am making progress !
If we assume that this 9V is NOT switched by the CPU, but is rather supposed to be on all the time, then this means we have a missing rail going to the front panel. So if this rail happens to be used to power the couple DC/DC converters I saw on the LCD display board... no wonder that there is no picture...
so now as someone suggested before, it's time to reconnect the front panel and shine a torch on the LCD panel to try to see if we have a picture but no backlight, or if we have no picture at all....
Hmmm this is getting exciting, I like that !!!
ALSO : got news from the guy with the ASUS tablet and the two Somfy electric fence motors.... had him over the phone. He said he will pay the 50 euros I asked for the motor I fixed, no problemo, as well as the 30 Euros I spent for the used battery and charging board for his Asus tablet, and he even spontaneously said "yeah that's for the parts but don't forget to your labour !!! " .
WOW !!! First time I get a "client" like that ! I want more of them !!!
Humanity is not 100% lost then, some bits of it out there are still worth saving !