Unusual Brymen BM235 Fault

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • A look at a returned Brymen BM235 with a very unusual fault.
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Комментарии • 290

  • @Matraxea
    @Matraxea 4 года назад +76

    Did you notice its doing it in a pattern? It goes: 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 pause, repeat. It's extremely consistent. Something in the logic is definitely doing it. Looks like it's timed with the refresh of the LCD too....

    • @PlasmaHH
      @PlasmaHH 4 года назад +4

      My guess would be it has something to do with the autoranging "leaking over", maybe even internally accidentally connecting the reference wrong. Its probably on the asic.

    • @Chrisamic
      @Chrisamic 4 года назад +6

      Brian I saw that too. It's static on the 5, but flashes the real reading four times quickly and then pauses on the 5. The period for one complete cycle is just slightly over 2 seconds (close to 2.2 seconds, maybe). Only the designers would know what on the processor might be cycling at this speed and with that pattern. Some auxiliary function is bleeding over and affecting the display output, but is otherwise leaving the critical functions unaffected. Another clue is that it is causing a display error on V and A settings, but is only causing some barely noticeable flickering on resistance and diode settings - again that might only mean something to the ASIC designers.

    • @robbieaussievic
      @robbieaussievic 4 года назад +16

      ...... It's Morse, I decoded it,
      "Seven castaways marooned on deserted isle"

    • @muppetpaster
      @muppetpaster 4 года назад +2

      @@robbieaussievic WILSON!!!!!!!!!

    • @ChristophPech
      @ChristophPech 4 года назад +18

      It says "Help, I'm stuck in a Chinese multimeter factory"

  • @markkrutzmann6862
    @markkrutzmann6862 4 года назад +39

    I like that you keep investing failures of "your" meters. Makes interesting videos and improves probably not this but multiple lines of devices.
    Keep on going Dave!

  • @SimonCoates
    @SimonCoates 4 года назад +70

    5:31 "Light at the right angle" - no no no Dave, it's all about getting the tongue at the right angle 😁

    • @AvidiaNirvana
      @AvidiaNirvana 4 года назад +4

      The first time I read that, it sounded dirty. Lol

    • @1HotLegendLS
      @1HotLegendLS 4 года назад +2

      😂😂😂😂

  • @PsiQ
    @PsiQ 4 года назад +48

    there is an electrician imprisoned in a workplace somewhere and he reprogrammed it for SOS but didnt get it done right...

    • @paulgray1318
      @paulgray1318 4 года назад

      Aye, that would be 5000 5000 5000 2001 (sooo sooo sooo cool)

    • @voltlog
      @voltlog 4 года назад

      Brilliant guess 😁

  • @thephantom1492
    @thephantom1492 4 года назад +40

    Hey Dave, 3:30, you can see why they discharged 'unevently'. Top is a NiMH while bottom is alkaline!

    • @maicod
      @maicod 4 года назад +5

      quite a careless usage of the owner I might say :(

    • @Ghozer
      @Ghozer 4 года назад +2

      I spotted this too, potentially the cause of the failure....

    • @hotgluegunguy
      @hotgluegunguy 4 года назад

      @@Ghozer it's definitely not a good idea, but how would it cause the failure?

    • @Ghozer
      @Ghozer 4 года назад

      @@hotgluegunguy asside from the different chemistries of the batteries, one potentially charging/overcharging the other, and different material types mixing, and the potential to cause a fire, the actual current they are capable of is different also, resistances, allsorts, so who knows exactly what issues it could cause...

    • @hotgluegunguy
      @hotgluegunguy 4 года назад +1

      @@Ghozer I still don't see what damage it would cause here, as the batteries are not charged by the device. High series resistance could cause unstable operation, but I can't imagine it damaging the meter. I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just curious as to why you arrived at that assumption.

  • @megkalapnemadom
    @megkalapnemadom 4 года назад +12

    try the range button. if it is a 5 V issue then the "5" will jump a decimal, if it is a leftmost digit issue then the "5" will stay on the left

  • @stevenspmd
    @stevenspmd 4 года назад +16

    And this is why Dave is able to sell meters, absolutely no BS .. I have two already; thinking about a 121gw :-)

    • @henninghoefer
      @henninghoefer 4 года назад +2

      I have one and I regret buying it. The first firmwares were slow and the recent ones tend to drift. The display hasn't got a lot of contrast (even at max setting) and there's no way to read the SD without taking it out of the meter. I recommend watching ruclips.net/p/PLZSS2ajxhiQDDs_mWPLavaveGe0RGEw1M before ordering one.

    • @floris_vde
      @floris_vde 4 года назад +1

      @@henninghoefer Agree with you, I really don't like the 121GW. It messed up some measurements because of a low battery, and at that point you've just fucked up my confidence completely.

    • @equitimer
      @equitimer 4 года назад +1

      I had both types of EEVBlog meters (121GW and BM235). The BM lost all function of its buttons, and the 121GW I barely trust to measure DCV under 10 volts. The AC measurements are downright dangerous to trust when checking if an AC circuit has 110V/230V live voltage on it and trying to measure ripple on something like +24V DC is just impossible. The AC+DC measurements ranges are not specified in the datasheet. The fanboys at the EEVBlog forum thinks this is fine, as they know the inside of the meter by heart...that is NOT what I expect to need when I buy a DMM. I want a datasheet. I bought it from the KS campaign so naturally there was no datasheet at the time. I have learned my lesson, I will never again any instrument carrying the EEVBlog on it...But each to their own!

  • @JimGriffOne
    @JimGriffOne 4 года назад +20

    Looks like it's generating some noise somewhere and it is trying to autoscale to the fast fluctuations in the noise.
    EDIT: So, it shows the correct voltage and toggles range. Then it can't be noise. I'm probably wrong. Definitely looks like a processing issue now.

  • @johnmorgan1629
    @johnmorgan1629 4 года назад +3

    Dave don't see enough sellers doing this, levels of honesty in new nevermind older products that you show.

  • @WacKEDmaN
    @WacKEDmaN 4 года назад +38

    nice job of mixing batteries!... noticed one is rechargable (the low voltage one)

    • @leonkernan
      @leonkernan 4 года назад +2

      That's why I stick to Eneloops (and not just because I bought them from DSE like they were toilet paper)

    • @Thebigmanmetaldetecting
      @Thebigmanmetaldetecting 4 года назад

      @@leonkernan hahahaha

    • @5speedfatty
      @5speedfatty 4 года назад +2

      went to check the comments before i mentioned the very same. good eye mate

    • @sarah1390
      @sarah1390 4 года назад +1

      I seen that too right off the bat. 1.3 V is about as high as a rechargable one gets from my experience

    • @chocolate_squiggle
      @chocolate_squiggle 4 года назад +3

      Yeah that's a glorious example of terrible marketing by Energizer! First thing I thought when I first saw Energizer "Eco" branded batteries was that they must be rechargeable cells. So I'm not surprised they've been mixed up with an actual Ni-Mh cell. But no, turns out they're just made of a whopping FOUR percent recycled materials. I'm not sure you could get much more disingenuous.

  • @malgailany
    @malgailany 4 года назад +49

    Please spend some time on finding the fault on the BM235, this subject is interesting.

    • @lcdconsultant5252
      @lcdconsultant5252 4 года назад +3

      Since Dave has access to the company he should definitely get a replacement CPU and put it in.
      What if that does not fix it?
      Reasons to fix it:
      1) You got to be very curious why the meters you sell died.
      2) It will probably sell another 50 meters.
      3) You can call it a tutorial on replacing SMD components.

    • @MetalheadAndNerd
      @MetalheadAndNerd 4 года назад +2

      I wonder why Dave doesn't put much time into his channel anymore. He said that this is his main job. So what else eats up so much time that he cannot do fundamentals or anything with some work behind anymore?

  • @grogyan
    @grogyan 4 года назад +9

    At 2:30 My guess is there is a broken capacitor attached to the voltage reference

  • @larryscott3982
    @larryscott3982 4 года назад +8

    Notice the 5 cycles on regular timed intervals.

  • @nixxonnor
    @nixxonnor 4 года назад +42

    The white lead on the input connector board looks a little toasted (visible between 9:11 and 9:20)

    • @Yrouel86
      @Yrouel86 4 года назад +11

      It looks to me like a hardened drop of rosin flux not a burn mark

    • @Kyle-Veilleux
      @Kyle-Veilleux 4 года назад +10

      @@Yrouel86 Yeah, I think so too, I dont see a skid mark on the pcb near that wire. So probably flux.. My bet is an internal fault of the prosessor and that flashing 5 four times, then pauses and repeats consistently. Is some sort of fault indicator. Like maybe the eprom has corrupted somehow. It's weird for sure

    • @ronniepirtlejr2606
      @ronniepirtlejr2606 4 года назад +1

      I noticed the same thing!

    • @cda32
      @cda32 4 года назад +1

      Just some stray flux or conformal coating

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 4 года назад

      @@Kyle-Veilleux Except that the folks that built the thing said there is no internal fault code.

  • @piotr86
    @piotr86 4 года назад +1

    My theory is the LCD driver is damaged. The segments change each time the processor refreshes the display, more often when measuring resistance than when measuring voltage. It looks like some bit of some internal counter (frequency divider or memory address counter) has a short to memory area of first digit's segments.

  • @ianc4901
    @ianc4901 4 года назад +3

    It's an interesting and very unusual fault, the fact that it is a repeating pattern makes it fascinating ! I would like to see a scope reading to measure the frequency of that pattern.
    Most of these guesses here show that most people really don't understand what they are seeing and either didn't watch the whole video or are assuming that Dave knows nothing about electronics and that he can't see what we can see in the video !

    • @devrim-oguz
      @devrim-oguz 4 года назад

      It looks like it blinks every 500 milliseconds for 4 times than stops for a second

  • @steverobbins4872
    @steverobbins4872 4 года назад +22

    Is there a voltage reference chip in there somewhere? If Vref is dropping to zero the display might read full scale.

    • @steverobbins4872
      @steverobbins4872 4 года назад +5

      It looks like U2 is a LM385-1.2 voltage reference diode from Texas Instruments. Looks like it's being fed bias current via R27.

    • @station240
      @station240 4 года назад +10

      @@steverobbins4872 I was looking for the reference voltage, U2 looked like the candidate for being one.
      A scope probe on that, and a few on the power pins for the micro should sort out where the issue is.

    • @Max-kc2rc
      @Max-kc2rc 4 года назад +5

      @@station240 I couldn't agree more. Scope the shit out of that - Hook up a good meter right next to it, and just compare what is going on at various voltage-rails. (where you find deviations that rhythm of full-scale readings). My opinion is: having a non-broken copy of the device might be even better than having a schematic ;-)

  • @p23q
    @p23q 4 года назад +23

    replace the chipset. take one from another broken bm235.
    would love to see you repair it and give it away to someone in need!

  • @piratk
    @piratk 4 года назад +6

    It is very regular. The pattern repeats. I guess some cross talk from some counter, on a high bit causing a saturated value.

  • @Kyle-Veilleux
    @Kyle-Veilleux 4 года назад +1

    the way the 5 flashes from 5 to 0 is almost like some sort of error code.. like it flashes 4 times then pauses then flashes 4 times and so on. almost like the check engine light on a car

  • @Skauber
    @Skauber 4 года назад +8

    Swap the asic (processor) with a good meter and see if it fixes it. Might be an internal fault in the asic, perhaps even reflashing it, if possible, with new firmware would fix it.

    • @neosandi6
      @neosandi6 2 года назад

      5:59 J1 or U5 looks some thing burn out

    • @Skauber
      @Skauber 2 года назад

      @@neosandi6 J1 is a jumper

    • @neosandi6
      @neosandi6 2 года назад

      it look 's you are right , but it still look burned at place J1

  • @MrMaxeemum
    @MrMaxeemum 4 года назад +1

    You must have another scrap unit around that you could swap the processor with just to see if that cures it. it doesn't matter about calibration as you are unlikely to put the unit back in to service. It would just be good to see it through to the end.

  • @cburgess5294
    @cburgess5294 4 года назад

    I bought a 235 directly from Brymen and 1 month after the warranty expired it developed a calibration error that prevent it from measuring any voltages. Shipped it back to Brymen and they re-calibrated it and sent it back - it did take about 90 days to get it back but at least they repaired it.

  • @LazerLord10
    @LazerLord10 4 года назад +13

    Maybe a stupid suggestion, but could it be the most-significant bit (MSB) of their custom ASIC going weird? IDK how they make their ASICs or what each of the pins does, but maybe a bond wire somewhere that's related to the MSB is faulty. Not that I've ever heard of them failing, but it's all I can think of. The randomness makes it look like a floating pin or something.

    • @Okurka.
      @Okurka. 4 года назад +3

      Time to get the nitric acid out and decap the ASIC.

    • @ThePoxun
      @ThePoxun 4 года назад +2

      Its not random. On voltage anyway. Its a regular sequence of 5 pulses. its four pulses showing the correct reading then the 5th pulse just shows the max range. edit: the other ranges have a pattern too but different from voltage.

    • @neosandi6
      @neosandi6 2 года назад

      5:59 J1 or U5 looks some thing burn out

  • @computerman200
    @computerman200 4 года назад +4

    I have had meters that a voltage reference ic takes a dump after the meter gets hit with high voltage...dose similer things

  • @dennisseuferling815
    @dennisseuferling815 4 года назад +1

    Do the eeprom chips carry any write data. I had an incident where a character byte was accidentally written to the wrong address on an eeprom and it caused the display to output the wrong character when called. Just something to check.

    • @alexmirica
      @alexmirica 4 года назад

      I have a 25q series EEPROM with similar weird behaviour, it bit flips at MSB every exactly 16 bytes sent. It was used as a font lookup table memory and a particular character on the display changes, as Dave's multimeter does. I exchanged emails with the manufacturer several times and they refused to believe that their EEPROM was delivered as faulty, they carefully test them, etc. The EEPROM was delivered with factory programmed fonts and I never used it. Just plugged it in my flash reader and bootloaded the fonts in my code. I had instantly saw the weird glitch, with exact repeatability. I copied its content in a blank EEPROM and it works flawlessly. It's not my circuit design fault, as the manufacturer claimed.

  • @diggitroman
    @diggitroman 4 года назад +1

    Hi, I've had a *very similar problem* with APPA305. Reason was, it somehow managed to erase its' own calibration EEPROM. Because I got it free with this error and it had some decent amount of counts, I decided to dig into this. It took me several hours to reverse engineer eeprom data mapping, and in the end, I've mapped all calibration data (I think except of temperature) and recalibrated it.

  • @paulgray1318
    @paulgray1318 4 года назад

    "Let's switch this puppy on", bless, not heard that for too long, brilliant. Thank you for that happy nostalgia thought.

  • @nigeljohnson9820
    @nigeljohnson9820 4 года назад +3

    Maybe ESD damage to the micro. Might be worth scoping the meter supply and comparing its current draw against a known good one. If the chip is damaged, its supply current may be higher.

  • @Petertronic
    @Petertronic 4 года назад +1

    That's a weird fault, I'd be fascinated to see more in depth troubleshooting...

  • @iamdarkyoshi
    @iamdarkyoshi 4 года назад +6

    Swap the asic with another meter, my bet's on a damaged asic... It toggles at a consistent frequency

  • @Zadster
    @Zadster 4 года назад +1

    Internal bondwire fracture - maybe on something related to the voltage reference. Making just enough contact to supply a reference, then draws current and the failed junction goes non-linear, add a tiny amount of capacitance and it oscillates?

    • @uzaiyaro
      @uzaiyaro 4 года назад

      Could you test this with some percussive maintenance while the thing is powered and see if anything changes, or is everything kind of set in stone with the packaging? Would be curious to know if this is a viable diagnostic method.

  • @t0nito
    @t0nito 4 года назад

    It's a consistent pattern, that's for sure.

  • @scotthewitt6047
    @scotthewitt6047 4 года назад

    Very nice that you sent him a new one

  • @chrislott1994
    @chrislott1994 4 года назад +1

    When I saw this, I wondered if the design has a auto-cal, or sanity check circuit, that’s executed on boot up. I can imagine a built-in circuit, like BIT, that switches the input between ground, 5V, etc. If the control signals for such a circuit went berserk, it might cause these symptoms.

  • @yambo59
    @yambo59 4 года назад

    Ive got a similar lower model to this one, a 210A I think but in the Greenlee brand, and so far its been perfect, love it.

  • @TheFrenchMansControl
    @TheFrenchMansControl 4 года назад +5

    @Dave if you can, try giving it a re-flash. What's the betting of a random bit flip in the firmware that causes a jump to the wrong part of code or some crap?

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 4 года назад +2

      Dave didn't design or build this meter, Brymen did. He isn't going to have the code or hardware to flash it with.

    • @johncrowerdoe5527
      @johncrowerdoe5527 4 года назад

      @@stargazer7644 They might have given him a sealed black box flashing tool like you do for untrusted field techs.

  • @AngDavies
    @AngDavies 4 года назад +13

    What happened to: "though shalt always check voltages"? :P seriously though, isn't 5v a standard digital voltage value? Something being polled at regular intervals and it's somehow leaking onto the main sensing line/one of the grounds being weak and unable to sink enough stray voltage, would be interesting to see whether the relevant pin on the micro was actually seeing any stray voltages?
    One interesting thing to note: the volts reading is dc, and the millivolts is AC, but they both show something that looks like 5 to some exponent, that's important, because the only waveforms that have the same peak to peak and RMS values...are rectangular waves, i.e. some kind of logic and it's quite a regular pattern too

    • @muppetpaster
      @muppetpaster 4 года назад +1

      Bit unlikely that it is 5 volts bang in everytime.....

    • @AngDavies
      @AngDavies 4 года назад

      @@muppetpaster 5v seems equally random otherwise it's not too of the range and it's not a power of two, plus it's a multimeter-i'd imagine it has to have precision voltage sources floating around to even work properly, and it's not quite bang on 5v every time anyway- sometime it shows a .01/.02 if I recall correctly
      Edit: hard to say it's switching to fast to say whether that .01 is tied to the 5v or to the 0v reading

  • @albedo2020
    @albedo2020 4 года назад

    1.check OP amps input stage. 2. check Ref. Voltage input stage (ref diide). 3. clean the contakts of the rotary switch (oxyde). 4. Glitch in the memory or cpu register?. 5. re-solder pins specially Opamp and mpu.

  • @ianwalker3746
    @ianwalker3746 4 года назад +3

    Batteries are mixed, rechargeable and ordinary, thats why voltages are different.

  • @1kuhny
    @1kuhny 4 года назад

    Possibly get a new asic and solder that in. As everyone said it is flickering at regular interval. Atleast putting a new one would eliminate some faulty silicon

  • @gregclare
    @gregclare 4 года назад +1

    I was going to buy one of these, but I got no reply to my question on the EEVBlog Store, or on the eBay listing. So, I figured that support communication would probably also be nonexistent. So, didn’t end up getting one.

  • @MikeBramm
    @MikeBramm 4 года назад +2

    I find it very interesting that it toggles 0, 5, 0, 5, 0, 5, 0, 5, always in the same sequence with the same time period, then waits a fixed period of time and repeats that toggling. It's not at all random, which I would have expected. It certainly looks like the processor is displaying an error message (like when your car shows the diagnostic codes on the malfunction indicator light). Maybe contacting the manufacturer will yield some results. Very interesting indeed.

  • @bigjd2k
    @bigjd2k 4 года назад +1

    Dual slope integration lost its integrating part (cap)?

  • @piotr86
    @piotr86 4 года назад

    My other theory is a short circuit on the zebra stripes connecting the display to the board. My meter alternately displays 0.000 and -0.000. Maybe in this Brymen there is a short circuit between the driver lines of the minus symbol and the G segment of the first digit.

  • @nowster
    @nowster 4 года назад +10

    Could the 5.000 be the reading from the internal reference voltage (after scaling)? It may be a faulty internal multiplexer is feeding it into the A/D converter intermittently? PS. You're more frugal with the flux than a certain Mr Rossman. 😉

    • @RobertSzasz
      @RobertSzasz 4 года назад

      I'm guessing there's a 5v rail going into a mux, reference is more likely 1v-3v

    • @neonhomer
      @neonhomer 4 года назад +1

      That wasn't even one miliPaul of flux...

    • @simontay4851
      @simontay4851 4 года назад +1

      But its powered by 2 AAA batteries so unless there is a boost circuit to generate 5V, there won't be 5V on the board. It likely runs on 3.3V or less.

  • @markhenry1144
    @markhenry1144 2 года назад

    Someone inside is sending an SOS before letting the smoke out.....

  • @dl7majstefan753
    @dl7majstefan753 4 года назад

    I had a fault in a scope, where a rubber key was stuck inside and made a permanent contact. Couldn´t be seen from outside. So the reaction on any input was weird. Check all rubber keys for correct operation.

  • @MatthewSuffidy
    @MatthewSuffidy 4 года назад

    Just guessing. It is showing the correct voltage intermittently, so the downstream of the ADC is ok. It is weird how the display is messing up which may show an electrical issue, like voltage leaking on a line, or dropping. It could be some kind of ADC communication breakup which is going to the max value.

  • @proluxelectronics7419
    @proluxelectronics7419 4 года назад +7

    The fault produces a repeating fixed pattern not random, internal cpu crosstalk fault??

    • @sanguchito7381
      @sanguchito7381 4 года назад +2

      Was about to comment the same. Doesn't look random, there's an actual pattern for some reason.

    • @bernhardreinel
      @bernhardreinel 4 года назад +2

      #12 Freeze Spray the ICs
      #13 Send it off to the hydraulic press channel and get lunch.

  • @jeffm2787
    @jeffm2787 4 года назад

    Both fuses good? Voltage spike perhaps trashed the asic driving the display? I had a Uni-T that someone blew the fuses which caused a voltage skip that got past the input protection and took out the main IC. Spot on except it had all the wrong ranges. Replaced the IC and it's been perfect.

  • @nightshadelenar
    @nightshadelenar 4 года назад +1

    might be an issue with one of the registers getting an improper clock and/or ref voltage.

  • @mcuembedded
    @mcuembedded 4 года назад

    It could be a problem with the voltage reference. Or it could be an op-amp with a cracked solder joint or feedback resistor somewhere. Those are the only 2 things that could shoot the reading to the roof and back I would guess.

  • @mohammadr797
    @mohammadr797 4 года назад +1

    Seems the best solution is to replace main chip with another good DMM ic's and do some comparison ...

  • @Kyrad777
    @Kyrad777 4 года назад +2

    8:10 - The surface of the black component in the lower screen just right of center.

  • @alexmirica
    @alexmirica 4 года назад

    Dave, check the EEPROM. Read and check its contents several times. I have a 25q series EEPROM with similar weird behaviour, it bit flips at MSB every exactly 16 bytes sent. It was used as a font lookup table memory and a particular character on the display changes, as your multimeter does. I exchanged emails with the manufacturer several times and they refused to believe that their EEPROM was delivered as faulty, they carefully test them, etc. The EEPROM was delivered with factory programmed fonts and I never used it. Just plugged it in my flash reader to check if their fonts are fine and bootloaded the fonts in my code. I had instantly saw the weird glitch, with exact repeatability. I copied its content in a blank EEPROM and it works flawlessly. It's not my circuit design fault, as the manufacturer claimed. Maybe you have similar issue.

  • @byronwatkins2565
    @byronwatkins2565 4 года назад

    If it should measure the reference, the result would obviously be full scale. But I don't know why it would measure the reference unless it alternates between signal and reference using a switch.

  • @jaredwright5917
    @jaredwright5917 4 года назад

    My first guess on seeing its behavior, and the fact it happens in any mode, is that it has dual ADCs that it alternates between to get measurements and one of them is not working anymore for some reason.

  • @bobert4522
    @bobert4522 4 года назад

    @eevblog2 I would probably take another meter out of the scrap bin and swap the processor. Not too many pins so shouldn’t take too long I don’t think. Would be interesting to see if it persisted, might be the silicon.

  • @ArumesYT
    @ArumesYT 4 года назад

    Why is this video posted on the secondary channel? I usually don't watch EEVblog2, but this one seems perfectly suitable for the main channel that I'm subscribed to.

    • @Shamino0
      @Shamino0 4 года назад

      I think he said it's because he isn't able to fully diagnose or fix the problem.

  • @kjur18
    @kjur18 4 года назад +4

    What happens when you switch ranges? Let's say, 50V instead of 5? Will it flash second digit or first?

    • @devrim-oguz
      @devrim-oguz 4 года назад

      It is an auto-ranging multimeter. But maybe applying a higher voltage might help.

    • @johncrowerdoe5527
      @johncrowerdoe5527 4 года назад

      @@devrim-oguz There's a manual ranging button in the row under the display.

  • @alfagulf
    @alfagulf 4 года назад +1

    I would change the processor even without calibration just to rule out or confirm the processor failure theory.

  • @uzaiyaro
    @uzaiyaro 4 года назад +1

    Can you measure the input to the logic side to see if something is feeding 5v into it? Although this kind of failure doesn't explain the A/mA weirdness to me. I'm brand new to electronics, green as grass, so I'd love to learn more about this, and if this develops into anything. Will scoping any of the logic test points (if there are any?) help at all? I'm probably talking complete nonsense, but I'd love to see more diagnosis of this.

  • @chriswesley594
    @chriswesley594 4 года назад +3

    This is a dissappointing video. Essentially "I got a faulty meter back with a weird fault. I tried a couple of things but coluldn't really be arsed. Thanks for watching".

  • @Marzec309
    @Marzec309 4 года назад +3

    Is there a bit from the ADC that is flickering?

    • @morphx666
      @morphx666 4 года назад

      I think it is because I've seen many faulty ADCs doing the exact same thing

  • @ronniepirtlejr2606
    @ronniepirtlejr2606 4 года назад +1

    Morse code from the other side.

  • @cameronsteel6147
    @cameronsteel6147 4 года назад +3

    The alternating between 0 and 5 does seem to have a bit of a rhythm to it...no idea if that's relevant.

    • @devrim-oguz
      @devrim-oguz 4 года назад

      Not just a bit, it is completely regular.

  • @Swenser
    @Swenser 4 года назад

    Apply high heat to processor. And see if problem gets better or worse.

  • @Tommyinoz1971
    @Tommyinoz1971 4 года назад +2

    It's the damn solar flares again!

  • @GeorgeGeorge-xj2bc
    @GeorgeGeorge-xj2bc 4 года назад

    I would try to resolder the cpu chip to see if this could fix the problem.

  • @martinda7446
    @martinda7446 4 года назад

    Man, that microscope is fine, amazing quality.

  • @michaelhawthorne8696
    @michaelhawthorne8696 4 года назад

    I've used a Mantis for years and I agree they are the 'Ducks Guts'....RM3 looks almost unsoldered on the left side (11:39) got to be a problem

  • @tunderbird123
    @tunderbird123 4 года назад

    Press the selector down and it starts to be ok...The usual fault on Uni-t ...only some contact lub in the selector, turn a few times and, problem solved.

  • @KrotowX
    @KrotowX 4 года назад +1

    Definitely look like exceeded range measurement due to different ASIC chip properties in this particular multimeter or it can be software bug too. I'm curious are this glitch is only BM235 specific or it affect all BM2xx line? I ordered BM257s at yesterday and hope it will not show these funny 5-s.

  • @Tobinindustrial
    @Tobinindustrial 4 года назад +1

    Very interesting issue. Following with interest.

  • @hypersonicfox
    @hypersonicfox 4 года назад

    The thing is it doesn't appear to be random. On voltage mode you can see a pattern.

  • @Metalhead-4life
    @Metalhead-4life 2 года назад

    Did the broken inductor issue you made a previous video about turn out to be a common issue or was it a one off?

  • @ThePoxun
    @ThePoxun 4 года назад +1

    Is it possible its switching in a reference voltage for self calibration and the switching signal is not functioning?
    Or is there a pin on the ASIC that's pulsing at that frequency? Is there any ghost signal coming out of the input connections?

  • @devrim-oguz
    @devrim-oguz 4 года назад

    It could be a both programmatical and hardware error. Because the digit 5 blinks with a constant pattern. (It blinks 4 times then stops for a while) Why don't you replace the MCU to see if it helps?

  • @dhpbear2
    @dhpbear2 4 года назад

    I'm not sure if' it's affecting the other digits, since you didn't connect up anything to measure, they show as zeroes (with the least significant digit 'bobbling'). Measure, say, 1.234 volts and see if it alternately displays "1.234" and "5.000"

    • @kjur18
      @kjur18 4 года назад

      It does measure fine, he said that then it alternates between measured voltage and 5.

  • @michelfeinstein
    @michelfeinstein 4 года назад

    Can you put it under the oscilloscope and see if any of the controller's pis are oscillating?

  • @einarht21
    @einarht21 4 года назад

    Hello, did you try freezing the processor a little bit to to see if there is any change?

  • @whiskerlesswalrus
    @whiskerlesswalrus 4 года назад

    you are a class act replacing a meter that had such a crazy looking issue and a few years out of warranty-its all of that lead free solder they use now and it is growing tin whiskers all over and maybe internally in the chip-it is an odd failure. You make some of the most entertaining videos-you have a great joyful attitude in them.

  • @dragonfli069
    @dragonfli069 4 года назад

    i believe it is a display driver issue

  • @paulf1071
    @paulf1071 2 года назад

    What about an unstable crystal o/p? Worth a quick probe ??

  • @stargazer7644
    @stargazer7644 4 года назад

    You don't need to recal the meter just to prove the processor is the fault. Just swap it out with one from another busted meter and see if it stops blinking 5.

  • @trevorvanbremen4718
    @trevorvanbremen4718 4 года назад

    My $0.02 would be to thoroughly clean the rotary switch and contacts... (My guess is that the CPU is being asked to be in multiple 'modes' at the same time due to leakage between switch contacts)

  • @neosandi6
    @neosandi6 2 года назад

    posible pul up / pull down R... ???

  • @wdavem
    @wdavem 4 года назад

    Maybe give it some crazy vibration and see if anything changes?

  • @KeanM
    @KeanM 4 года назад

    Seems like a internal silicon issue to me. Not sure how the main processor and LCD driver communicate and the format of display data, but it could be just a display data corruption considering it only affects the most significant digit and in a repeatable way.

  • @nrdesign1991
    @nrdesign1991 4 года назад

    The etchant trap thing still matters if you use the cheapest, worst process available on the market for high volume production, where you still can't afford any failure.

  • @donreid358
    @donreid358 4 года назад

    What happened to "always check power supplies"? If the processor is given an out-of-spec supply voltage then it may misbehave.

  • @elektronikk-service
    @elektronikk-service 4 года назад +2

    Faulty ADC or some capacitor connected to the ADC

    • @johncrowerdoe5527
      @johncrowerdoe5527 4 года назад

      My thought as well. Meters traditionally use a charge or discharge ramp with a counter, imstead of the SAR ADCs in signal processing. Maybe a fault in that ramp circuit could make zero look like full/half range, with or without a 50% bias circuit.

  • @dragonfli069
    @dragonfli069 4 года назад

    p.s. could this be made into a how to use your oscillisucope lesson to trace down the fault?

  • @paulstaf
    @paulstaf 4 года назад

    You should change the processor out just to prove the fault. Don't need to re-calibrate it as you wouldn't use it anyway. :)

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd 4 года назад

    So here I was, thinking it was a range overflow issue (+1, 0, then -1 manifesting as 5000), but noooo... you had to go and rain on my parade, saying it's a 6000+ count meter, at the end of the video!! :D (totally j/k)

  • @thamarv45
    @thamarv45 4 года назад

    I've got the same problem with my old school Keihtley 175. Don't have clue what it is yet.

  • @thsinger
    @thsinger 4 года назад

    At round about minute 10 you can see a hand above the input jack, look like making high 5. I guess this is what the meter want to say. 🖐

  •  4 года назад

    Always very interesting videos. Thanks Dave for the time you spent for us. I just have a quick question : I saw on your PCB some resistors that is labeled RM in place of R. What is the meaning?

  • @HomelabExtreme
    @HomelabExtreme 4 года назад

    I would be nice if you would try to swap chips, just to confirm whether the fault follows the main CPU or the PCB, calibration wouldn't be important for that.