PM5 failure caused by device holder
Posted: February 28th, 2024, 8:17 pm
Probably pretty rare but thought I would post it up to stop people killing their PM5.
I had a customer presumably make his own device holder by removing the rear battery holder screw and using a longer screw to affix it to the back of the monitor.
Well if the screw is too long it goes right through the rear plastic and straight into an electrolytic cap on the board and causes a permanent short even after the screw is removed.
The PM5 then throws a "USB Overload" error if you are on the latest firmware version and your PM5 is now stuffed.
Sent C2 an e-mail, if they ever relay the board in the next hardware version, it ideally needs a hole right there directly inline with the screw, not a capacitor because sooner or later shit happens.
I had a customer presumably make his own device holder by removing the rear battery holder screw and using a longer screw to affix it to the back of the monitor.
Well if the screw is too long it goes right through the rear plastic and straight into an electrolytic cap on the board and causes a permanent short even after the screw is removed.
The PM5 then throws a "USB Overload" error if you are on the latest firmware version and your PM5 is now stuffed.
Sent C2 an e-mail, if they ever relay the board in the next hardware version, it ideally needs a hole right there directly inline with the screw, not a capacitor because sooner or later shit happens.