Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Hi,
could you check the incoming power supply is really 5V or not?
Also if possible than check the output voltage on the USB cons of the NAS,
should be 5V too.
Regards
A
Original comment by aneme...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2011 at 2:45
I really don't know how to check that. Is there any specific tool?
Original comment by paulv...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2011 at 2:51
Yes, some kind of multimeter you will need it.
example:
http://www.google.com/imgres?q=digital+multimeter&hl=hu&client=ubuntu&hs=8PY&sa=X&channel=fs&biw=1073&bih=666&tbm=isch&prmd=imvnsrb&tbnid=QWFpkqB6ZansIM:&imgrefurl=http://weihuameter.en.made-in-china.com/product/beAmnsoChRYq/China-Digital-Multimeter-M3900-3-1-2.html&docid=1m2xXAuMwIKtPM&w=369&h=700&ei=TOqNTpO6A6iF4gTQ6fzFAQ&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=305&vpy=96&dur=397&hovh=204&hovw=107&tx=121&ty=185&page=1&tbnh=154&tbnw=81&start=0&ndsp=20&ved=1t:429,r:9,s:0
Original comment by aneme...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2011 at 5:50
I've added an usb hub to the NAS. I know there should not ben enough power to
power it, but it seems there is after all (probably that was the problem that
destroyed the usb readers). Using the hub, the readers (also more than one at
the same time) work great.
Original comment by paulv...@gmail.com
on 10 Oct 2011 at 1:02
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
paulv...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2011 at 11:39