Those look spot on to meI've sanded down to 1000 grit twice and these seem to be my consistent results. Are the high 3.3v readings ok or is that an indication of a short somewhere?
View attachment 28503
Those look spot on to meI've sanded down to 1000 grit twice and these seem to be my consistent results. Are the high 3.3v readings ok or is that an indication of a short somewhere?
View attachment 28503
Anything over 1k with the 3.3v line is fine.Values without tantalum capacitors
View attachment 28543
After soldered the tantalum capacitors I got:
View attachment 28544
Resistance between 1.15v and 3.3v changed a lot, is this expected?
This is where the 3.3v tantalum was soldered:
View attachment 28545
Those resistances were indeed fine. 267 is quite low, tho. Got any clear photos of both sides of the trim?I'm getting low numbers on my 3.3 line.
View attachment 30739
Though, in retrospect, these numbers were probably fine, I decided to sand my edges more. now, my 3.3 is sitting at 267 everywhere. I've resanded 3 or four times, from 220 to 1000. the edges are smooth, no frays or anything sus looking. i removed the components that were on the edges. I don't know where the short is, and i don't want to just keep sanding away the board if there's some other likely problem.
YesThose resistances were indeed fine. 267 is quite low, tho. Got any clear photos of both sides of the trim?
Thanks, appreciate it. I'll try to clean it really good, maybe sand a bit more in some places.Aside from needing a good dusting, I don't see anything amiss. That's a good trim
I have the same value on the 1v to ground. Did you found the reason?View attachment 20681
Hello, I have these values of resistance between points, my trimm type is the one of the basic guide of 6 layers, and my board is rlv-cpu-01, these values are correct?
6-7 ohms is a normal resistance for the 1V line on a 6 layer board.I have the same value on the 1v to ground. Did you found the reason?