RPi Pico "disconnects" after a few minutes to days
RPi Pico "disconnects" after a few minutes to days
I'm trying to use an RPi Pico W as a temp/humidity sensor using a DHT20.
It kind of works - at least sometimes, but I keep "losing" sensors more or less randomly.
I connected everything up like here (using MicroPython): https://github.com/flrrth/pico-dht20 There are currently 4 sensor-boards, 3 soldered, one on a breadboard.
The error modes I could observe are:
- DHT20 fails to init - sometimes after the first read, sometimes after days. Resetting the machine works sometimes, if not, power cycling usually does the trick
- The board just "stops" after about 5min - the serial console just says "device disconnected". Power cycling is the only option.
My measurement work by having a timer fire every minute, connect to wifi, read from the sensor, and then send an mqtt message (either the values or an error message) and shutdown wifi again.
My current ideas why it could fail (but I'm not an electronics guy at all):
- There is some kind of "rogue current" messing with some IC.
- Some component is broken
- Maybe the power draw is too low or issuing sleep() messes with the USB-power connection somehow?
For me the problem is, I don't really know where to look for errors. The software works in principle, the soldering seems to be good enough to sometimes work for days, and looking too deep into the whole electronics side is beyond my capabilities.
Perhaps slightly adjust your logic a little and see what it does.
Read from the sensors first, then enable and connect to wifi, send the data, then disconnect. That would reduce the maximum power draw as only one function is active at once.
Small edit: I have a MagTag ESP32 board with circuitpython that can't read onewire devices while the wifi is active. Whether that's because of supply instabilities when wifi is transmitting, or interrupt conflicts, or just plain poor programming in the onewire drivers or the wifi drivers, I don't know. But reading the devices first and then connecting to wifi and sending the data afterwards works.
I tried that. The loop was:
That should nicely separate everything, but it still ran into similar issues.
Hmm I'm not sure of the pin drive currents on the Pico, but can you power the sensors off a pin? At least then you can programmatically power cycle them if you need to.
The Pico also has a watchdog, you could set it up to give it a reboot if things don't respond in time. It doesn't solve the issues of course but at least it gets it back to a workable state. And if the watchdog fails, or it works but there's still no USB serial, then that would point towards power instabilities or somesuch.