-
I am wondering how the wiring is supposed to look when the ESP is powered from the battery itself (Using a buck converter). Would you still want to connect ground together? (And thus, connect the P- to the GND pin of the RS485 connector). |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Replies: 5 comments 42 replies
-
Sorry, I cannot support here. I'm a software developer. ;-) I hope someone else could step in here. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Ok I found the answer to this question myself: When you power the ESP from the Battery output (After the BMS), absolutely dont connect the GND, otherwise the coprocessor for handling RS485 (And I guess the LCD too seeing as I cannot start / turn off the BMS with the included button any more) will die a quick death (Sizable spark when connecting, for a reason that I dont fully understand). Luckily it can still be started with the old "jumpstart" method and seems to otherwise function fine. oh well, I guess I wanted to use BLE anyways (I didnt) Edit: I'm starting to even doubt that this would work without connecting GND as the tx pin would of course get pulled to the "Ground" in communication. I guess one would need to use optocouplers or an isolated DC:DC converter |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
@kinsi55 Previously you wrote that you connected the buck converter between B+ and P-. Later you write that you checked the connection between GND and B- and found that they were linked. Did you also measure a link between P- and GND? The fact that you now see a different connectivity could just mean this is the result of the destroyed chip. BTW, did you connect your P- to the earth ground of your house (which you should absolutely do)? JK chose to expose the full VBAT on the GPS plug, probably because they wanted more flexibility to use the power as needed in different external modules. Their RS485 module comes with an isolated DC converter and an isolated RS485 driver. If you want to power your ESP though a battery powered DC converter you probably should use the same approach and convert your DC from this port. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
same question. have powered the d1 with dc dc converter. B+ and P- , but if turn off from bms discharge , the d1 still remain powered whit ground from rs485 connector. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Regarding powering of the ESP module, why dont we use a buck converter DC-3.3V (VCC) from the B+ and B- of the battery pack to avoid turning off of the JK-BMS. Put the converter and the ESP module in a safe box outside nearby the JK-BMS. Also use a relay to trigger the BMS starting up when needed using VCC wired to B- and GND to P-. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Ok I found the answer to this question myself: When you power the ESP from the Battery output (After the BMS), absolutely dont connect the GND, otherwise the coprocessor for handling RS485 (And I guess the LCD too seeing as I cannot start / turn off the BMS with the included button any more) will die a quick death (Sizable spark when connecting, for a reason that I dont fully understand).
Luckily it can still be started with the old "jumpstart" method and seems to otherwise function fine. oh well, I guess I wanted to use BLE anyways (I didnt)
Edit: I'm starting to even doubt that this would work without connecting GND as the tx pin would of course get pulled to the "Ground" in communicati…