TiN Posted May 29, 2015 Posted May 29, 2015 (edited) Well, since EVBOT having transition state currently, here's alternative solution for you, EPOWER people. Since controller accepts controls from PMBus, attached Raspberry Pi can talk to EPOWER and adjust voltages. Voltage range is 0.6 to 2.0V Tested with Model B Rev2.0 (not plus), but should work with any Pi. Details in this article for those who interested. Try it, and let me know if any problem Also old-school hardware-only way with trimpot resistor is covered too. Edited May 29, 2015 by TiN Quote
Crew Trouffman Posted July 13, 2015 Crew Posted July 13, 2015 Any chance to compile this to run on the Odroid XU3 ? Shared Source code ? Quote
Massman Posted July 15, 2015 Posted July 15, 2015 Yes, this is a relatively basic i2c communication. You can also use EVC. Any chance to compile this to run on the Odroid XU3 ? Shared Source code ? WiringPI is available for hardkernel: https://github.com/hardkernel/wiringPi Quote
xxbassplayerxx Posted July 15, 2015 Posted July 15, 2015 I asked TiN the same thing over at KPC and he said it would be possible to do it but he cannot release NVidia's voltage tables for Arduino since they wouldn't be compiled in .exe form and would essentially be out in the open. Quote
TiN Posted July 15, 2015 Author Posted July 15, 2015 Btw, it's not nvidia's to be precisely correct And I dislike arduino stuff regardless Pure C FTW! Quote
RULE Posted July 15, 2015 Posted July 15, 2015 Hi Tin, is possible have a read out of the current? The CHL8318 should support this features, if i'm correct. Quote
SimoFLC Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 Hi,do i need EPower or i can use Raspberry straight to gpu? Quote
buildzoid Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 Hi,do i need EPower or i can use Raspberry straight to gpu? This whole thing is about using the RPi to control the E-power. What do you want to hook the RPi to? Quote
SimoFLC Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 thanks for answer, problem is find evbot, i tought was alternative way, but seems too difficoult for me Quote
TiN Posted December 26, 2015 Author Posted December 26, 2015 Here I showed example of using RPI directly to VGA to control voltages. So yes, you can directly control VGA, if you know what to send to control voltages/settings on I2C. Quote
K404 Posted January 6, 2016 Posted January 6, 2016 Here I showed example of using RPI directly to VGA to control voltages.So yes, you can directly control VGA, if you know what to send to control voltages/settings on I2C. Where there is a TiN, there is a way! Quote
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