Broken microcontroller: what to do next
Posted: 12 Feb 2019, 17:50
I'm opening this thread to get some advice (or at least receive some comfort).
>1 year ago I bought a cheap DIY keyboard kit but I only assembled it recently. The PCB had the microcontroller, resistors and so already soldered, so I just threw some switches and LEDs at it. The resulting board was working beautifully .. for 2 days. Out of the blue the number row got stuck: all LEDs on and keys not working at all.
After resetting several times the keyboard (the firmware support a combination of keys to do so) I was not getting any progress. LEDs were working "fine" (in some the backlight modes, such as "wave", they were working fine), but keys were pretty much dead, so I proceeded to check the internals.
After tinkering a bit with my multimeter I saw that the broken row was receiving roughly 0.7V instead of the 4.9 ~ 5V that other functional rows were getting. The microcontroller is kind of small but I managed to check the continuity between the pin and the attached row (continuity seemed alright), and the voltage at the MCU pin was also 0.7 sad Volts.
My knowledge about microcontrollers is pretty rudimentary, but I'd say the pin attached to the number row just died and I cannot do much about it. The microcontroller is a fairly mysterious Vision VS11K06A. There are several cheap Chinese mounting it, but the technical info about it on the Internet is virtually 0. Moreover is quite small, so even if I got a spare MCU, it would be tricky for me to replace it.
Can I declare the keyboard as "dead" or am I missing something I could still test? Thanks
>1 year ago I bought a cheap DIY keyboard kit but I only assembled it recently. The PCB had the microcontroller, resistors and so already soldered, so I just threw some switches and LEDs at it. The resulting board was working beautifully .. for 2 days. Out of the blue the number row got stuck: all LEDs on and keys not working at all.
After resetting several times the keyboard (the firmware support a combination of keys to do so) I was not getting any progress. LEDs were working "fine" (in some the backlight modes, such as "wave", they were working fine), but keys were pretty much dead, so I proceeded to check the internals.
After tinkering a bit with my multimeter I saw that the broken row was receiving roughly 0.7V instead of the 4.9 ~ 5V that other functional rows were getting. The microcontroller is kind of small but I managed to check the continuity between the pin and the attached row (continuity seemed alright), and the voltage at the MCU pin was also 0.7 sad Volts.
My knowledge about microcontrollers is pretty rudimentary, but I'd say the pin attached to the number row just died and I cannot do much about it. The microcontroller is a fairly mysterious Vision VS11K06A. There are several cheap Chinese mounting it, but the technical info about it on the Internet is virtually 0. Moreover is quite small, so even if I got a spare MCU, it would be tricky for me to replace it.
Can I declare the keyboard as "dead" or am I missing something I could still test? Thanks
