| ??? 10/01/07 18:58 Read: times |
#145204 - there's a difference between a fake and a fix Responding to: ???'s previous message |
Erik Malund said:
The first thing that the majority of responders pointed out was that there was no "RESET IC." However, it turned out that the problem, if there even was one, aside from failure to read the datasheets, was improper coding.
How many other examples of such utter foolishness would surface if people actually investigated the causes of their "problems" rather than assuming that they're this or that and the using the "scattergun" approach to fix them? Doesn't anyone ever perform rigorous failure mode and effects analysis? 1) you seem to suggest that it is the job of unpaid volunteers to "actually investigate the causes". If that is the case I totally disagree, form such a source all you should expect is 'suggestions'. If I sm mistaken in taking the two paragraphs as a whole and you, in effect, are saying that 'people' should dig deep before posting and list all found facts, I do, of course, agree. No, but they should remain silent if they haven't got a solution. If they want to "guess" then they should label their pontifications as guesses. 2) adding a supervisor would fix or identify as software the problem.
3) 'fixing the RC reset (somone suggester a reversal of R and C) would NOT 'fix' a reset problem, just greatly diminsh it. Reversing the R and C would hold the MCU in reset. Erik Not one of the "problems" about which I've read on this forum has been firmly linked to the RC reset. I don't believe the RC reset is the ideal, but, so far, nobody has shown a sequence of signals that doesn't fit the nominal behavior, nor has anyone shown in any reasonable way that, whatever the problem was, it had been shown to be gone. Now, I've mentioned that Vcc is often suspect, and that nobody has been willing to put forth an example in which there was a proper rise and fall time on Vcc, yet there was a "RESET" problem. In fact, I doubt anyone has gone to any trouble at all to track down the real trouble when one of these situations occurred. I would certainly not assume that, when a problem is no longer readily apparent, it has been repaired. RE |



