Xenon Flashes Can Make New Raspberry Pi 2 Freeze and Reboot
An anonymous reader writes Unfortunately for Raspberry Pi 2 owners who are trying to photograph their devices, ... the Raspberry Pi 2 has been found to be Xenon flash sensitive. Any camera with a Xenon flash aimed at the device is causing the device to freeze for a few seconds before rebooting. The forum thread about the bug is an interesting play-by-play of how the problem was narrowed down.
Hence, even though it looks like the power supply is failing, it could simply be the power supply is turning off due to overcurrent.
No. Covering the regulator chip solves the problem. That means that it is the culprit.
If that was the case, putting a blob of material on the power supply chip (and nothing else) wouldn't remedy the problem – but it does (see the last post on this page.)
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This thread shows a quick experiment which confirms it's directly the light which is the cause, not the EM pulse from the capacitor discharge in the flashgun. Chip U16 apparently, which is part of the power regulator.
A 100mW red laser pointer aimed at U16 also triggers it.
Unless you want to claim diode lasers now emit x-rays and low rise time EM pulses... it's light sensitive.
And inspecting U16 closely, it's no surprise. You're not looking at a plastic package but the laser marked underside of a bare die.
Bingo, that's about what I was going to say. U16 is flip-chip bonded to the circuit board, meaning the naked die is exposed on the bottom. Even if it had a plastic or ceramic cover, it might still be photo sensitive to light getting underneath it. If the underside of the die (flipped, so topside) is really exposed, it basically becomes a silicium solar cell.
TFA found out precisely which chip it is (U16), covering it solves the problem.
The ENIAC Demo Competition
There's plenty of cases of electronics misbehaving due to exposure to strong light. Glass enveloped diodes (such as signal diodes) can be notorious for it, as can the black plastic encased units if the light is strong enough.
Small bare CoG (Chip on Glass) LCD panels will crash / hang when you use the flash on the camera taking photos of them in operation ( same reason, the controller die is exposed ).
It's not EM-pulse or xrays causing the problem, just good ole silicon junctions being exposed to intense light :)
That's because you're hearing the pulsed transmission of a TDMA radio technology.
D-AMPS (AT&T pre-Cingular), iDEN (Nextel), and any GSM 2G (up to EDGE) all use/used TDMA to share the frequency, so they're all potential causes of this.
These days you won't hear it much because D-AMPS and iDEN are both dead and most GSM phones will be attempting to connect on 3G UMTS (which uses CDMA) or 4G LTE (OFDMA).
DECT cordless phones are heavily derived from GSM so it's possible that they may be able to cause the same behavior, but due to their significantly reduced range requirements the power probably isn't there. I haven't heard it from my DECT phones.
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