RPi5 - power issues #3696
Replies: 12 comments 20 replies
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I don't know. Perhaps Google does, or a post on the Raspberry Pi forum? |
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What is the voltage at the Pi itself? In the past, if I have a long cable run, I'll up the voltage to the Pi (I was using a Pi 4) to something around 5.15v to account for V drop. |
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This might work. Pololu makes high quality stuff. I have one that I'm going to test with the Pi5. I have a Pi5 and a Pimoroni NVME base that should be here by the end of this week that I want to test with the D24V50F5. |
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I have found all the cheap power supplies quarky with tthe PI 5. I switched to a poe+ splitter with 5v type c out and havent had any problems since. I have an active cooler, nvme and ASI676mc running on it. If you dont have a poe switch, you could use a poe+ injector. |
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I also tried the POE hat for the PI5 and ran into throttling issues as well. |
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I had exactly the same issue but did solve it. The setup here is
I too used the 'cheap' buck converters and quite frankly the are rubbish ! ended up using this convertor which as worked fine |
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I also had pwr issues with my RaspPi 5 4MB, Pi Cam, dew heaters, exhaust fan setup. None of my existing 120v to DC 5 volt converters could hold 5.0V under load. Using a voltmeter and Pi "load testing" scripts I adjusted the output of my 12v power supply noted below. I did not run fan or heaters directly off Pi but they used the same power input. There are many stress testers out there; here is one This power supply is small w/ an adjustable pot that enables one to increase the voltage output until stable under load. One could use the stress test w/ pi in enclosure to make sure cooling is sufficient to prevent throttling as well. |
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Bugger |
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Just an update from me, got another buck converter but with a pot to adjust the output. Good stable output using a 19v old laptop psu and long cable BUT the pot is so sensitive that you just have to touch it and it whizzes up to 6v so too risky to use. Waiting to see how #Alex-developer gets on with the Pi Hut converter. |
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The 52Pi Raspberry Pi 5 power board works great, installed it and ran it last night, zero power issues or low voltage warnings. Highly recommend. |
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In closing this thread FYI I ended up using the https://wiki.52pi.com/index.php?title=EP-0225 board with an old laptop 19v power brick. This enabled me to have a 5m power cable. |
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I may be repeating something already posted but the RPi5 has a new power supply system unlike its predecessors. The "Certified" power bricks for the RPi5 are not the usual wall warts. They communicate with the new power circuits on the RPi5 in both directions. At Boot time, the RPi5 interrogates through the USB type C power connector to establish if the power brick is intelligent or not. By connecting a Buck-Boost converter to the RPi5 power connector, the RPi5 will boot without the annoying low power throttling status after booting by adjusting the power to 5.2 VDC or even higher. The Buck-Boost converter must be able to sustain 4 Amps (5 Amps is better) to prevent the RPi5 from throttling after boot time. |
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I guess there’s no simple answer to my issue but perhaps it may be a warning to others.
I went for the latest Pi5 8G.
I first connected it to a TalentCell @ 5v x 2A to test and it worked fine with a zwo cam.
I then got a cheap buck converter dropping 19v x 5A AC power block to its advertised 5v x 5A and it kept erroring with ‘low voltage’ and cutting out, now using the Pi HQ cam.
I then got the official Pi5 5A power block which worked fine until I added a 2m USB3.3 (100W) extension cable and it again it errored and cut out once after 24 hours.
I’m now wishing I’d gone for the Pi4 with its lower power requirements.
I note #3383 suggests POE which may be the only solution unless I source an even higher power block over 5A.
Unless there’s a way of reducing the power requirements of the Pi5 ?
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