Long story short, my galaxy note 10.1 stopped charging because I used a dodgy cheap cable. I've tried different cables, replacing the battery and flashing the stock firmware and kernel with no luck. It will not charge. The cables definitely work, as I flashed the stock rom over USB to my PC. It just won't charge the battery.
It gets the 5v from the USB port but none of that ever gets to the battery. (checked with multimeter)
Now I thought it would be a shame to let a great device die due to such a small problem. My current solution would be to combine some Li-Ion charging IC that could operate over USB input voltages with (perhaps) a balancing IC as the battery is 2-cell Li-Ion.
If it's significant the battery has 5 wires exiting the battery to the device, 2 red, 2 black and one blue.
I have no idea what the blue one does.
Due to my severely limited knowledge of electronics i'm not sure if the balancing IC is really necessary. To be specific I opened one of the batteries and found one of these inside:
MP24AG: http://eng.it-m.co.kr/cnt/prod/tep_5l/MP24AG.pdf
From what I can understand it provides current and voltage protection, but will it also balance the cells?
If so could I get away with a simple single cell linear IC such as: http://cds.linear.com/docs/en/datasheet/405442xf.pdf
Or would something more like this still be required? http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/bq24123.pdf
Does the second one (TI-bq24123) handle the cell balancing by itself?
I'm new to this forum but have an ongoing passion for electronics so I hope to be here for a while. Currently studying software engineering and like to have a couple of side projects going.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Nas
It gets the 5v from the USB port but none of that ever gets to the battery. (checked with multimeter)
Now I thought it would be a shame to let a great device die due to such a small problem. My current solution would be to combine some Li-Ion charging IC that could operate over USB input voltages with (perhaps) a balancing IC as the battery is 2-cell Li-Ion.
If it's significant the battery has 5 wires exiting the battery to the device, 2 red, 2 black and one blue.
I have no idea what the blue one does.
Due to my severely limited knowledge of electronics i'm not sure if the balancing IC is really necessary. To be specific I opened one of the batteries and found one of these inside:
MP24AG: http://eng.it-m.co.kr/cnt/prod/tep_5l/MP24AG.pdf
From what I can understand it provides current and voltage protection, but will it also balance the cells?
If so could I get away with a simple single cell linear IC such as: http://cds.linear.com/docs/en/datasheet/405442xf.pdf
Or would something more like this still be required? http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/bq24123.pdf
Does the second one (TI-bq24123) handle the cell balancing by itself?
I'm new to this forum but have an ongoing passion for electronics so I hope to be here for a while. Currently studying software engineering and like to have a couple of side projects going.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
Regards,
Nas