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Is my calculator dead?
08-18-2016, 07:45 AM (This post was last modified: 08-18-2016 07:50 AM by matthiaspaul.)
Post: #2
RE: Is my calculator dead?
(08-18-2016 05:35 AM)Strontium Wrote:  The only thing that I can think of being wrong is the fact I accidentally charged it using a Samsung "fast charger" instead of a standard USB wall plug.
Don't worry, this can be ruled out. The whole point of using USB for power is to standardize on the power supply.

Technically, there is no such thing as a "USB charger" - they are actually just USB power supplies. It is always the target device containing the battery which contains the charging circuitry and which determines the charging current.

The external supply will just provide (more or less) stabilized 5V power. There are several ways how to "communicate" the maximum current the supply can provide to the USB device, some are standardized, others proprietary, some are dumb, some use active protocols, and not all methods are understood by all devices, but no matter how you combine them, the supply never has control over the actual current the device will (try) to draw from the supply.
If the communication fails, this will cause a standard-conformant device to draw not more than 100 mA even if the supply could provide much more - the consequence will be slow charging, but not damage. In the worst case, a non-standard USB device would attempt to draw more current from the supply than the supply is able to deliver; this will result in the power supply to be overloaded. A good supply will go into "overload shutdown" then until the error condition has been removed, a not so good supply will have a fuse burning, and a really bad supply (which would not be conformant with any basic electrical standards and which therefore would be illegal to sell) would catch fire by being overloaded. However, from the perspective of the USB device, the consequence of trying to draw more current from the supply than allowed under the circumstances would be, that the supply voltage will drop or be cut off. In no case will the device be damaged by plugging in a "too powerful" USB supply. If the device fails with a "too powerful" supply plugged in, the fault and the reason for this can be found in the device, not in the supply.

So, to sum it up, it is impossible that you did something wrong by using a different external USB supply.

Quote:It's also been suggested that my calculator may have been bricked by OS 10077, however, I have not updated my calculator since I got it and I am fairly sure that version of the OS has never been on it.
Since you didn't wrote, when you got your calculator, it is impossible for us to know if it could have been shipped with firmware 10077 already or not.

Greetings,

Matthias


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Messages In This Thread
Is my calculator dead? - Strontium - 08-18-2016, 05:35 AM
RE: Is my calculator dead? - matthiaspaul - 08-18-2016 07:45 AM
RE: Is my calculator dead? - Kevin Ouellet - 08-18-2016, 06:43 PM
RE: Is my calculator dead? - Tim Wessman - 08-18-2016, 04:25 PM



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