PSP Shutoff/Standby (no power button)
Moderator: cheriff
PSP Shutoff/Standby (no power button)
On top of the psp to the left and the right of the usb port are 2 screw holes
the holes have a flipper/button inside them if you press with with something and open the umd drive you can see the flipper extending to the pcb. I pressed my flippers in with a paperclip one side of the paperclip slipped in pretty far and the psp shutoff or went into standby
You think this is caused a short of some kind making it shutoff?
the holes have a flipper/button inside them if you press with with something and open the umd drive you can see the flipper extending to the pcb. I pressed my flippers in with a paperclip one side of the paperclip slipped in pretty far and the psp shutoff or went into standby
You think this is caused a short of some kind making it shutoff?
thats not just a theory thats what its for. i have seen the camera attachment at pacific mall and it does in fact hold the camera from falling off.gorim wrote:My theory is that those holes are intended to allow USB devices to be "snapped" on top of the PSP, giving them a more solid attachment. Things like cameras, gps, etc...
Sticking anything inside is a bad move. You could really mess up your PSP that way.
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Actually...
Aside from the screw holes, there are two little holes NEXT to the usb port. these are not for attaching anything, but possibly for expanding the variety of attachments(not EVERY device can use just usb). If you look down directly at them, they look gold. As a connector would...
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This is possible. One connector is GND, as gorim already discovered. Looks like the other connector is connected to something on the circuit board, which looks like a step-up voltage converter, because there are the typical elements, like a big coil (big for SMD), capacitors and a small IC. There are another coil near the USB port, with the same IC (at least the same size), which may be used to generate the 5V for the USB port. Looks like both voltage outputs can be switched to tri-state by software. Any idea, which function I can use for it?wulf wrote:when I was reading my manual for metal gear ac!d, it said they were "dc out"
There is a camera for the PSP:gorim wrote:Well, it was stated that the PSP's USB port is likely a slave. So, any peripheral attachment may need power going to it first, before it can even negotiate with the PSP. Just a guess...
http://www.gadgetmadness.com/archives/2 ... essory.php
so I think the PSP USB port can be a master, too, because I don't think that it makes sense that the camera is the master and gets the power from the additional pins, only for feeding it back to a slave PSP USB port :-)
The idea isn't that the master feeds the power back to the psp.
The idea is that something must power the master to begin with, and the master can't get the power from the USB slave because the master must have some other source of power first just in order to function and communicate.
That, in theory, is where those extra power pins come in handy...
The idea is that something must power the master to begin with, and the master can't get the power from the USB slave because the master must have some other source of power first just in order to function and communicate.
That, in theory, is where those extra power pins come in handy...
Maybe you are right. Looks like the Vbus signal is not connected, at least I couldn't measure any connection. I don't know much about USB, but perhaps the reason is that Sony wants to prevent, that a user plugs in a PSP, which is in master mode, into a PC.gorim wrote:The idea is that something must power the master to begin with, and the master can't get the power from the USB slave because the master must have some other source of power first just in order to function and communicate.