Piviul,You shorted something out. Past the Power Supply. related to Ground ( GND ).I would STRONGLY ADVISE to not PLAY at this. Do not DABBLE with Electronics Engineering.The mistakes you make could cost you your life.I would advise that you enter a Formal Program of Instruction in Applied Physics 1: Electronics Engineering.And if you want to " write your own ticket ".While in this Curriculum, Specialize in Computer Science, and Information Technology.I cannot stress enough.Untrained Personnel attempting to modify another Engineers Circuits should have Proper Training.( THE GOLDEN RULE OF ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING )Without Proper Training, you will have disaster after disaster.As it will be the steepest learning curve.AS ELECTRONICS WAS THE HARDEST SH*T IMAGINABLE TO LEARN.Every other Field of Physics was easy compared to AP1.Related to TPLINK GND. Ignore Google AI.Trying to help.-StealthModeOn Fri, Sep 20, 2024 at 2:37 AM Piviul <piviul@riminilug.it> wrote:On 9/20/24 08:04, Diego Zuccato wrote:
> Argh! Una delle poche cose da non fare mai.
Questa lezione l'ho imparata, il problema è che ce ne saranno tante
altre a venire... ma per fortuna ci sono i bacchettoni che mi stimolano
a resistere 😛!
Comunque non ci ho capito quasi nulla... come mai se inserivo il gnd
(direi che fosse indipendente indipendente dall'aver inserito o meno rx
e tx, forse però una provo con solo il GROUND non l'ho fatta) il router
non partiva o meglio, si accendeva la spia power e nulla più mentre
invece con rx e tx inseriti e senza il gnd il router sembrava partire
normalmente?
Piviul