Can the Pi get damaged by plugging in a device with too high of a current.. i.e. amps..?
Or will it simply just not run, and then you unplug it without causing damage?
Thanks
If USB >1.2A then the device will stop working but the RPi should not be affected.kingneil wrote:Can the Pi get damaged by plugging in a device with too high of a current.. i.e. amps..?
Or will it simply just not run, and then you unplug it without causing damage?
Thanks
Only the first few thousand Pi 1Bs had polyfuses specifically to protect the USB ports. They were 140mA per port.HawaiianPi wrote:It likely will not run. I believe there is a poly-fuse protecting the USB ports as well.

However some HDD disk caddies "cheat" by using the (infamous) 'Y' lead which presumes that when the "upper arms" of the 'Y' are plugged into two USB ports it will be able to draw up to 500mA "per arm". In my experience that's only (just about) true for laptop/netbook ports and, for virtually all of the powered USB hubs I've investigated, albeit low-to-medium cost ones, all of the ports were connected in parallel and there appeared to be no per port or overall current limit other than that provided(?) by the hub PSU (ie. such hubs failed to meet the full USB specs., which, AFAICT, are not an ISO or equivalent "standard" and so not "enforceable"**)W. H. Heydt wrote:No USB 2.0 device should be looking for more than 500mA. If USB 2.0 device wants more than that (or a USB 3.0 device wants more than 900mA) there is something seriously wrong with the device.
I have an external DVD burner that uses a "Y" cable. At least in theory, that would still conform to the 500mA per port.FTrevorGowen wrote:However some HDD disk caddies "cheat" by using the (infamous) 'Y' lead which presumes that when the "upper arms" of the 'Y' are plugged into two USB ports it will be able to draw up to 500mA "per arm". In my experience that's only (just about) true for laptop/netbook ports and, for virtually all of the powered USB hubs I've investigated, albeit low-to-medium cost ones, all of the ports were connected in parallel and there appeared to be no per port or overall current limit other than that provided(?) by the hub PSU (ie. such hubs failed to meet the full USB specs., which, AFAICT, are not an ISO or equivalent "standard" and so not "enforceable"**)W. H. Heydt wrote:No USB 2.0 device should be looking for more than 500mA. If USB 2.0 device wants more than that (or a USB 3.0 device wants more than 900mA) there is something seriously wrong with the device.
Trev.
** in the country of manufacture and/or import?
A Galaxy Note 7 might draw over 1amp from USB when plugged in. I think it's charging the battery or something. Right now I've got a Pi 2B plugged into the USB port of a 3B. While I'm not sure how that's going to work out under load, I'm not expecting any sort of explosion.W. H. Heydt wrote:No USB 2.0 device should be looking for more than 500mA. If USB 2.0 device wants more than that (or a USB 3.0 device wants more than 900mA) there is something seriously wrong with the device.

Similar to this one perhaps (supplied with a "Woolworths" sold laptop, something like a decade ago):W. H. Heydt wrote:I have an external DVD burner that uses a "Y" cable. At least in theory, that would still conform to the 500mA per port.FTrevorGowen wrote: ...
However some HDD disk caddies "cheat" by using the (infamous) 'Y' lead which presumes that when the "upper arms" of the 'Y' are plugged into two USB ports it will be able to draw up to 500mA "per arm". In my experience that's only (just about) true for laptop/netbook ports and, for virtually all of the powered USB hubs I've investigated, albeit low-to-medium cost ones, all of the ports were connected in parallel and there appeared to be no per port or overall current limit other than that provided(?) by the hub PSU (ie. such hubs failed to meet the full USB specs., which, AFAICT, are not an ISO or equivalent "standard" and so not "enforceable"**)
Trev.
** in the country of manufacture and/or import?
Similar, and, yes, I use with a good quality powered hub (when I started, SBCs weren't handling 1+A on the USB ports). It's one of these: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/contro ... details&Q= and you can still get 'em. (The link is just the first convenient one. I haven't ordered from that vendor since before ordering on line was a thing.)FTrevorGowen wrote:Similar to this one perhaps (supplied with a "Woolworths" sold laptop, something like a decade ago):W. H. Heydt wrote: I have an external DVD burner that uses a "Y" cable. At least in theory, that would still conform to the 500mA per port.
http://www.cpmspectrepi.uk/raspberry_pi ... vices.html
IIRC, I did get it to work, via a powered hub with a good PSU, with one of my older Pi's (pre-B+), but I think I only used it in read mode.
Trev.