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Feb 26 at 13:15 vote accept 8 minikhh
Feb 19 at 23:49 comment added 8 minikhh I took the line separately from Vbus and made a 5V output separately through a regulator such as mic5205_5.0
Feb 19 at 9:44 comment added Justme From where does the 5V for the CC pull-ups come from? Directly from VBUS? Also, an USB Type-C receptacle is not allowed to have VBUS being supplied until a connection to device is detected. So that is not USB compliant and will damage something if you accidentally plug in a wrong cable between two devices you did not intend to.
Feb 19 at 5:01 comment added 8 minikhh Devices with 15w charging support are targeted. It's a general-purpose 15w fast-charger supported quick charge\
Feb 19 at 4:51 comment added Ale..chenski What kind of device are you trying to charge with your modification?
Feb 19 at 2:38 answer added Kuba hasn't forgotten Monica timeline score: 0
Feb 19 at 2:35 comment added 8 minikhh Even if I connect pull-up resistance to cc pin and charge 9v using fp6601q ic, does it drop to 5v if there is no additional pd negotiation?
Feb 19 at 2:29 comment added CommunityBot Please clarify your specific problem or provide additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it's hard to tell exactly what you're asking.
Feb 19 at 2:28 comment added Colin Without negotiation, how would the PD know what your desired voltage level is? USB D-/D+ are important for this reason. You saw the results on what happens without proper negotiations, the voltage dropped to a "default" state. Use the USB spec as guidance on making a proper solution.
Feb 19 at 2:18 history edited 8 minikhh CC BY-SA 4.0
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S Feb 19 at 2:14 review First questions
Feb 19 at 2:29
S Feb 19 at 2:14 history asked 8 minikhh CC BY-SA 4.0