Thermal sensors: Difference between revisions

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The PS2 has a thermal sensor IC in proximity to the EE (or EE+GS, depending on the revision).
The PS2 has a thermal sensor IC in proximity to the EE (or EE+GS, depending on the revision).


On consoles with a Dragon [[MechaCon]] (SCPH-5XXXX and later), the thermal sensor is connected to the MechaCon and the temperature can be read from software. On earlier consoles, the thermal sensor is connected to the [[SysCon]] and the temperature can (currently) not be read from software. GH-001 and GH-003 use a simple thermostat instead of a temperature sensor.
On consoles with a Dragon [[MechaCon]] (SCPH-500XX and later), the thermal sensor is connected to the MechaCon and the temperature can be read from software. On earlier consoles, the thermal sensor is connected to the [[SysCon]] and the temperature can (currently) not be read from software. GH-001 and GH-003 use a simple thermostat instead of a temperature sensor.


== Texas Instruments LM56 ==
== Texas Instruments LM56 ==

Latest revision as of 03:05, 28 March 2024

Overview[edit | edit source]

The PS2 has a thermal sensor IC in proximity to the EE (or EE+GS, depending on the revision).

On consoles with a Dragon MechaCon (SCPH-500XX and later), the thermal sensor is connected to the MechaCon and the temperature can be read from software. On earlier consoles, the thermal sensor is connected to the SysCon and the temperature can (currently) not be read from software. GH-001 and GH-003 use a simple thermostat instead of a temperature sensor.

Texas Instruments LM56[edit | edit source]

Thermostat, 2 digital outputs for 2 configurable temperature thresholds, used in conjunction with NJM062V op-amp

Used on GH-001 and GH-003

Texas Instruments LM74[edit | edit source]

SPI/Microwire temperature sensor, 13 bit, 8-pin SOIC-8

Used on GH-004, GH-005, GH-006, GH-007, GH-008, GH-010, GH-012, GH-013, GH-014

Texas Instruments LM70[edit | edit source]

SPI/Microwire temperature sensor, 11 bit, 8-pin VSSOP-8

Used on GH-015, GH-016, GH-017, GH-019, GH-022

Texas Instruments LM71[edit | edit source]

SPI/Microwire temperature sensor, 14 bit, 5-pin SOT-23, SMD-code: T16C. Some boards that use the LM71 also have alternate solder pads and wiring for a LM20.

Used on GH-023, GH-026, GH-029, GH-032, GH-035, GH-036, GH-037, GH-040, GH-041

Texas Instruments LM20[edit | edit source]

Analog output temperature sensor, 5-pin SOT-323/SC-70, SMD-code: T2B. Analog output connected to Dragon-MechaCon, which probably has an internal ADC for this. Some boards that use the LM20 also have alternate solder pads and wiring for a LM71.

Used on GH-051, GH-052, GH-061, GH-062 (also likely on GH-070, GH-071, GH-072, but unconfirmed)

Seiko S-58LM20A[edit | edit source]

Analog output temperature sensor, 4-pin SC-82AB, SMD-code: DRE. Analog output connected to Dragon-MechaCon, which probably has an internal ADC for this. Drop-in replacement for Texas Instruments LM20 that can be mounted on the same footprint with 1 pin less (which is NC on Texas Instruments LM20).

Used on GH-072 (also likely on GH-070, GH-071, but unconfirmed)

PS2 hardware in PS3[edit | edit source]

COK-001 has unpopulated pads for a thermal sensor next to EE+GS. COK-002 doesn't have any temperature monitoring capabilities next to GS.