![]() In doing so, I realized that my MOSI was wired to the ground of the module and the ground to the MOSI pin. When I saw that, I went ahead and started to measure voltages (I have just watched a couple of Dave's video recently, and he says 'thou shall check voltages'). I tried what you told me, and tweaked my oscilloscope to get better results for the picture, and while doing boosting the intensity of my faded out CRT, I saw a bunch of noise on the CS, MOSI and MISO pins on the board that I couldn't see before due to the faint image. Do these HIGH/LOWs show on your oscilloscope - both on the pin and on the ICSP header? Detach your SD reader and try the following code that will just toggle pins 50-53 HIGH and LOW every 100ms. 50 - MISO - Green - Channel 0 51 - MOSI - White - Channel 1 52 - CLOCK - Yellow - Channel 2 53 - ENABLE - Blue - Channel 3 ICSP1 - Pin1 - MISO1 - Green - Channel 4 ICSP1 - Pin5 - MOSI1 - White - Channel 5 I appreciate this is a "It works on my machine" but the Logic Analyzer shows the same data when connected to MOSI1 and MISO1 pins (middle of the board) It shows nothing when I connect to the MOSI2 and MISO2 pins which are on the second ICSP2 header by the Digital 13 pin. ![]() ![]() Quote from: Avacee on March 27, 2017, 10:34:03 pm And you are definitely using the ICSP1 header in the middle of the board between the chip and reset button? I have the same micro-SD Card Reader so knocked it up on the breadboard with the Logic Analyzer - See photos The Logic Analyzer shows the start of the SPI communication from SD.begin().
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