So the last few months I have been messing around with getting the actual PCB populated with all of the components and such. Things did not go well. While I was trying to make the weird voltages I couldn't figure out why the correct voltages weren't coming out of the LT1945. Of course I thought the chip might be at fault, not my own incompetence. In the process of desoldering and replacing the chip I ripped up a few traces off the board. This is a 10-pin MSOP package....fixing this wasn't possible.
I found out what the issue was though. Shoulda just looked at the dang datasheet....
Why it didn't occur to me check for an enable pin this device. Lesson learned - read the dang datasheet.
Long story short. I had to desolder all of the components from one PCB to another PCB - thus destroying more components with tiny little legs in the process -_- . Below you can see the resulting carnage and product of my endeavours.
The Second PCB with all of the components transferred onto it
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The original pcb with all of the nasty desoldering carnage
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So after all this my conclusion is... Start a new PCB. There has been some development with ESP32 and e-ink interfacing so I don't think it makes much sense to keep battling a board that will be outdated before it is even working.
Within the next few weeks I will be starting a new PCB centered around the ESP32. It will be harder better faster stronger etc. Until then - check yah later.
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