Getting Help
You are welcome to open discussions about issues, or if you bought your Pinecil from an official store, use the Pinecil community chat for support. It is helpful to do some basic diagnostics first in case the issue is easily fixed.Issues with the soldering of the main MCU could cause many problems and should always be checked.
Common Issues
Tip Shorted Warning
Tip Shorted Warning
If you are powering up a device that supports tip resistance detection (TS101 and Pinecilv2), the firmware checks the readings of the raw tip resistance and sorts these into three “bins”:
8 ohm tips, 6.2 ohm tips, and tip-shorted. The tip resistance is used when negotiating USB-PD and in thermal calculations.The tip-shorted option is selected if your tip is measured to be abnormally small. This could indicate a failed driver mosfet or a failed tip.Troubleshooting Steps
- Remove your tip and manually measure and verify the tip’s resistance
- It should be 6-8 ohms (depending on tip type)
- When measuring resistances this small, some multimeters can struggle
- If you have access to a current limited bench power supply, try doing a 4-wire measurement by measuring the voltage drop on the tip while applying a known current (
R=V/I)
High Tip Temperature Reading When Cool
High Tip Temperature Reading When Cool
If you are finding the tip is reading high, the first fields to check in the Debug menu are
RTip and CHan.- RTip: Raw tip reading in μV; at cool this should be around 700-1000 for larger tips and ~1500 for smaller tips (TS80’s)
- CHan: Temperature of the temperature sensor on the PCB in degrees Celsius × 10 (e.g., 29°C ambient should read as 290)
RTip Out of Spec
RTip will over-read on bad contacts or no tip inserted.If RTip is overreading, you may have:- Partially stuck on main MOSFET
- Slow reacting main MOSFET driver transistor
- Damaged Op-Amp
- Poor soldering on the Op-Amp circuitry
- No tip inserted or tip that is not connecting correctly
CHan Out of Spec
CHan reading comes directly from the cold junction compensation temperature sensor. This is usually a TMP36 (Pinecil V1), or an NTC thermistor (MHP30, TS80P, Pinecil V2).If CHan is reading low:- Check the connection from the MCU to the handle temperature sensor
- Check the power pin connection on the TMP36
- Check pullup resistor on the NTC thermistor
- Check no bridged pins or weak shorts on the signal to nearby pins on MCU or temperature sensor
- Reflow/resolder the aforementioned components
- Check ground connections on the sensors
- Check no bridged pins or weak shorts on the signal to nearby pins on MCU or temperature sensor
- Reflow/resolder the aforementioned components
No Display or Dots on Display
No Display or Dots on Display
If when you power up your iron you get no display, the first test is to (carefully) attempt to heat the tip.
- Press the front button (
+/A) on your device and check if the tip heats up - If the tip does not heat up, try reflashing the firmware first in case it is corrupted
Main Failure Mode
The main failure mode of the OLED display module is usually poor soldering on the OLED display cable to the main PCB. As this is soldered by hand generally, it’s the most prone to failures.If you have a poor connection or a floating pin, you can end up with a state where the screen works sometimes and then freezes or only works on some power cycles. It might work on very old versions of IronOS but not the newest ones.Troubleshooting steps:- Try to reflow the pins for the OLED
- On 96x16 screens, carefully peel it back from the adhesive and reflow the solder on the pins
- Check the pull-up resistors on the SDA and SCL pins (the OLED runs on an I2C bus)
Replacing a Dead OLED
If after all checks the OLED is still blank, or pixels are barely visible, although the soldering iron itself is working (turning on, heating up, melting solder successfully), then most likely the OLED is dead. But it can be relatively easily replaced.Models likeTS100, TS80, and TS80P share the same OLED screen which can be bought online:- Find and buy a display with the following spec:
OLED 0.69 inch / 14 pins / 96 x 16 pixels / 9616TSWC / I2C IIC - Disassemble your soldering iron
- Desolder old OLED and solder back new one
- Assemble your soldering iron back
There are YouTube videos showing how to do this, like this one for TS100.
OLED technology has a well-known issue: sooner or later the brightness starts to “fade out” until completely off. Common recommendations to prolong lifetime are: reduce brightness and reduce frequent updates (disable animations). However, results vary - some users experience issues after just a few months, while others have no issues at all.
Tip Heats When Not in Heating Mode
Tip Heats When Not in Heating Mode
Most likely you have either a blown MOSFET or shorted pin.Troubleshooting steps:
- Check the MOSFET
- Check the driver transistor
Accelerometer Not Detected
Accelerometer Not Detected
Your iron may have a new accelerometer that is not supported yet (happens every year or so) OR there is a soldering issue with the accelerometer.Troubleshooting steps:
- Check if there’s a known issue on GitHub
- Try going back to an earlier firmware release to test if this is a new issue
- Try reflowing/resoldering the accelerometer
- If your iron is new, there’s a slim chance your accelerometer may be DOA and need replacement
This warning will only be shown the first few times until settings are reset.
Important Notes
Tip Resistance
The tip is important for the operation of your iron:
- T100 and Pinecil tips are around 8 ohms
- TS80(P) tips are around 4.5 ohms