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Guido
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I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?

EDIT: Thanks for the response guys. I did indeed diagnosethink I diagnosed my problem incorrectly. I'm using a cheap Chinese MIDI-adapter which I pried open, and it lacks an optocoupler!. I'm getting a decent MIDI adapter now. Thanks!

I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?

EDIT: Thanks for the response guys. I did indeed diagnose my problem incorrectly. I'm using a cheap Chinese MIDI-adapter which I pried open, and it lacks an optocoupler! I'm getting a decent MIDI adapter now. Thanks!

I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?

EDIT: Thanks for the response guys. I think I diagnosed my problem incorrectly. I'm using a cheap Chinese MIDI-adapter which I pried open, and it lacks an optocoupler. I'm getting a decent MIDI adapter now. Thanks!

added 216 characters in body
Source Link
Guido
  • 11
  • 2

I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?

EDIT: Thanks for the response guys. I did indeed diagnose my problem incorrectly. I'm using a cheap Chinese MIDI-adapter which I pried open, and it lacks an optocoupler! I'm getting a decent MIDI adapter now. Thanks!

I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?

I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?

EDIT: Thanks for the response guys. I did indeed diagnose my problem incorrectly. I'm using a cheap Chinese MIDI-adapter which I pried open, and it lacks an optocoupler! I'm getting a decent MIDI adapter now. Thanks!

Source Link
Guido
  • 11
  • 2

MIDI output circuit behaving incorrectly when not connecting with USB

I recreated this circuit to send MIDI notes to my MIDI-USB adapter to my computer. enter image description here

It works fine when the Arduino is powered via USB. When I power the Arduino Nano with 9v on Vin however, the output is gibberish. It just spams the input monitor on my computer with random midi commands. For testing I used this code:

    #include <MIDI.h>

    MIDI_CREATE_DEFAULT_INSTANCE();

    static const unsigned ledPin = 13;
    bool on = false;
    void setup()
    {
        pinMode(ledPin, OUTPUT);
        MIDI.begin(MIDI_CHANNEL_OFF);
    }

    void loop()
    {
        digitalWrite(ledPin, on);
        on = !on;
        MIDI.sendControlChange(12, 127, 1);
        delay(1000);
    }

The Arduino itself seems to be working fine when powered with 9v (note that I tested with both a wall power supply as well as a 9v battery) as the TX-led still flashes briefly and the built-in led also toggles nicely.

At first I blamed my power supply and/or my power supply, but both work fine on my MIDI-keyboard so I don't think they are to blame.

Worth mentioning: When the Arduino was powered by Vin, I also as a test plugged in the USB-cable in the Arduino, But only touched the connector on the USB-port on my computer. I then received the correct notes.

Because of this I think it is an issue with the grounding. What am I doing wrong?