Hi, Totally agree, one more additional point. If you loose your clock (crystal breaks or something like it), the micro will freeze with the outputs in the respective states. An external watchdog or an internal oscillator for the watchdog can get the outputs into reset state, which is input and they would not drive some high current power transistors for an extended period of time. Overall the watchdog is good enough as "software watchdog" but still reseting it or setting it to a very high value is a little to easy if you need high reliability. Cheers, Bob --- In lpc2000@yahoogroups.com, "lp2000c" <lp2000c@e...> wrote: > > It depends what your reliability requirements are. > > The internal watchdog is disabled at reset, and the WDTC register can > be written to at any time (writing a large value to this register > effectively disable the watchdog by making the timeout period in the > minutes range), so if you need a reliable watchdog you should > consider adding an external one. > > > --- In lpc2000@yahoogroups.com, "smt5211" <from-yahoo@d...> wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > I was viewing the schematic for a LPC2106 based design (see > > http://www.mct.net/product/dil2106/schema.pdf). It included a > NPC303 > > external watchdog chip. Is this needed if we are not running our > > design off batteries? > > > > Regards, > > Shane.
Message
Re: Does the LPC2106 need an external watchdog chip?
2005-01-07 by lpc2100_fan
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.