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There are currently 3 versions of the top Power board, but they all work exactly the same at their core. The only real difference is the IR LED control line.1 - 1537 (first version) has IR LEDs.2 - 1697 (second version) has no IR LEDs, but kept the same board layout so that IR control line does nothing now.3 - 1697 (Elite) also has no IR LEDs, but that control line is now the 1-2 switch. The LED will not light up if the bottom board is not present. I could blather on exactly why, but trust me, it will not. The only way that it could, is if you happen to get the Guide button pad a little bit offset when pushing it down, and then it will make contact on the Cathode side of the LED grounding it, which will make the LED light up, but that's the only way that can happen with no bottom board attached.Now, for the thing not lighting up when you have the bottom board in place, you'll need to check the soldering connections there first, as it should. Either connected to a PC USB port or some phone charger, you should get some LED flashing after pressing the Guide button down. Post some good pics of the board if you can and I'll have a look see.
Both of those board versions are the same, and are a match for the MCU board that you are using, but any will really work with any other board, though I wouldn't use an Elite Power board on any of the older MCU boards, but everything you have there is fine.The MCU board looks fine, so if it worked before you started working on the top board, then it should still be alright.The controller B top board, if the LED polarity is correct, Q3 goes to the Cathode, then R5 goes to the Anode, and that soldering on the LED looks questionable from that pic. You'll want to make sure that wire is not touching the USB connector as it will short to ground. On that eBay top board, the LED doesn't look at all like it has been soldered on there. It may feel stuck on there, but the flux alone can do that, so it may only have one side half soldered, then the other side insulated from the pad by the flux under it. That doesn't look to me at all like it's been done properly and if that's how you received it I'd let the seller know about it, if nothing else he could have put the LED on straight and not broken J2, unless you did that. I can't make out the polarity from the pic, so if that is correct, Anode + on the left, Cathode - on the right, I'd just take the iron and a very small amount of solder to it and make sure it's actually on there good. Then test the thing out. Just from what I can see there, it only looks like soldering issues to me, but if you're 100% sure that's all good, or have redone them all and are sure, then you can try this. First plug up one of the Top boards (no bottom) with a USB cable to some power source, PC or whatever, and set your meter for measuring DC Volts. Flip the board over and place the black lead on the USB connector shield, or any ground spot, then put the Red lead on the top of R5, you should get 3.5v. If not, check on the bottom of R5, if you have 3.5v there, test the top again and make sure. Don't be rough, as you don't want to rip R5 off there, but make sure the lead does gently pierce the solder as sometimes crud can buildup over solder joints and can keep you from getting a good measurement, so you may only get 3.5v on one side from a false test, but as long as you get it on the top side of R5, then that's good and suggests there is an issue with the LED or it's connections, the soldering, polarity, traces or pads. If you have 3.5v on the bottom of R5 and not on the top, then R5 is bad. It is an 80ohms, 0402 SMT Resistor. If you have no 3.5v at all, then first try some other power source, a USB port on the PC, if there is still no 3.5v, then there is an issue with the regulators and that's a lot more than you'll probably be able to get into diagnosing there. Unplug the USB cable and set the meter to Ohms. Check R10, it should be around 1.5k (1500ohms).I have yet to see Q3 fail, as it's just an NPN Transistor, let alone 2 of them fail, so for now I'd leave that of the testing, but that there is everything in the LED circuit. You have 3.5v that is always on when the USB cable is connected. That goes thru R5 to keep the LED from frying. Then the signal for the LED comes thru R10 to Q3 turning it on, and it connects Ground to the LED Cathode and lights it up. If you have 3.5v on the top of R5, and if R10 is 1.5k, and if the LED connections are good, and if the LED is installed correctly, and it still doesn't work connected to the bottom board, then that MCU board is suspect.
If your meter is making the LEDs light up then the board can do it. The Resistor is in there as a current limiter, and you're not going to measure any voltage drop at it on an open circuit.That 1.91v and 1.95v is the measurement from both boards? If so then that sounds right, as you will measure a drop there because it's a semiconductor. Try this, just the top board again, plug up the USB cable and flip it over, take some piece of wire, few inches or so, and jumper the bottom of R5, to pin 2 of J2, the left side connector. Pin 2 is at the bottom right hand corner of J2 and is marked with a 2. You don't have to stick the wire inside the connector, and I don't recommend that in case something shorts, you can touch the lead on the board where it's soldered to the left of the 2 marking. What should happen is the LED comes on, if it doesn't turn on, then Q3 is bad. That will test 100% of the LED circuit from the control line to the power supply for it, which we already know is good at 3.52v, so if the LED comes on, then the bottom board might have some issue, or, there could be some other power issue up on that top board, as it's doing quite a few different things.
Yeah that's pin 2, I was looking on the board I have here versus your pics, but that's it. That mess under JJ6 on the other side of the MCU board is the RF module. It's power would have to be shorted out for it to keep the controller from turning on, and you'd almost have to do that on purpose as removing any of the parts on it isn't going to do that. I''s possible that some of the joints on J1, J2, J5 or J6 could ahve come loose, but you should be able to see that with a magnifying glass and moving them around a bit. So that pretty much confirms everything in the LED circuit and the LED is good. So after a look at the connectors, if you see nothing iffy, lets plug the boards together and start poking around. Plug the USB cable back up and check the voltages on TP7 and TP9. They are both on the right hand side, looking at the bottom of the MCU board. There are no official wired XB1 controllers. The wireless one works as a wired with the USB cable, but so far that's it. Any XB1 wired controller will be 3rd party and for sure not have anything even remotely compatible inside of it.
Have you not been pressing the Guide button after plugging it up? I mentioned that quite awhile back. Either way, long as they work now. The LB/RB are mounted to the Top board. Those Gray and Black wires are for the Trigger Rumble motors. Thanks but no worries, I was here working on some FPC design anyway, and your pics made up for it, versus some that I get for troubleshooting, which could be a PCB or Nessy for all I can make out.
O < dot on PCB 1 -- -- 8 2 -- -- 7 3 -- -- 6 4 -- -- 5
GROUND = 0vVOLTAGE = 10vGROUND ---/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\--- VOLTAGE ^ | | WIPER
0-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 < how it was0---1---2---3---4---5---6---7---8---9---10 < how it is with the added Resistors
GROUND = 0vVOLTAGE = 10vGROUND ---/\/\---/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\---/\/\--- VOLTAGE ^ | | WIPER