From 11:00 PM CST Friday, Feb 14th - 6:30 PM CST Saturday, Feb 15th, ni.com will undergo system upgrades that may result in temporary service interruption.

We appreciate your patience as we improve our online experience.

PXI

cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

PXIe-8381 connection problem

HI,

 

I use a PXIe-8381 module to connect the PXIe-1082 chassis through a Linux PC. I installed NILinux2023Q2DeviceDrivers on AlmaLinux 9.1 (binary compatible to RHEL9).

The whole development setup works fine and I can develop software using nidaqmx successfully.

 

But when I carried my PC and tested the software on another testbench chassis, I found that I fail to connect. The front panel LED of the PXIe-8381 module which is inside the testbench chassis was always solid amber.

 

I was quite confused. The part number of PCIe-8381 is the same (153097C-01L), why one module worked while another did not?

 

If I switch the PXIe-8381 module from the testbench chassis to my development chassis, the problem still exists. So I guess the problem source is the PXIe-8381, but what should I do to fix it?

 

The PC motherboard is ASUS Prime Z270-A, BIOS is updated to the latest one.

The Bus Number Range checked by  MXIeBusDetect.exe is  [0, fe].

The MXI-Express BIOS Compatibility software does not support Linux. I did not try it.

 

Thanks in advance for your help.

0 Kudos
Message 1 of 2
(864 Views)

Hi Stopper3046,

 

That's a tricky problem. The short answer is "RMA it" -- NI can figure out what's wrong.

 

It's probably out of warranty, though, so here are a couple things you could look at:

  • compare the two boards, look for damaged/missing components (it happens)
  • verify the LEDs on the card are active (there's are some "breathing" LEDs when in a chassis)
  • swap cables if you have a 2nd one
  • look for bent backplane pins (they're fairly easy to spot)

The LED is amber which means the power rails are good, and dragging your PC over eliminates a bunch of possibilities. Most of the debugging LEDs (on the board inside the chassis) have meaning, so if you spot a difference when plugged into the PC (and powered) it could be helpful.

 

- Robert

 

 

0 Kudos
Message 2 of 2
(784 Views)