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Associate II
May 12, 2025
Question

X-NUCLEO-LPM01A output drops from 3.3V to ~1.5V when powering Arduino UNO

  • May 12, 2025
  • 3 replies
  • 2547 views

Hi STM Community,

I'm trying to use the X-NUCLEO-LPM01A board to measure the current consumption of an Arduino UNO during simple blinking states.

Setup Description:

  • Power output is taken from CN14 (OUT and GND pins) on the LPM01A.

  • These lines are directly connected to the Arduino UNO's 3.3V pin and GND.

  • The LPM01A is powered via USB and in normal measurement mode.

Problem:

  • Before connecting Arduino UNO, LPM01A display shows a stable 3.3V (or sometimes 3.27V).

  • After connecting the Arduino UNO, the voltage drops to ~1.5V, and the Arduino does not power on.

Working Comparison:

Previously, I tested the same setup using STM32 NUCLEO-C031C6 as the target board.

  • I removed SB2 and SB23 bridges as per the reference manual.

  • In that setup, everything worked as expectedvoltage remained stable, and current measurements were valid.

My Questions:

  1. Why does the voltage drop when powering the Arduino UNO?

  2. Is it not recommended to supply power directly to the Arduino UNO's 3.3V pin using LPM01A?

Thanks in advance for your help!

 

3 replies

TDK
Super User
May 12, 2025

It should work fine. What pins are you using? Should be using pins 1 and 3 of CN14. Perhaps show a picture of your setup.

 

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UdayAuthor
Associate II
May 12, 2025

Thank you for the response.

Yes, as specified in the user manual, I’m using pin 1 (GND) and pin 3 (VOUT) of CN14 on the X-NUCLEO-LPM01A board.

UdayAuthor
Associate II
May 12, 2025

CN14_PIN.png

Andrew Neil
Super User
May 13, 2025

@Uday wrote:

Is it not recommended to supply power directly to the Arduino UNO's 3.3V pin using LPM01A?


Surely, that pin is an output - not an input?

What happens if you try to apply 3.3V to that pin from a standard power supply, and measure it with a standard meter - does that work?

 

PS:

Also, the Arduino UNO is a 5V system - it's not designed to run on 3.3V.

 

Is it an Arduino UNO R3? or R4? or what??

R3 Schematic: https://content.arduino.cc/assets/UNO-TH_Rev3e_sch.pdf

R4 Schematic: https://docs.arduino.cc/resources/schematics/ABX00080-schematics.pdf

A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked.A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work.
Andrew Neil
Super User
May 13, 2025

@Andrew Neil wrote:


Surely, that pin is an output - not an input?


@Uday  Indeed it is - as the User Manual shows:

AndrewNeil_0-1747125170503.png

https://docs.arduino.cc/resources/datasheets/A000066-datasheet.pdf#page=8

If you just apply power to the 3V3 pin, you are just driving the output of the LDO - so there is no power to the MCU or the rest of the system!

 

PS:

Similarly for the R4:

AndrewNeil_1-1747125415486.png

https://docs.arduino.cc/resources/datasheets/ABX00080-datasheet.pdf#page=12

A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked.A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work.
Andrew Neil
Super User
May 13, 2025

@Uday I don't think that ST have anything which will supply 5V - you'll have to look elsewhere.

eg,

https://www.microchip.com/en-us/development-tool/atpowerdebugger

https://www.nordicsemi.com/Products/Development-hardware/Power-Profiler-Kit-2

No doubt others, too.

 

@STTwo-32 This has always struck me as a major omission on ST's part - that's why I have the other two, mentioned above!

A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked.A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work.