RDTech UM series
Status | planned |
---|---|
Source code | [1] |
Connectivity | serial over Bluetooth |
Features | measures USB devices; voltage, amperage, wattage, resistance, capacity, temperature, voltage over USB data lines (charging mode), color display (26x26mm, 128x128px) |
Website | rdtech.aliexpress.com |
What is it?
A ~$13 USB load meter; it measures various properties for USB devices including their voltage, amperage, wattage, resistance, capacity, temperature, data line voltage, and charging mode. It can track up to 11 groups of mAh/mWh capacity data, one of which is ephemeral (and disappears after replugging the device), nine of which are persistent until cleared, and one of which whose recording is only activated above a certain current threshold (and which can be recorded in parallel with any of the other 10 data groups). It also allows graphing the amperage and voltage over time, on the device's display itself, as well as rotating the display contents into any orientation.
Unlike most devices of this type, this one communicates through serial-over-Bluetooth; the manufacturer provides apps (for Android and Windows, downloads including device documentation here), but not protocol documentation nor source code.
Note that this is specifically about the UM24C - the UM24 is the version *without* Bluetooth communication, although it's unclear whether the serial pads are still exposed and functional on that model. On the C model, the Bluetooth board is a separate layer (using an off-the-shelf serial-to-Bluetooth module) that connects to the serial pads using pogo pins.
The manufacturer has indicated that the firmware is not designed to be upgradeable and doesn't provide updates; nevertheless, the SWIM pin for the on-board STM8 chip is exposed, as are the other necessary pins for STM8 debugging. It's unclear whether the chip will allow eg. dumping, though.
The load meter can be connected either by plugging it in directly using its USB male plug end, or by connecting it using a cable and the micro-USB port on top. These are functionally equivalent; in both cases, both power and data are passed through and measured in the same way. I've not observed any difference in measurements between these two modes of operation.
It's unclear whether measurement of data lines is accurate enough to theoretically be used as a logic analyzer, but given the strange stability of the values during testing (unlike the voltage on the power lines) and the low-end STM8 chip, I suspect it's not.
[TODO: Abstract introduction, as most of the above information also applies to the UM25C and UM34C, but list their differences.]
Protocol
1-byte commands are sent to the device, and in the case of 0xf0, the device responds with a 130-byte data dump of the current device status. All other commands return no acknowledgement.
Each device (UM24C, UM25C, UM34C) has a similar command and response format, but the commands and responses vary slightly by device type. These variations are documented below. Unfortunately this means you will need to know what type of device you are communicating with to take full advantage of it.
Commands to send
Multiple commands may be sent at once; e.g. you could set the recording threshold to 0.28 A and rotate the screen by sending 0xccf2 immediately. An exception appears to be requesting the data dump; it doesn't seem to return the 130-byte response unless you wait a bit (approximately 0.2 seconds) after sending other commands.
Device | Byte | Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xf0 | device control | Request new data dump; this triggers a 130-byte response |
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xf1 | device control | Go to next screen |
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xf2 | device control | Rotate screen |
UM24C | 0xf3 | device control | Switch to next data group |
UM25C/UM34C | 0xf3 | device control | Go to the previous screen |
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xf4 | device control | Clear data group |
UM25C/UM34C | 0xa0 - 0xa9 | device control | Set the selected data group (0-9) |
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xb0 - 0xce | configuration | Set recording threshold to a value between 0.00 and 0.30 A (inclusive); add the value after the decimal point to 0xb0 (0.00 is 0xb0, 0.30 is 0xce) |
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xd0 - 0xd5 | configuration | Set device backlight level between 0 and 5 (inclusive); 0 is dim, 5 is full brightness |
UM24C/UM25C/UM34C | 0xe0 - 0xe9 | configuration | Set screen timeout ("screensaver") between 0 and 9 minutes (inclusive), where 0 disables the screensaver |
Response format
All byte offsets are in decimal, and inclusive. All values are big-endian and unsigned.
Offset | Length | Type | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 2 | marker | Start marker (always 0x0963) |
2 | 2 | measurement | Voltage - UM25C: millivolts (divide by 1000 to get V), UM24C/UM34C: centivolts (divide by 100 to get V) |
4 | 2 | measurement | Amperage - UM25C tenth-milliamps (divide by 10000 to get A), UM24C/UM34C: milliamps (divide by 1000 to get A) |
6 | 4 | measurement | Wattage (in mW, divide by 1000 to get W) |
10 | 2 | measurement | Temperature (in Celsius) |
12 | 2 | measurement | Temperature (in Fahrenheit) |
14 | 2 | configuration | Currently selected data group, zero-indexed |
16 | 80 | measurement | Array of 10 main capacity data groups (where the first one, group 0, is the ephemeral one) -- for each data group: 4 bytes mAh, 4 bytes mWh |
96 | 2 | measurement | USB data line voltage (positive) in centivolts (divide by 100 to get V) |
98 | 2 | measurement | USB data line voltage (negative) in centivolts (divide by 100 to get V) |
100 | 2 | measurement | Charging mode index, see below |
102 | 4 | measurement | mAh from threshold-based recording |
106 | 4 | measurement | mWh from threshold-based recording |
110 | 2 | configuration | Currently configured threshold for recording (in centiamps, divide by 100 to get A) |
112 | 4 | measurement | Duration of threshold recording, in cumulative seconds |
116 | 2 | configuration | Threshold recording active (1 if recording, 0 if not) |
118 | 2 | configuration | Current screen timeout setting, in minutes (0-9, 0 is no screen timeout) |
120 | 2 | configuration | Current backlight setting (0-5, 0 is dim, 5 is full brightness) |
122 | 4 | measurement | Resistance in deci-ohms (divide by 10 to get ohms) |
126 | 2 | configuration | Current screen (zero-indexed, same order as on device) |
128 | 2 | marker | Stop marker (always 0xfff1) |
Charging modes
Not all devices support detection of all listed charging modes, but the index between devices is consistent (e.g. index 1 will always be QC2).
Index | Display | Meaning |
---|---|---|
0 | UNKNOWN | Unknown, or normal (non-custom mode) |
1 | QC2 | Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0 |
2 | QC3 | Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 |
3 | APP2.4A | Apple, max 2.4 Amp |
4 | APP2.1A | Apple, max 2.1 Amp |
5 | APP1.0A | Apple, max 1.0 Amp |
6 | APP0.5A | Apple, max 0.5 Amp |
7 | DCP1.5A | Dedicated Charging Port, max 1.5 Amp (D+ to D- short) |
8 | SAMSUNG | Samsung (Adaptive Fast Charging?) |
Unknown response fields
Bytes 0+1 and 128+129 are not entirely known yet. They were believed to be device-specific start/stop markers, but some variations have been observed.
On UM24C, all observed units seem to be 0x0963/0xfff1 so far.
On UM25C, 0x0963/0xfff1 and 0x09c9/0xfff1 have been observed on two different units, but they do not appear to change over time on the specific units themselves.
On UM34C, all observed units so far have 0x0d4c as the first two bytes, but the last two bytes vary each time the device is polled. The values drift up and down over time, but will change completely after a device reset. For example:
2019-02-09 16:55:35,150 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x79cd 2019-02-09 16:55:47,837 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x75f8 2019-02-09 16:55:49,031 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x78c3 2019-02-09 16:56:08,855 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x7bd9 [reset] 2019-02-09 16:58:01,091 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x2c2d 2019-02-09 16:58:52,247 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x19e5 2019-02-09 16:59:10,683 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x19e5 2019-02-09 16:59:29,816 DEBUG: Start: 0x0d4c, end: 0x18ea
Board pictures
UM24C
Not great pictures, but hopefully they'll be useful.