@As_Electronic_Project So making a type C OTG in this way will make the phone a host? I'm confused because there is other videos that say the resistor needs to be soldered to VBUS and then wired to pin 5 in order to run as host. But in this video the resistor is soldered to the ground. Can you shed light on this?
Yes, making a Type-C OTG cable this way will make the phone act as a host. The confusion arises because there are different methods for achieving this. The method in the article involves soldering the resistor to the ground, which is a valid approach. Other methods, like soldering the resistor to VBUS and pin 5, are also used to set the phone in host mode. Both methods can work, depending on the specific Type-C configuration being used. www.aselectronicproject.com/2023/12/how-to-make-type-c-otg-cable-at-home.html
I have a type c plug but on the board it only has 6 pins. I'm this type of layout, which pin is the CC pin? I know in a 12 pin layout it is pin 5. Can you shed any light on this? Also, I made an otg wire just as you did in this video. However, when I plugged in my USB drive, my phone has the USB drive as the controller or host. I tried going into my phone settings to switch to the phone as the host but it wouldn't allow it. What is your thoughts?@@As_Electronic_Project
@@As_Electronic_Project So making a type C OTG in this way will make the phone a host? I'm confused because there is other videos that say the resistor needs to be soldered to VBUS and then wired to pin 5 in order to run as host. But in this video the resistor is soldered to the ground. Can you shed light on this?
Amazing it's simple
Good
🎉
I have only 510 resistor can it be?
I couldn't find exactly 5.1k ohm resistor but i have 75k ohm😅 and one at 33-68 ohm which ones should i use
@As_Electronic_Project So making a type C OTG in this way will make the phone a host? I'm confused because there is other videos that say the resistor needs to be soldered to VBUS and then wired to pin 5 in order to run as host. But in this video the resistor is soldered to the ground. Can you shed light on this?
Yes, making a Type-C OTG cable this way will make the phone act as a host. The confusion arises because there are different methods for achieving this. The method in the article involves soldering the resistor to the ground, which is a valid approach. Other methods, like soldering the resistor to VBUS and pin 5, are also used to set the phone in host mode. Both methods can work, depending on the specific Type-C configuration being used. www.aselectronicproject.com/2023/12/how-to-make-type-c-otg-cable-at-home.html
I have a type c plug but on the board it only has 6 pins. I'm this type of layout, which pin is the CC pin? I know in a 12 pin layout it is pin 5. Can you shed any light on this?
Also, I made an otg wire just as you did in this video. However, when I plugged in my USB drive, my phone has the USB drive as the controller or host. I tried going into my phone settings to switch to the phone as the host but it wouldn't allow it. What is your thoughts?@@As_Electronic_Project
You will need the original type c jack
@@As_Electronic_Project original? Not sure what you mean
@@Injustice.Exposed mean 12 pin loaded jack
Y no se calienta
apa bisa tanpa resistor
कदापि नहीं
@@As_Electronic_Project So making a type C OTG in this way will make the phone a host? I'm confused because there is other videos that say the resistor needs to be soldered to VBUS and then wired to pin 5 in order to run as host. But in this video the resistor is soldered to the ground. Can you shed light on this?