outdated: Gosund EP2 Tasmota flashing #10350
Replies: 74 comments 268 replies
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Thanks Elmar Anything that should be updated there ? |
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Hi barbudor, many thanks for the link :-). I didn't know it => would have saved me quite some time in measuring the pins ;-) ;-) ;-). I'm not perfectly familiar with the templates structure. Just checked, my EP2 shows: I've tested the one from the link as well: Both are working pretty much the same (as far as I can tell, I'm still working my way into the tasmota universe ;-)). LED is blue when on, Power measuring shows same values, ... thanks again for the link |
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Thanks for the detailed explanation, I'll give it a try as soon as I managed to open that beast. I'm struggling on that part... |
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Using a carpenters knife and a well dosed amount of force, you can actually open these without alot of destruction. mine is nearly intact after cracking it open with this method |
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This is not a criticism of your project, just additional funny information! |
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well, then i was in luck i guess, but flashing is kinda hit or miss, first one flashed after several attempt, with the second one im trying with the same soldering and tasmotizer for 30min without luck right now, putty can open the serial tho and displays debug output on 115200 baud |
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mhmm that's interesting. My 6 sockets behaved all the same during flashing... Do you get a connection in tosmatizer or does it stuck at "connecting"? br |
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stange... I directly soldered the gpio0 pin to ground and then plugged the UART in... that gave me a constant blue LED and flashing worked great. Had no issues there... |
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Without the gpio0 grounded the ESP doesn't enter flash mode... maybe also try inverting your RX and TX. Keep in mind RX of your ESP goes to TX of your UART and vice versa... |
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rx & tx is fine as i can check the factory firmwares debug output using putty, i just resoldered my connections and checking again, maybe some connection was not "good enough" ;) |
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My plugs were glued at the bottom, so I almost completely destroyed one of them (see pic) but for garage use it will work. I'll visit my friend at work. He has a turning lathe and that will do the job correctly. @estvulpes Thanks for measuring the distance to the bottom of the insert! Reassembling with some hot glue turns into a milky white and I think that's it for me. |
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Hello everyone, Does anyone have a tip for me. 7x switch on does not work. Thanks and greetings |
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Thanks for the answer. You a nice 2nd Advent |
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I also sent an email to the support and when they replied |
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Hi, I also flashed my EP2 devices right now to Tasmota and used the template from there. |
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Hello, I measured the connections, if GPIO0 is pin1, then PIN 25 of the espressif (U0RXD) is connected to PIN2 (just next to the GPIO0 soldering) and PIN 26 of the espressif is connected to pin 4. So flashing using these larger contacts should be possible. However, I have not managed to flash, yet. Can someone please confirm? Am I right? |
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Hey guys, I semi-bricked my 1 out of 4 Gosund EP2. Probably because I used the "another device option" on the first time. Now the green light flashed once very shortly when plugging it in. The only thing the plug is capable now is switching powern on when pushing the button. Best regards, |
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Plug into a power strip with a switch. |
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Ok so i'm starting to hate these plugs. Yea.. so basically i have one serial flashed ok, one ota bricked open, one ota bricked closed and another with gosund firmware and also closed :D |
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Out of curiosity, does anyone know why it's not possible to flash on version 1.0.4? I mean, upgrading OTA is possible, otherwise they could not install 1.0.6. Does it then use another installation method, or signed/encrypted binaries? If so, why does it work with 1.0.6, did they reduce the security or use another upgrade method there? |
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--- NO TASMOTA FOR GOSUND EP2 ANYMORE ??? --- Tried to upgrade/downgrade Gosund EP2 via the support email ([email protected]). The answers:Thank you for your email. and second:
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Thanks for this write-up. A minor clarification on your wording " To get COM access you need to solder on GND (black), VCC (red), RX (yellow) and TX (green). I measured these pins according to the ESP8285 spec ". So, the yellow wire makes a connection to the RX of the ESP8266 chip and the TX of the USB programmer, the green wire between the TX of the ESP8266 and the RX of the USB programmer. |
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Hi, I cannot say for sure (because I did not open the gosund and sent it back already) but my interpretation was, there is really different chip inside. That would mean also manual flashing by opening it would not be possible.
I agree it is a pity, as I could get gosund for a much better price than pre-flashed tasmota like nous a1t ...but what does it help? The nous a1t btw. worked like a charm.
Am 28. August 2023 16:57:16 MESZ schrieb sfromis ***@***.***>:
…If you have the hardware, you could check the vendor via getting the MAC and looking it up. If not "Espressif", the MCU is not Tasmota-compatible.
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Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
#10350 (reply in thread)
You are receiving this because you were mentioned.
Message ID: ***@***.***>
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Hi, Your request (---) has been updated. To add additional comments, reply to this email. Witch socket EP2 RTL oder AR - whtas the differnence & how can i find out |
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Hello I need your help. At which points do I have to solder to flash Tasmota? |
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Hi all! What command should I use to reset the counters? |
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Hi there, just in case someone struggles (like I did) with the latest gosund “EP2” and flashing tasmota…
Just before Christmas I ordered two of these smart plugs from gosund and I didn’t really looked at the version ;-). So here we are having two EP2s with "no" possibility to disassembly them (EP2 housings are glued and not screwed) and no OTA seems to work…
Since it’s Jan. 1st and don’t want to wait to send them back and order different ones I started to take a closer look.
(1) Biggest challenge is to get the transparent part of the white main housing (they are glued together). Carefully “opening” the glued area you end up with something that looks like this (compared to the original one). Doesn’t look that much great but hey, these plugs shall work and not shine ;-):
(2) Next step is unscrewing (yes there are screws ;-)) these 3 screws (red) and soldering of the ground connection (blue):
(3) If that’s done, you can take the ground connection away and unscrew the plug from its housing:
(4) Next you need little force (I use a drilling vice to apply the force evenly an parallel) to push the plug out of its housing:
(5) You end up with something looking like this:
(6) Next you need to carefully disconnect the Wi-Fi antenna from the chip pcb:
(7) You can now unclip the antenna carrier and you end up with the bare plug itself. The entire smart plug disassembled looks like this:
(8) Now to the actual flashing procedure. To get COM access you need to solder on GND (black), VCC (red), RX (yellow) and TX (green). I measured these pins according to the ESP8285 spec and luckily there are solder pads on the chip pcb :-):
(9) You also need to ground this pin to enter flash mode:
(10) Connecting it to the USB-UART programmer looks like this (in my case):
(11) For flashing I used the Tasmotizer 1.2:
(12) After flashing, you need to configure the module. It turned out to work with these configs:
(13) Everything reassembled and glued back together (just for safety), I end up with the gosund EP2 working as I wanted it (keep in mind that working with AC can be very dangerous and you should never plug AC in without the housing on!):
So, all in all the process it pretty straight forward. It took my like 1h for the 1st plug and about 10 minutes for the second (figuring out the UART connection took the most time). But I have to say that there are plugs being WAY easier to flash ;-).
Best regards
Elmar
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