Hello Again Sir,

Seth here. Okay, I think I was not able to mux my pins b/c of the Cape 
being attached. Someone said that these Capes were already to work w/ 
EEPROM.

This is probably why I could not mux P9.30. P9.30 is Relay3. 

I will try again w/ your instruction. I tried so many routes, I may have 
gotten a bit agitated w/ myself.

...

I will be reading over your ideas soon. I only missed the captions of 
photos you put together.

Seth

P.S. It may be easier to test a motor on my side of things but I will 
figure out how to wire this automotive LED soon. It may take some soldering 
but I will get to it.

On Sunday, March 29, 2020 at 10:47:26 PM UTC-5, Dennis Bieber wrote:
>
>         o/~ talking to myself in public o/~ 
>
> On Sun, 29 Mar 2020 23:24:46 -0400, in 
> gmane.comp.hardware.beagleboard.user 
> Dennis Lee Bieber <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
>
> >On Sun, 29 Mar 2020 17:53:51 -0700 (PDT), in 
> >gmane.comp.hardware.beagleboard.user Mala Dies 
> ><functt-re5jqeeqqe8avxtiumwx3w-xmd5yjdbdmrexy1tmh2...@public.gmane.org 
> <javascript:>> wrote: 
> > 
>
> >>It seems I cannot mux my pins. 
> >> 
> > 
>
> NOTE: I haven't actually run this with anything connected to the GPIO... 
>
> -=-=-=- 
> debian@beaglebone:~$ cat gpio_test.py 
> #!/usr/bin/env python3 
>
> import Adafruit_BBIO.GPIO as GPIO 
> import time 
>
> PIN = "P9_30" 
>
> GPIO.setup(PIN, GPIO.OUT) 
> GPIO.output(PIN, GPIO.LOW) 
>
> for t in range(10): 
>     print("on %s" % t) 
>     GPIO.output(PIN, GPIO.HIGH) 
>     time.sleep(t) 
>     print("off %s" % (10 - t)) 
>     GPIO.output(PIN, GPIO.LOW) 
>     time.sleep(10 - t) 
>
> GPIO.cleanup() 
>
> debian@beaglebone:~$ 
> -=-=-=- 
>
>         That should toggle the GPIO in a 10 second cycle, starting with a 
> short 
> on, long off, and ending with a long on, short off... 100 seconds total. 
>
> debian@beaglebone:~$ python3 gpio_test.py 
> on 0 
> off 10 
> on 1 
> off 9 
> on 2 
> off 8 
> on 3 
> off 7 
> on 4 
> off 6 
> on 5 
> off 5 
> on 6 
> off 4 
> on 7 
>
>
>
> -- 
> Dennis L Bieber 
>
>
On Sunday, March 29, 2020 at 10:47:26 PM UTC-5, Dennis Bieber wrote:
>
>         o/~ talking to myself in public o/~ 
>
> On Sun, 29 Mar 2020 23:24:46 -0400, in 
> gmane.comp.hardware.beagleboard.user 
> Dennis Lee Bieber <[email protected] 
> <javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
>
> >On Sun, 29 Mar 2020 17:53:51 -0700 (PDT), in 
> >gmane.comp.hardware.beagleboard.user Mala Dies 
> ><functt-re5jqeeqqe8avxtiumwx3w-xmd5yjdbdmrexy1tmh2...@public.gmane.org 
> <javascript:>> wrote: 
> > 
>
> >>It seems I cannot mux my pins. 
> >> 
> > 
>
> NOTE: I haven't actually run this with anything connected to the GPIO... 
>
> -=-=-=- 
> debian@beaglebone:~$ cat gpio_test.py 
> #!/usr/bin/env python3 
>
> import Adafruit_BBIO.GPIO as GPIO 
> import time 
>
> PIN = "P9_30" 
>
> GPIO.setup(PIN, GPIO.OUT) 
> GPIO.output(PIN, GPIO.LOW) 
>
> for t in range(10): 
>     print("on %s" % t) 
>     GPIO.output(PIN, GPIO.HIGH) 
>     time.sleep(t) 
>     print("off %s" % (10 - t)) 
>     GPIO.output(PIN, GPIO.LOW) 
>     time.sleep(10 - t) 
>
> GPIO.cleanup() 
>
> debian@beaglebone:~$ 
> -=-=-=- 
>
>         That should toggle the GPIO in a 10 second cycle, starting with a 
> short 
> on, long off, and ending with a long on, short off... 100 seconds total. 
>
> debian@beaglebone:~$ python3 gpio_test.py 
> on 0 
> off 10 
> on 1 
> off 9 
> on 2 
> off 8 
> on 3 
> off 7 
> on 4 
> off 6 
> on 5 
> off 5 
> on 6 
> off 4 
> on 7 
>
>
>
> -- 
> Dennis L Bieber 
>
>

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