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    Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

    Pi not starting at first try

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    pi3
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    • P
      P71Ryan
      last edited by

      Pi Model or other hardware: 3
      Power Supply used: 2.4 A USB
      RetroPie Version Used: 4.1
      Built From: Pre made SD Image on RetroPie website
      USB Devices connected: Button/Joystick controller
      Controller used: Keyboard
      Error messages received: None
      How to replicate the problem: Powering down system, attempting to turn power back on.

      Hello all, I recently built my brother a tabletop arcade setup using RetroPi. It works great and I'm very pleased overall. My biggest issue is when I turn the system off I have to manually pull out the USB power cord and plug it back in for some strange reason. I attempted to search for an answer in the forums but couldn't find anyone with a similar issue.

      In list form,
      I power on the systems main power
      Monitor, Pi (LED) shows, speakers and buttons turn on.
      The monitor shows no HDMI 1 (only 1) signal message.
      I unplug the Pi power and plug it back in.
      The Pi and RetroPi boot and work flawlessly.

      I believe this more so to be a Pi issue but was wondering if anyone could help me out please.

      Thank you.

      mituM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • mituM
        mitu Global Moderator @P71Ryan
        last edited by

        @P71Ryan said in Pi not starting at first try:

        I believe this more so to be a Pi issue but was wondering if anyone could help me out please.

        That's how a Raspberry PI works - it doesn't have a power switch. If you stop it (shutdown), then in order to start it again you have to re-insert again the microHDMI power. There are other methods so you don't have to do that - either a toggle switch on the power line or a shutdown/startup dedicated switch connected to the the PI's GPIO pins (I'm sure there may be other options).

        NOTE: I advise you to not yank the power in order to turn the PI off, you risk corrupting your SD card - use the EmulationStation menu to shut it down.

        Also, why are you using an old version like 4.1 instead of using a current (4.5.x) release ?

        P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • P
          P71Ryan @mitu
          last edited by

          @mitu I'll double check the version, it should be the latest.

          I'm shutting it down but the outlet it gets plugged into losses power completely when I turn off the mast switch. So when I give it back power should't it automatically turn back on? It currently comes back on, meaning the led turns on, but doesn't display anything.

          cyperghostC quicksilverQ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • cyperghostC
            cyperghost @P71Ryan
            last edited by

            @P71Ryan said in Pi not starting at first try:

            @mitu I'll double check the version, it should be the latest.

            .... So when I give it back power should't it automatically turn back on?

            Usually, yes!

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • quicksilverQ
              quicksilver @P71Ryan
              last edited by quicksilver

              @P71Ryan you need to add hdmi_force_hotplug=1
              to your /boot/config.txt

              Sounds like your pi is booting up before your monitor and it's not detecting the HDMI display so it's switching to composite video output. The above command prevents this from happening.

              Alternatively you can make sure your monitor is powered before turning on your pi.

              P 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • P
                P71Ryan @quicksilver
                last edited by

                @quicksilver Thank you very much, after removing the # in the config, it boots perfectly now.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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