Thanks for reporting this. I must confess that we're quite puzzled - we even tried the GS cam again ourselves just to double check it wasn't horribly broken, but it seemed OK. Here are a few things you might be able to try:
* Maybe try downloading a fresh copy of Raspberry Pi OS onto a spare SD card. Don't download or configure anything else, just let it do its usual updates ("sudo apt update" and "sudo apt full-upgrade" to be sure). Does rpicam-hello work?
* Do you have any other models of camera that you could try? Do those work, or do something similarly strange?
* I don't suppose you can lay your hands on another Pi 5? It might be worth knowing if it's just this Pi 5, or a general problem.
* It doesn't sound like power or transmission problems, but can you say anything about the power supply you've got and the length of your cables?
We also noticed your comment about the Pi 3 and the "horizontal lines". Can you say anything more about that, it doesn't seem to us like something that we would expect. Thanks!
* Maybe try downloading a fresh copy of Raspberry Pi OS onto a spare SD card. Don't download or configure anything else, just let it do its usual updates ("sudo apt update" and "sudo apt full-upgrade" to be sure). Does rpicam-hello work?
* Do you have any other models of camera that you could try? Do those work, or do something similarly strange?
* I don't suppose you can lay your hands on another Pi 5? It might be worth knowing if it's just this Pi 5, or a general problem.
* It doesn't sound like power or transmission problems, but can you say anything about the power supply you've got and the length of your cables?
We also noticed your comment about the Pi 3 and the "horizontal lines". Can you say anything more about that, it doesn't seem to us like something that we would expect. Thanks!
Statistics: Posted by therealdavidp — Wed Jul 03, 2024 10:14 am