This is only a preview of the March 1998 issue of Silicon Chip. You can view 43 of the 96 pages in the full issue, including the advertisments. For full access, purchase the issue for $10.00 or subscribe for access to the latest issues. Articles in this series:
Items relevant to "Sustain Unit For Electric Guitars":
Items relevant to "Multi-Purpose Fast Battery Charger; Pt.2":
Items relevant to "Command Control For Model Railways; Pt.3":
Items relevant to "PC-Controlled Liquid Crystal Display Board":
Articles in this series:
Articles in this series:
|
Build this multi-purpose
Fast Battery Charger
For tools, camcorders, R/C equipment & car batteries
Last month, we presented the circuit
and operating details for this charger.
This month, we conclude with the
construction details and parts list.
Pt.2: By JOHN CLARKE
The Multi-Purpose Fast Battery
Charger is housed in a plastic instru
ment case measuring 257 x 190 x
85mm. All the circuitry is mounted
on one PC board coded 14302981 and
measuring 121 x 173mm. Two versions
of the TEA1102 battery management
IC are being made, a 20-pin dual inline package (DIP) and a 20-pin surface
mount package. We have made pro
vision for the surface mount version
of the TEA1102 by means of a small
46 Silicon Chip
carrier PC board coded 14302982 and
measuring 29 x 16mm. We’ll talk more
about this aspect later on.
The power transformer (T1) is
mounted sideways on the rear metal
panel of the case, as shown in the
photographs. Note that the inte
gral
ribs and bushes within the case will
need to be removed in the area where
the transformer mounts.
The ribs can be removed with a
sharp chisel while the bushes are eas
ily cut out with a large, sharp drill bit.
The main PC board is secured with
self-tapping screws into the four bush
es under the corner mounting holes
in the PC board. Remove the other
integral bushes under the board with
a large drill.
The component layout for the main
PC board is shown in Fig.1.
Before you install any parts on the
PC board, it is wise to check it against
the pattern of Fig.5. There should not
be any shorts or breaks between tracks
or any undrilled holes. Fix any defects
before proceeding.
Then you can begin by installing
the PC stakes at the various external
wiring connection points on the PC
board. Next, install the wire links and
resistors and then the diodes and zener
diodes. Take care with their orienta
tion and be sure to put each type in
its correct place.
As already noted, the TEA1102 (IC1)
Fig.1: this component layout shows IC1 as a conventional dual in-line package but it may be supplied
as a surface mount package. In that case, you will need to use the carrier PC board at right.
may be supplied as a conventional
dual in-line package (DIP) which can
be soldered directly into the PC board
or it may be a surface mount type. If
you have the surface-mount type, you
will need to mount it on the carrier
board. This is coded 14302982 and
measures just 29 x 16mm. It is assem
bled as follows.
First, check the pattern for shorts
between the tracks and then pre-tin
the copper lands where the IC pins
will be placed. This done, insert and
solder the two 10-way pin headers
into the PC board so that the plastic
holders are on the opposite side to the
copper pattern.
Next, place the surface-mount IC
in position and, using a fine-tipped
soldering iron, apply heat to each pin
so that it melts the solder on the PC
land. Check that each pin is soldered
by measuring between the pin header
connection and the IC pin with a mul
timeter set to read Ohms. Check also
that there are no shorts between pins.
When the carrier board is complete,
March 1998 47
Resistor Colour Codes
❏
No.
❏ 1
❏ 3
❏ 1
❏ 3
❏ 1
❏ 1
❏ 4
❏ 2
❏ 2
❏ 1
❏ 1
❏ 1
❏ 2
❏ 1
❏ 1
❏ 4
❏ 2
❏ 1
❏ 1
❏ 1
❏ 1
Value
330kΩ
220kΩ
150kΩ
100kΩ
82kΩ
68kΩ
33kΩ
27kΩ
22kΩ
18kΩ
15kΩ
12kΩ
10kΩ
4.7kΩ
3.3kΩ
2.2kΩ
1kΩ
680Ω
470Ω
68Ω
10Ω
Fig.2: the main switching
inductor is bifilar wound, with
two strands of 1mm enamelled
copper wire.
it can be inserted into the main PC
board and soldered in position. Make
sure that the IC is oriented correct
ly. The remaining ICs can now be
installed, taking care to orient them
correctly, as shown in Fig.1.
The two power transistors and two
power diodes are mounted with their
metal flanges towards the edge of the
48 Silicon Chip
4-Band Code (1%)
orange orange yellow brown
red red yellow brown
brown green yellow brown
brown black yellow brown
grey red orange brown
blue grey orange brown
orange orange orange brown
red violet orange brown
red red orange brown
brown grey orange brown
brown green orange brown
brown red orange brown
brown black orange brown
yellow violet red brown
orange orange red brown
red red red brown
brown black red brown
blue grey brown brown
yellow violet brown brown
blue grey black brown
brown black black brown
PC board. Do not cut their leads short
because you will have to bend them to
enable the flanges to be mounted on
the rear panel for heatsinking; we’ll
come to that later.
You can install the capacitors next.
The electrolytic capacitors must be
oriented with the correct polarity ex
cept for the 3.3µF bipolar type which
can go in either way.
The five LEDs are installed so that
they stand with about 12mm of lead
length above the board. Later they will
be bent over to protrude through the
bezels in the front panel. Be sure that
they are oriented correctly.
Winding L1
L1, the main switching inductor, is
wound on a plastic transformer bobbin
which is then soldered into the main
board. Fig.2 shows how it is wound.
Two lengths of 1mm enamelled copper
wire are bifilar wound from one side
of the bobbin to the other.
You need to strip the enamel from
the ends of two lengths of 1mm wire
and then solder them to pins on the
one side of the transformer bobbin.
The actual pins used on each side of
5-Band Code (1%)
orange orange black orange brown
red red black orange brown
brown green black orange brown
brown black black orange brown
grey red black red brown
blue grey black red brown
orange orange black red brown
red violet black red brown
red red black red brown
brown grey black red brown
brown green black red brown
brown red black red brown
brown black black red brown
yellow violet black brown brown
orange orange black brown brown
red red black brown brown
brown black black brown brown
blue grey black black brown
yellow violet black black brown
blue grey black gold brown
brown black black gold brown
Capacitor Codes
❏
Value
IEC
❏ 0.1µF
100n
❏ 0.0018µF 1.8n
❏
820pF 820p
EIA
104
182
821
the bobbin are not important since
the pins on each side are connected
together by the PC pattern. Now bifilar
wind on 10 turns (ie, both lengths of
wire at the same time), with each turn
placed neatly on the bobbin Once
wound, terminate the wires onto the
pins on the opposite side of the for
mer. Again, the actual pins used are
not important and you will need to
ensure that the enamel is stripped off
the wire ends before soldering.
Insert one of the core halves in place
and secure it with a clip. Now place
the 1mm spacers on the two faces of
the inserted core and install the sec
ond core half in place and secure it
with a clip. You now have a finished
inductor and it can be soldered into
the main board either way around.
The large finned heatsink on the rear panel is necessary to keep the output
devices (Q1, Q2, D1 & D2) cool. Use cable ties to keep the wiring neat and tidy.
Rear panel hardware
Now insert the PC board into its
correct position in the case and mark
the centres for the power transistor and
diode mounting holes on the rear panel.
Remove the rear panel and drill out
these holes plus two holes for the cord
grip grommet and fuseholder in the
position shown on the wiring diagram.
Also 4mm holes are required for the
transformer mounting and the earth
termination plus the bridge rectifier
which mounts above D1.
Do not forget the holes to mount the
thermal switch THS1. Holes for the
transistors, diodes and rectifier must
be deburred with a larger drill to pre
vent punch-through of the insulating
washers and to ensure a flat contact to
the heatsink.
Fig.3: the power transistors and power diodes are mounted as shown
here. After mounting, use a multimeter to confirm that their metal tabs
are indeed isolated from the rear panel.
Place the heatsink against the rear
panel and mark the hole positions on
it for drilling. Note that you must line
up the heatsink so that the screws for
Q2, D1 and the rectifier pass through
the heatsink between the heatsink fins.
Drill out and deburr all the holes.
Attach the PC board to the case with
the supplied self-tapping screws. Ap
ply a smear of heatsink compound to
the flat face of the heatsink and secure
each of the transistors and diodes to
the rear panel and heatsink with a
screw, nut, insulating washer and in
sulating bush. Fig.3 shows the details.
If you use mica washers apply a
smear of heatsink compound to the
mating surfaces before assembly. The
silicone impregnated washers do not
require heatsink compound. Check
that the metal tabs of the devices
are indeed isolated from the case by
measuring the resistance with a mul
timeter. Apply a smear of heatsink
compound to the face of the rectifier
before securing it to the rear panel. It
is not necessary to insulate the rectifier
case from the rear panel.
Fit the AC power cord into its
cordgrip grommet and secure it into
March 1998 49
Fig.4: this diagram shows all the details of the wiring from the PC board to the front
and rear panels. Take care with the mains wiring and shroud all exposed mains
terminals with heatshrink tubing.
50 Silicon Chip
Fig.5: check your etched PC boards against these full-size artworks before
mounting any of the parts.
Below: the thermal cutout (THS1) is mounted on
the rear panel above Q1, Q2, D1 & D2, along with
the bridge rectifier and power transformer.
March 1998 51
Parts List
1 PC board, code 14302981,
121 x 173mm
1 PC board, code 14302982, 29
x 16mm (required for SMD
version of IC1)
1 front panel label, 244 x 75mm
1 plastic instrument case, 257 x
190 x 85mm
1 aluminium rear panel to suit
above case
1 heatsink, 109 x 75 x 33mm
(DSE H-3460 or equivalent)
1 18V 6A mains transformer (T1)
(DSE M2000 or equivalent)
1 ETD29/16/10 transformer
assembly with 3C85 cores (L1)
(Philips 2 x 4312 020 37502
cores, 1 x 4322 021 34381
bobbin, 2 x 4322 021 34371
clips)
1 NTC thermistor (DSE R1797)
(NTC1)
2 3AG panel mount safety fuse
holders (F1,F2)
1 630mA slow blow 3AG fuse
1 7A fast blow 3AG fuse
1 SPST neon-illuminated mains
rocker switch (S1)
1 SPDT centre-off toggle switch
(S2)
1 DPDT toggle switch (S3)
1 4P3W rotary switch (S4)
1 2P6W rotary switch (S5)
1 80°C thermal cutout (THS1)
1 momentary pushbutton switch
with normally open contacts
(S6)
1 black 4mm banana panel
socket
1 red 4mm banana panel socket
1 black 2mm micro banana
panel socket
1 red 2mm micro banana panel
socket
1 black 4mm banana plug
1 red 4mm banana plug
1 black 2mm micro banana plug
1 red 2mm micro banana plug
5 M4 screws x 10mm
the rear panel hole. Also, secure the
fuseholder and transformer with 4mm
screws, star washers and nuts. Attach
the earth wire (green/yellow stripe) to
the solder lug or crimp lug and secure
to the rear panel with a screw, star
washer and nut.
52 Silicon Chip
6 M4 nuts and star washers
4 M3 screws x 10mm and nuts
1 M3 screw x 25mm and nut
4 self-tapping screws to mount
PC board
4 insulating bushes for TO-220
and TO-218 packages
2 TO-218 insulating washers
2 TO-220 insulating washers
25 PC stakes
1 7.5A mains cord with 3-pin
plug
1 mains cordgrip grommet
2 1mm spacers, 10 x 5mm, to
gap L1
1 600mm length of red hookup
wire
1 600mm length of green
hookup wire
1 600mm length of blue hookup
wire
1 600mm length of yellow
hookup wire
1 600mm length of black hookup
wire
1 300mm length of red heavy
duty hookup wire
1 300mm length of black heavy
duty hookup wire
1 150mm length of 0.8mm tinned
copper wire
1 2m length of 1mm enamelled
copper wire
1 55mm length of 15mm
diameter heatshrink tubing
1 50mm length of 25mm
diameter heatshrink tubing
7 small cable ties
1 solder lug for earth terminal
2 10-way single in-line pin headers (if IC1 is surface mount)
5 5mm LED bezels
Semiconductors
1 TEA1102 or TEA1102T fast
charge controller (IC1)
1 4093 quad Schmitt NAND gate
(IC2)
1 4020 binary divider (IC3)
Front panel details
The front panel can now be drilled
out to accept the switches, terminals,
fuseholder and the LED bezels. The
front panel artwork can be used as a
template for drilling. Attach the label
in place after drilling and cut out the
1 TIP147 PNP power Darlington
transistor (Q1)
1 TIP142 NPN power Darlington
transistor (Q2)
2 BC337 NPN transistors
(Q3,Q5)
1 BC548 NPN transistor (Q4)
2 MUR1550 fast recovery diodes
(D1,D2)
1 1N4004 1A diode (D3)
2 1N914, 1N4148 diodes
(D4,D5)
1 35A 400V bridge rectifier
(BR1)
1 12V 1W zener diode (ZD1)
1 11V 400mW zener diode
(ZD2)
5 5mm red LEDs (LED1-LED5)
Capacitors
1 1000µF 25VW PC electrolytic
1 100µF 25VW PC electrolytic
1 100µF 16VW PC electrolytic
2 10µF 16VW PC electrolytic
1 10µF 100VW MKT polyester
(Philips 373 series)
1 3.3µF bipolar electrolytic
1 1µF 16VW PC electrolytic
1 0.1µF MKT polyester
1 0.0018µF MKT polyester
1 820pF MKT polyester or
ceramic
Resistors (0.25W 1%)
1 330kΩ
1 12kΩ
3 220kΩ
2 10kΩ
1 150kΩ
1 4.7kΩ
3 100kΩ
1 3.3kΩ
1 82kΩ
2 2.2kΩ 0.5W
1 68kΩ
2 2.2kΩ
4 33kΩ
2 1kΩ 1W
2 27kΩ
1 680Ω
2 22kΩ
1 68Ω
1 18kΩ
1 10Ω
1 15kΩ
2 0.1Ω 5W
Miscellaneous
Heatsink compound, solder,
machine screws and nuts, etc.
holes with a sharp hobby knife.
The two rotary switches require
their shafts to be cut down to about
12mm long, with a hacksaw. Their
shaft rotation should be adjusted for
only five positions for S5 and two
positions for S4. This is done by
(+)
+
+
+
+
+
Fig.6: this full-size artwork can be used as a drilling template for the front panel.
FAST
+
+
PROTECT
REFRESH
6
+
OUTPUT
(-)
THERMISTOR
NO BATTERY
100%
NICAD & NIMH
+
+
+
12
7.2
9.6
(NICAD & NIMH
ONLY)
+
+
2Ah
1.2Ah
14.4
+
SLA (6V&12V)
+
30
15
4Ah
60
Battery Capacity
Mins
TIMER
BATTERY
VOLTAGE
REFRESH
MULTI-PURPOSE FAST BATTERY CHARGER
Testing
Check your work carefully before doing any voltage tests.
Then apply power and measure the voltage between the TP
GND on the PC board and pin 12 on IC1. You should measure
about +12V DC. Check that pin 14 and pin 16 of IC2 and IC3
are at +12V. Pins 1 & 16 should be at + 4.25V.
Switch S3 to the NiCd & NiMH position and check that
the “no battery” LED lights.
Measure the output voltage on the plus and minus termi
nals. It should measure about 10V on the 6V battery selection.
When connecting the thermistor, check that the voltage at
pin 8 of IC1 is at about +2V when the temperature is around
25°C. If you heat up the thermistor slightly by holding your
finger and thumb tightly around its body, the voltage should
drop. If the temperature rises, then it is either a very hot day
and your body temperature is lower than that of the air or
you have the wrong type of thermistor.
When charging a battery, make sure you select the correct
battery type and voltage on the front panel switches. Also
set the timer for the closest timeout period for the particular
battery capacity.
If you are charging a lead-acid battery, the timeout setting
does not matter. You may wish to check the charge current
which should be made with an RMS meter or a digital oscil
loscope which reads RMS.
If a standard multimeter is used, you can expect the
reading across the two 0.1Ω resistors in parallel to be about
200mV. An RMS reading should show about 300mV which
is equivalent to 6A. To vary the current slightly, change the
value of the 3.3kΩ resistor at the IB input of IC1; larger for
less current, smaller for more.
Note that the heatsink and Q1 will run hot on fast charge
and so the charger should be provided with sufficient venti
lation to prevent the thermal cutout operating. The TP CELL
and TP GND PC stakes can be monitored to measure the cell
voltage of the connected battery.
Note: charging current is best determined by checking the
charging time of a discharged battery. If it's too long, the current can be increased slightly by using a larger value resistor
at pin 2 of IC1. A 3.9kΩ resistor will increase it by about 10%.
If the charge time is too short, the battery may be suffering
from memory effect. Try a few discharge & charge cycles.
The timeout period can be increased to suit larger batteries
by increasing the value of the 820pF oscillator capacitor. SC
+
FUSE (7.5A)
+
POWER
6V & 12V
LEAD
ACID
NIMH,
NICAD
& SLA
removing the locking collar from beneath the star washer
and nut and rotating the switch fully anticlockwise. Now
re-insert the locking washer into position five for S5 and
position two for S4.
Now assemble all components onto the front panel. Begin
the wiring as shown on the diagram of Fig.4, using coloured
hookup wire. The mains wiring must be done using mains
rated wire. Be sure to sheath the terminals for the fuse and
power switch with heatshrink tubing. Use heavy duty wir
ing for the connections between the rectifier and PC board,
the thermal switch and to the output terminals and fuse F2.
Tidy up the wiring with cable ties and insert the front panel
into the case with the LEDs protruding through their bezels.
You will need to make up some leads with banana plugs
and alligator clips to connect from the output terminals to a
battery. Also, the thermistor connections require a lead with
miniature banana plugs. We sheathed the thermistor wiring
in heatshrink tubing.
March 1998 53
|