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December 2013 1
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Contents
SILICON
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Vol.26, No.12; December 2013
Features
16 Electric Superbikes: The Very Fast Sounds Of Silence
Capable of speeds in excess of 200km/h, these electric superbikes from
Ripperton and Varley are not only fast but almost silent – by Ross Tester
22 Update Your Car’s Interior With LED Lighting
Swapping out your car’s old-fashioned incandescent interior lamps for cool
white LED lamps is easy to do. They’re brighter, draw far less current and have
much better colour rendition – by Leo Simpson
44 A Look At The New PIC32MZ Microcontroller
Microchip now has an updated version of the PIC32 microcontroller, called the
PIC32MZ. It’s faster, has better peripherals, a new CPU, more memory and can
remap its I/O pins to aid PCB layout – by Geoff Graham
Update Your Car’s Interior With
Cool LED Lighting – Page 22.
Build An
Electronic
Bellbird
– Page 26.
88 Review: Opus One A2696 DAB+ & Internet Tuner
This digital tuner from Altronics not only receives DAB+ signals but also “tunes”
internet radio stations with ease – by Geoff Graham
Pro jects To Build
26 Build An Electronic Bellbird
Bring the sounds of the bush into your loungeroom. This simple project mimics
the musical bell-like sounds of a real Bellbird (or Bell Miner) and has a dynamic
LED chaser display as well – by John Clarke
34 PortaPAL-D: A Powerful, Portable PA System, Pt.1
Featuring Li-Po battery operation, high-efficiency loudspeakers and a 100W
class-D amplifier, the PortaPAL-D is ideal for busking, sports events, meetings
or anywhere you need a powerful, portable PA system – by John Clarke
64 More Reception Modes For The SiDRADIO & SDRs
Want to get DAB+ reception on your SDR without unplugging the DVB-T
dongle and plugging it into a different USB port on your PC? Want to receive
narrowband digital mobile radio signals as well? Here’s how – by Jim Rowe
80 “Tiny Tim” 10W/Channel Stereo Amplifier, Pt.2
This month, we show you how to assemble the amplifier and power supply
PCBs and describe the case preparation – by Nicholas Vinen & Leo Simpson
Special Columns
PortaPAL-D: A Powerful, Portable
PA System – Page 34.
58 Serviceman’s Log
Variety is the spice of life & helps pay the bills – by Dave Thompson
70 Circuit Notebook
(1) Simple 2-Coil VLF Metal Locator; (2) USB Keyboard Emulation For A Microprocessor; (3) Re-housing An Apple Macbook Power Adaptor; (4) Revised Firmware For USB MIDI-Mate; (5) X-Y Test Pattern Generator For Analog Scopes
92 Vintage Radio
Too Cool for School: Kriesler 41-47 “Mini” transistor radio – by Ian Batty
Departments
2 Publisher’s Letter
4
Mailbag
siliconchip.com.au
25 Subscriptions
57 Product Showcase
96 Online Shop
98 Ask Silicon Chip
103 Market Centre
Tiny Tim 10W/Channel Stereo
Amplifier, Pt.2 – Page 80.
December 2013 1
SILICON
SILIC
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief
Leo Simpson, B.Bus., FAICD
Production Manager
Greg Swain, B.Sc. (Hons.)
Technical Editor
John Clarke, B.E.(Elec.)
Technical Staff
Ross Tester
Jim Rowe, B.A., B.Sc
Nicholas Vinen
Photography
Ross Tester
Reader Services
Ann Morris
Advertising Enquiries
Glyn Smith
Phone (02) 9939 3295
Mobile 0431 792 293
glyn<at>siliconchip.com.au
Regular Contributors
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Rodney Champness, VK3UG
Kevin Poulter
Stan Swan
Dave Thompson
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2 Silicon Chip
Publisher’s Letter
Should Australia continue to
subsidise the car industry?
There is considerable debate at the moment about
whether the level of subsidies granted to the Australian
car industry should be continued by the Government. As
with many debates about government action, it is not a
simple question and whichever way it is finally resolved
will have major ramifications for the tens of thousands of
people either directly or indirectly employed by the car
industry and for the whole Australian economy.
Much of the debate hinges around high labour costs in Australia, apparently low
productivity and falling sales of locally manufactured cars. The real problem is
the last item, not enough sales. While the cars manufactured by Ford, Holden and
Toyota are undoubtedly well-designed and competitive with equivalent cars made
overseas, there simply are not enough of them being sold to make production viable.
But what is the real reason not enough Australian-manufactured cars are being
sold? Virtually zero tariffs. In the past, Australian cars had considerable protection
by dint of the high tariffs levied on all imported cars. Over the years, these have
been whittled away by successive governments and reduced to zero for cars sourced
from countries with which we have free trade agreements, as in the case of cars
sourced from Thailand, for example. That is why we now have such a wide range
of motor vehicles. Years ago, the choice was much more limited.
Make no mistake, tariffs are very beneficial for a country’s employment, as they
make it difficult for imported products to compete with those produced locally.
But the downside of high tariff protection is that it makes all products (ie, those
protected by tariffs) more expensive. So whether or not a person decides to buy a
locally made or equivalent imported product, the cost will always be higher than if
there were no tariffs at all. As well as that, as with the car industry, with low tariff
protection, the range of products available is bound to be dramatically broader.
So where is this headed? Will the Government give in to all the special pleading
and carry on the subsidies for years to come as the sales of Australian cars continue
to decline? Or will they bite the bullet and say enough: no more subsidies?
I suggest that we can look to history for the best guide to what the decision should
be. In 1973, the Whitlam Labour Government reduced all import tariffs by 25%.
By any measure, it was a precipitate decision and the almost immediate result was
that a large portion of the Australian electronics industry was wiped out. Probably
more than 100,000 people lost their jobs in the years immediately following. Many
people would have regarded it as a complete disaster.
But looking at it with 40 years of hindsight, it was a brilliant decision, and I make
that statement as one who had worked in the electronics industry. Up to that time,
imported electronic appliances such as TV sets, stereo systems, radios and other
items were virtually unavailable or very expensive. Then came the flood, mostly
from Japan, and prices of TVs and other consumer electronic appliances dropped
overnight. They have been dropping ever since.
Can anyone imagine Australia ever producing the huge range of electronic equipment that we now enjoy, behind a 25% tariff barrier? Clearly that is preposterous.
With a population of only 23 million people, how could an Australian electronics
industry ever hope to compete with all that is made everywhere else? Australia still
has an electronics industry but as in most other western countries, it is confined
to specialised or niche products.
Personally, I regret that we will lose much of the large skill base and all
the employment that pertains to the car industry but I think it is inevitable,
whether subsidies are maintained or not. In the long term though, Australia
will be better off.
Leo Simpson
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ecember 2013
2013 3
NDovember
7
MAILBAG
Letters and emails should contain complete name, address and daytime phone number. Letters to
the Editor are submitted on the condition that Silicon Chip Publications Pty Ltd may edit and has the
right to reproduce in electronic form and communicate these letters. This also applies to submissions
to “Ask SILICON CHIP” and “Circuit Notebook”.
Coal-fired power stations
are defunct
They finally shut the power station
I once worked at. Someone must have
toured the place and realised it was a
museum piece.
The thing that made me realise
power stations as we know them are
defunct was working at a coal-fired
power station. There are millions of
moving parts and as the years go by
they all need maintaining.
Nuclear power stations would be
even more onerous as tremendous
safety precautions would add to the
bill. Nuclear power stations would
still have the same efficiencies as coal
I reckon.
Guy Reece,
Kirwan, Qld.
Comment: many of Australia’s large
coal-fired power stations are more
than 40 years old and as you say,
increasing maintenance is a costly
problem and they should replaced but
governments seem reluctant to commit to new base-load power stations.
Apart from nuclear or closed-cycle
gas-fired power stations, there are no
Supplier-driven technology
is desirable
I refer to the letter entitled “Supplier-Driven Technology Is Not What
The Customer Wants” (Mailbag, page
6, November 2013). I disagree with
the title and content of the point the
author wants to make. I think the
title should have been “not what this
customer wants”.
Consumer take-up of tablet computers has been remarkable and
based on the fact that it is in fact
what the consumer wants. There’s a
healthy legacy of failed products that
manufacturers may have tried in the
past however tablets are by no means
one of them. Smart manufacturers
of these devices are simply meeting
the demand.
4 Silicon Chip
other systems for generating base-load
power in Australia.
Nuclear power stations are generally less thermodynamically efficient
because boiler temperatures and the
temperature of the super-heated steam
are generally less than in modern
coal-fired power stations. Closed-cycle
gas-fired power stations are presently
the most thermodynamically efficient
in existence.
Electronic voting
is not necessary
I fully agree with the Publisher’s
Letter in the October 2013 issue in that
electronic voting is not needed and
that most problems can be resolved by
simple changes of law and procedure.
I have fundamental concerns about
the reliability of an electronic system
and the implications if it “goes down”.
Effectively, paper back-up systems
would still be required in case an
individual polling place or the main
system failed. Paper ballots can also
be re-counted in a way electronic
votes cannot.
From my own experience in charge
I appreciate the “build it and they
will come if you market it right” view
however the proof of the pudding
and subsequent taste is the fact that
the adoption rate of tablets is so prolific across so many areas of learning,
business, agriculture,leisure etc and
does in fact make life easier when
compared to lugging a laptop around.
I use an Android 7-inch tablet for
my business and being able to use a
computing device small enough to be
only marginally less portable than a
mobile phone but miles easier than a
laptop is fantastic. There is next to no
start-up time compared to laptops,
they are more portable, have longer
battery life and can access multiple
email accounts, the internet, Skype,
blogs, newspapers (I’m a newsagent)
of a polling place we have a very good
paper system now, with good checks
and cross-checks. In the case of an
unprincipled government, paper ballots are also less open to manipulation
than “hidden” electronic systems that
are not open to any scrutiny.
I also resent the possibility of being
made to cast a valid vote. I do always
cast a valid vote, however I prefer a
system of compulsory ballot box attendance to one of compulsory voting.
My right (as I see it) to vote informally
is, I think, a key counter-balance in a
system that requires me to attend. The
level of informal votes, as you rightly
point out, has something to say. If,
under a simplified system, the level
rises, this is a key indicator of societal
dissatisfaction with the overall political process.
My wife is from the USA and I have
observed electronic systems in use.
People dislike them and distrust them.
As you stated, they also require attendance at a polling place. The thought of
and all the other well-publicised and
appreciated applications that are
available. Yes I can do most of this
on my smartphone but being an older
person, I need the extra real-estate a
tablet screen offers.
I appreciate that tablets may be
viewed as a desirable item to steal
but no more so than a mobile phone,
wallet, car keys or a laptop. The solution, just be more careful!
Personally, I find that I am far
more productive with the tablet
compared to the laptop which I
sometimes couldn’t be bothered
starting up. And if that’s the result
of a manufacturer telling me what I
want, then thanks.
Angelo Giuffre,
Jindabyne, NSW.
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December 2013 5
Mailbag: continued
Diesel-electric locos point
the way for hybrids
With respect to the Publisher’s
Letter on the topic of hybrid cars in
the November 2013 issue, I find that
history is being ignored.
One of the major losses in a normal car is the transmission. An allelectric car removes this but limits
range. So the obvious solution is to
modernise the diesel-electric train
architecture.
A new generation hybrid would
be a motor-generator with electric
drive to the wheels. This is one way
an internet-based system is simply too
frightening to contemplate! To have
any decent security at all, they would
require very high levels of complexity
– a further alienation – otherwise they
would be open to “ambush” voting
programs.
I’m not that happy about the census
having gone that way. At least there is
less reason to manipulate the census
as compared to the outcome of an
election.
Angus Witherby,
Mordialloc, Vic.
Electronic voting is an advantage
for people with a disability
I am a visually-impaired reader who
cannot read print. I receive SILICON
CHIP as an audio book from Vision
to reduce the excessive hybrid costs,
also reduce weight and get a boost
in the hydrocarbon fuel efficiency
as well.
I also like the nippy Nissan Leaf
electric car.
Alan Bothe
Manly, Qld.
Comment: it is doubtful whether
the overall efficiency of a motorgenerator-motor system would be
better than a modern gearbox such
as a CVT, DSG or 6-speed automatic
gearbox. In fact, there might also be
a weight penalty.
Australia which I download from the
Library Services each month.
I note your Publisher’s Letter in the
October 2013 issue regarding electronic voting. In presenting your arguments against this form of voting, you
refer to people with disabilities who
would find it difficult to use a computer. However, you do not recognise
the many blind or visually-impaired
voters who would benefit from being
able to vote electronically.
I have been using a computer fitted
with screen-reading software since
1985. This software enables me to use
a computer in much the same way as
a sighted person does, even though I
cannot read what is displayed on the
monitor. Before I retired, this remarkable software enabled me to confidently
handle my responsibilities as senior
law clerk in a legal office. I also spent
nearly 30 years as a member of about
15 Standards Australia technical committees, mostly in the automotive area.
More recently I was able to respond
to my obligations to complete the last
census questionnaire on line.
For the first time this year, I was
able to vote using the new system
of telephone voting provided by the
AEC instead of having to rely on my
wife to explain all the voting options
and then fill in my voting papers. The
telephone voting enable me to vote independently, although the new system
was quite time-consuming. The AEC
officer was required to read out to me
all the political parties and candidates
before I could vote. An electronic voting system by contrast would be a lot
quicker and would certainly be more
private.
To a sighted person, voting using a
computer probably seems impossible.
There are, however, an increasing
number of blind or visually impaired
people who are very computer-literate
and would easily cope with electronic
voting.
Barry Napthine,
Woodend, Vic.
New regulations on
wireless microphones
The Australian Communications
and Media Authority (ACMA) is writing to advise about the changes affecting the use and supply of wireless
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December 2013 7
Mailbag: continued
microphones in Australia. To that end, ACMA has published
a series of fact sheets targeted at ‘plug and play’ users, professional users and suppliers.
The ACMA also has an online wireless microphones
hub, which is a one-stop shop for all the information you
need to know and resources to help people prepare for the
change. Readers can sign up to our free, monthly e-bulletin
which provides updates on the ACMA’s work on wireless
microphones. The recent changes are as follows.
Many wireless audio transmitters (which includes wireless microphones) currently operate in the frequency range
694-820MHz. From 1st January 2015, it will be illegal to
use these devices as this spectrum will be used to deliver
4G mobile broadband services. ACMA has introduced two
measures to protect consumers from being sold wireless
audio transmitters that cannot be used after 1st January
2015.
From 17th September 2013, suppliers must include a
warning label with each wireless audio transmitter that
operates in 694-820MHz advising potential buyers that
the device will be illegal to use after 31st December 2014.
From 1st January 2014, suppliers will no longer be able to
import, manufacture or sell wireless audio transmitters in
Australia that operate in 694-820MHz.
ACMA strongly encourages people to check their existing equipment now to make sure that they can continue to
use it after 31st December 2014. If you’re unsure how to do
this, check your user manual or contact your supplier for
help. Contact your supplier to see if you can re-tune your
existing equipment so it uses a different frequency range.
The main alternative frequency ranges are 520-694MHz and
1790-1800MHz. A full list of alternative frequency ranges
is available on the ACMA’s website.
If you need more information, check out our wireless microphones hub at www.acma.gov.au/Industry/wirelessmics
or email us at freqplan<at>acma.gov.au
Anna Cheung, Spectrum Engineering Section,
Australian Communications and Media Authority,
Melbourne, Vic.
Incorrect statements
lower the standard
While enjoying the theory, design and practicality of
recent SILICON CHIP projects, I am concerned at what I
consider to be incorrect information or statements used
to justify or support the reasoning behind them. The first
was the “Rugged Battery Charger” in April 2013. I applaud
the re-purposing of the iron-core halogen transformers and
the detailed technical explanations behind the design. It
is an informative demonstration of power supply design
principles and pulse-charging of batteries.
Unfortunately the statements regarding “we couldn’t find
a charger of this power for under $100” and “a basic car
charger that can put out a good 10A or so” are misleading
at best. The 10A is only achieved as peak pulse currents
while the average current, as stated, is much lower at around
3A. As noted, the charge current is uncontrolled, so why
8 Silicon Chip
siliconchip.com.au
Silicon Chip Magazine November 2013
Nostalgia for
2N3055 transistors
I read the comment that “. . . the 2N3055 is a very
old transistor . . .” (Mailbag, page 8, November 2013)
and it reminded me that I bought my first 2N3055
prior to 1966. I know this because I paid £2/5/– (ie,
before decimal currency). It was used to regulate the
high-voltage supply of a mono valve amplifier, using
6CA7s in ultra-linear configuration.
The input to the regulator was about 460V and the
output was regulated by feeding the base from the
voltage doubled output of a 150V 30mA transformer,
giving just over 400V. The 2N3055 was mounted on
a small heatsink under the chassis, supported by insulating standoffs.
The amplifier gave good service and was sold in
working condition when we had a garage sale in the
late 1980s. Its successor was a stereo EA design, using
2N3055s as the output transistors. By that time, they
were much cheaper (about 60c each). That they are still
sold is testimony to their flexibility and robustness.
Alan Cashin,
Islington, NSW.
risk your $200 battery?
In a Jaycar advertisement in the centre pages of the same
issue, there is a promotion for an intelligent switchmode
“12V 3.8A 5-stage Multi Stage Battery Charger” for the sum
of $79.95. That’s 3.8A continuous with fully and safely
controlled charging.
While not so technical or innovative, the best use I’ve
found so far for these transformers is to power multiple
12V AC/DC MR16 LED globes, which are easily available
in wattages up to 6-7W. In this way, the downlight fittings
themselves can also be re-purposed by retrofitting with
LED globes and using them in an alternate location. Two
6W MR16 LED globes will provide a similar or better illumination to a 50W MR-16 halogen globe at a third of the
power consumption.
The second was the “Lithium Battery Pack For Your
Cordless Drill” in the October 2013 issue. I again applaud
the concept of re-purposing rather than tossing equipment
in the “circular file”, and totally agree that repairing, repacking or replacing Nicad and NiMH battery packs can
be a problem.
The lithium-based portable power tools being sold currently are indicative of the practicality of replacing nickel
batteries with Li-Po cells.
I have successfully repacked and replaced Nicad and
NiMH battery packs, and also replaced Ni-based batteries
with Li-based technologies by using the same Li-Po battery
packs ignored in the breakout titled “Commercial Li-Po
Tools: Do They Check Cell Status?”.
It seems that someone did not do their research very
well before making sweeping statements like “the easiest
way was to scour the shelves at a couple of major hardware
stores – and we have to report that we didn’t find a single
tool that had any form of charger multi-connector”. This
assumption means that pretty much everything in the
break-out is incorrect. Given that only the charger connections were inspected, there was a failure to comprehend
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Mailbag: continued
the differences between the “hobbyist” technologies and
“consumer/trade” technologies.
A look at the internals of a Li-Po battery pack from a
medium-priced 14.4V cordless drill shows that the complex charge control, cell equalisation and low-voltage
shut-down circuitry is in the battery pack, not the charger
– so it does not need “a form of charger multi-connector”.
The “charger” is then only a regulated power supply
and status indicator. I also have an 18V version of the
same brand drill which also has the charge and control
circuitry within the battery pack. The small extra weight
of the circuit board is negligible compared to the weight
of the tool.
The production volumes of consumer and trade products
makes this cost effective, and also ensures the best possible
battery life. The hobbyist-type batteries are designed to
maximise power-to-weight ratio and to minimise volume,
so their charge control circuitry has always been deliberately external to the battery packs.
Gary Brewer,
Croydon Hills, Vic.
Comment: while the scope waveforms on page 78 of the
April issue show the charger delivering a peak current of
9.58A, equivalent to an average current of 3A, that does
10 Silicon Chip
not indicate the maximum capacity of the charger itself.
It should deliver a maximum current of about 10A into
a flat battery.
iPod charger adaptor query
I found the iPod Charger Adaptor project (SILICON CHIP,
August 2013) to be rather interesting but I wonder how
necessary it is.
Some time ago, my oldest son bought an iPhone 4 with
a smashed screen cheaply and he got a new screen on
eBay and repaired it. He wanted to be able to charge it in
his car and he knew I had a small USB charger that plugs
into the car’s lighter socket, that I’d bought a few years ago.
He asked me if he could borrow it, so I gave it to him. He
came back quickly and said it didn’t work.
I dismantled it and found, as I suspected, that the D- and
D+ connections on the USB port were floating, with only
the VCC and GND lines connected to the circuit. I then
simply bridged the D- and D+ connections on the USB port
and put it back together again and gave it back to him to
try. He came back and said that it now worked and asked
what had I done to make it work. I told him what I’d done
and he asked what that was supposed to do.
I explained to him that when you plug a device into a
USB port, the device asks the USB port for permission to
draw current for charging. If the D- and D+ lines are open
circuit, there is no communication between the device and
the port, so the request goes unanswered and the device
does not charge. By bridging the D- and D+ connections,
it causes the USB port to give automatic permission to the
device to draw current.
I’m not sure if this will work for all devices that can
use a USB port for charging but we already knew that it
definitely works for an iPhone 4. Since reading the SILICON
CHIP article, we have rounded up all the other devices we
have that can be charged from a USB port and all except
one can be charged on this modified USB car charger. The
additional devices that can be charged are as follows: iPod
Nano 3G, iPod Nano 4G, iPod touch 3G, Samsung GT-E3300
phone, LG K360 phone, Amicroe Touch Tab 2 Tablet and
Huawei L300 phone.
While we were doing all this testing, my son commented
that all these devices will charge from the car charger, because several or his friends have i(devices) that they charge
from similar car chargers (from eBay) without problems.
He was right that they all charged.
It’s interesting to note that a similar car charger that I
bought on eBay more recently, already had the D- and D+
connections bridged when manufactured. It’s probably
similar to (or the same) as the the units my son’s friends
use that they got on eBay.
So, I just wonder if anyone thought to just simply bridge
the D- and D+ pins on the USB port when researching/
designing the iPod Charger Adaptor.
Bruce Pierson,
Dundathu, Qld.
Comment: while it is true that many phones and MP3
players can be charged with the D+ and D- data lines
shorted on a charger, this is not necessarily true in all
cases. Charging may or may not occur with this charger
siliconchip.com.au
configuration and if it does, the charge
current will often be much less than
500mA.
In some cases, shorted D- and
D+ lines on a charger will show a
“charging is not supported with this
accessory” warning on the iPod device
being charged. This means that you
are required to use a genuine Apple
charger or use the SILICON CHIP iPod
Charger Adaptor which simulates one.
DAB+ digital radio black
spots have been filled
Recently, black spots in metropolitan DAB+ coverage have been filled.
The main transmitter sites are still Mt
Coot-tha in Brisbane, Mt Dandenong
in Melbourne, Carmel in Perth and
Artarmon in Sydney.
Additional transmitters have been
installed at Mt Mee in Brisbane, 101
Collins Street, Melbourne and Central
Park in Perth (Mindarie). In Sydney,
the extra transmitters are at Westfield
Centrepoint, Redfern, Bilgola Plateau,
Collaroy Plateau, Gregory Hill and
Hawkesbury.
siliconchip.com.au
Lip sync problems
with TV & surround sound
I’m wondering what the cause of
lip sync being out on my TV.
For quite some time I’ve been
in the practice of using my stereo
amplifier for surround sound for
the TV and the sound and picture
have been in perfect sync. So why
it has slipped out is a total mystery
to me. I am using a Telstra T-Box for
all channels so the programs are now
via the internet.
At each of these sites, a 7MHz-wide
receiver converts all DAB+ signals
down to an intermediate frequency
which is then accurately filtered.
This signal is then converted back to
its original frequency, amplified and
then re-radiated on another antenna.
The re-radiated power is either
300W or 500W ERP (effective radiated power).
There is shielding between the
receiving and transmitting antennas
to prevent oscillations occurring due
to feedback. This system works for
all three DAB+ signals coming from
I now have to resort to just using
the TV speakers on their own which
is nothing like the quality of sound
I was once enjoying. If a reader can
solve the mystery I will be grateful.
Graeme Scott,
Albury, NSW.
Footnote: the correspondent subsequently found the solution to his
lip sync problem. The answer was to
feed the TV’s optical (TOSLINK) audio output to the amplifier and use
that instead of the analog outputs.
a single main transmitting site and
they are adjacent channels within one
7MHz TV channel.
Alan Hughes,
Mt Hamersley, WA.
Is there a database for
remote control codes?
Is there such a thing as a database or
registry of remote codes for domestic
TVs, receivers, DVD and CD players?
Many times I have had to discard otherwise serviceable electronic equipment for want of a remote control.
I went through a phase of trying the
December 2013 11
Mailbag: continued
sive database of remote control codes
exists.
Photos show faulty assembly
of Tiny Tim loudspeaker
I’m sure I’m not the first to notice a construction problem in the
photographs on page 35 of the Tiny
Tim Loudspeaker in the October
2013 issue. Pieces 3 & 4 are butted
together differently to the assembly
shown in the diagram on page 33.
The website reference for the Fostex
design indicates that the diagram on
page 33 is correct. The construction
shown in the photographs changes
the geometry of the horn by quite
a bit.
If this construction was actually
used in the speakers tested by your
lab then the graphs on page 34 are no
longer valid and your observations
on the performance of the Fostex
driver versus the Jaycar and Altronics drivers have been compromised.
Keith Ward,
Harden, NSW.
universal units but (and maybe I was
just unlucky) it was the devil’s own
job trying to first find a set of codes
that operated the device in question.
Almost always, particularly with
more complex devices, some function
would turn out to be unattainable.
Alternatively, is there such a thing
as a device which will capture and
store in some retrievable format the
complete set of codes for a given device? Is there a ‘learning’ function if
you will, that would allow one to store
these codes in a standard format for
prospective use down the track when
the original remote is destroyed, lost
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Comment: in fact, you are the only
person to bring this mistake to our
attention. We asked Allan LintonSmith whether he had glued the
sections up as shown in the photos
or was it just a mock-up. He admitted
that he had glued them up as shown
for his first speaker but then was puzzled as to why internal dimensions
did not appear to be correct.
Apparently, it took him a while to
realise what he had done and then he
had to break the joint between panels
3 & 4. While breaking the joint did
damage the plywood veneer the reglued joint was not visible so it was
no great problem. He then glued up
the sections for the second speaker
correctly.
However he had forgotten this
mistake while writing the article and
later re-checking the article proofs.
He was amazed that anyone had
spotted the mistake.
or just dies of its own accord?
A publicly accessible database of
remote control codes could become a
handy community resource and might
even help to stem the flow of e-waste
into land fill.
Peter Felton,
Willoughby, NSW.
Comment: you would need to store
the IR codes in a learning remote so
that you could use it later if the original remote dies. There are plenty of
standalone learning remotes available
and also some with USB interfaces (eg,
USB-UIRT).
We don’t think that a comprehen-
Wind power does reduce
coal consumption
I am amazed that any publication,
especially a technical one, would
print a letter to the editor (“Industrial
wind factory refugees” by “Name and
address supplied but withheld at writers request”, June 2013) stating in part
that “Wind-factories don’t result in
one less scoop of coal being used to
generate power”!
I would suggest that the writer is either a total non-logical thinker, has no
understanding whatsoever of methods
of generating electricity, or is so biased
against wind turbines that he/she can’t
see the wood for the trees, and one can
only assume that the writer believes
that coal-powered generators continually generate excess power just in case
the wind stops blowing, which is of
course, pure poppycock!
It is indisputable that in coal-fired
power stations, it takes a quantity of
coal to generate a kilowatt-hour of electricity. Therefore, for each and every
kWh generated by a wind turbine, that
much coal does not need to be burned.
Fairly simple logic!
Your writer bemoans the fact that
“Wind-factories, at best, operate at
17% of capacity, and take power from
the grid the rest of the time.” Well,
hello – the wind doesn’t blow all the
time! The 17% figure (which may or
may not be right) is the proportion of
time that the generator would have
to run at its full rated output, if the
wind speed was sufficient for it to do
so, which of course for much of the
time, it isn’t!
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The one point that your correspondent raises that I can readily agree with
is that some wind turbines do in fact
consume power from the grid when
not operating! A quick look on the
community-owned Hepburn Wind
(Vic.) website reveals just how right
“name withheld” is – for the month
of July 2013, the site ‘only’ generated
1069.7MWh of extreme-green power
but consumed a whole 2.2MWh of
brown-coal produced power!
By my reckoning, for every scoop
of coal burned to provide power to
Hepburn Wind’s turbines during periods of insufficient wind, almost 500
scoops of coal are not required when
the wind is blowing!
Maurice Wedlake,
Buronga, NSW.
Wind farms can never
provide base-load power
With regard to recent discussion on
wind farms, SILICON CHIP readers may
be interested in a recent paper of mine
(Miskelly 2012) on the effectiveness of
these installations.
Listening to DRM
may require a licence
I found the article on DRM radio
in the November 2013 issue both interesting and informative. I believe,
however, that the article omitted one
item that some people might find
significant. At present to receive
DRM requires the purchase of a
licence from the DRM consortium.
At least that was the situation when
I activated the DRM mode on my
WinRadio Excalibur G31DDC radio
(reviewed in the June 2012 issue of
SILICON CHIP) early this year.
My experience of DRM has been
disappointing. I have completely
failed to find any stations at all to
In proposing any form of generation
to replace the present CO2-emitting
sources, it is essential that it be fit-forpurpose. Can the proposed generation
provide sufficient power to meet the
minimum requirements? Can it always provide power at times of peak
demand? Can it reliably provide the
date but your article has given me
a couple of reasons why this could
be. Radio Australia, which is the
station I would be most likely to
pick up, only broadcasts on DRM for
a couple of hours in the middle of
the day. My listening is normally in
the evening when SW reception is at
its best. The other possibility which
your article has pointed me to is the
antenna. Due to some difficulties in
installing a long-wire antenna on
my quarter acre block I have opted
to use an active antenna on my roof.
Thanks for an always interesting
magazine.
Syd Read,
Hastings, Vic.
required load. If it is variable, how
much backup is needed from more
conventional sources?
Whether or not the proposed form of
generation has the potential to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions does not remove the need for rigorous evaluation.
Indeed, such an evaluation is a critical
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Mailbag: continued
Alternative to solid fuel
nuclear reactors
I see that there has been recent
discussion in the pages of SILICON
CHIP about nuclear power and I
agree that to make a dent in carbon
dioxide emissions we should be
heading down the nuclear path but
there is an alternative to a uranium
oxide solid-fuel reactor.
This is a molten-salt reactor using the thorium fuel cycle with a
fluoride-based molten salt, running
at atmospheric pressure. It has all
the advantages and not many disadvantages when it comes to waste
products (both fission products and
transuranic products).
The molten-salt reactor can not
only be used to provide energy
(which can produce electricity, treat
water etc) but nuclear waste from solid-fuel reactors can be reprocessed
and used in the fuel cycle of the
thorium reactor, thus getting rid of
the nuclear waste that is around now.
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14 Silicon Chip
A molten-salt reactor was up and
running in America in the 1950s.
The program ran until the early
1970s when it was terminated by
Richard Nixon (I think) because
he wanted more jobs in California
working on the fast-breeder plutonium reactors. Also, the military
wanted to go down the plutonium
route because they needed this to
make bombs!
Here are some advantages of the
thorium molten-salt reactors:
• Uses thorium, a very common
element.
• Runs at atmospheric pressure.
• Because of the above, they can be
made small.
• Needs NO human input to shut
down in an emergency.
• Can be installed anywhere (no
water is needed).
• Next to no waste.
• Radioactive isotopes for medical
purposes can be extracted while the
reactor is running.
More information can be obtained
at http://thoriumremix.com/th/ and
http://thoriumenergyalliance.com/
index.html
Greg Gifford,
Laguna, NSW.
requirement if we are to achieve the
required radical emissions reductions.
First, some basic facts:
(1)The base load on the eastern Australian grid is a minimum of some
17,000MW which must be satisfied,
24 hours per day, 7 days per week,
365 days per year. The demand varies
up to over 30,000MW on certain days
and at various times of the year. The
17,000MW minimum is that required
in the “wee small hours” of the morning after such loads as the last trains
to run and off-peak hot water systems
have switched off. This minimum demand represents the cumulative total
of such essential services as streetlighting in our cities and towns, the
provision of building security lighting,
hospital round-the-clock emergency
services and so on.
(2) The electricity grid operates continuously and supply and demand
must be in strict balance, second-bysecond. Failure to supply the demand
will swiftly result in widespread
blackouts. Restoration of supply after
a blackout may take many hours, so
permitting a blackout at any time is
not an option.
(3) As a consequence, any variation
in output of any generator on the grid
must be immediately backed up from
other generation.
At present, there is some 2500MW
of installed wind farm capacity connected to the eastern Australian grid.
These wind farms are scattered over
a wide area of this grid. In fact, the
eastern Australian grid is geographically the most dispersed on the planet,
stretching from Queensland in the
north and taking in the eastern states
of NSW, Victoria and Tasmania, plus
South Australia.
According to the wind industry and
its academic supporters, wind farms
have a capacity factor of some 30%
and that because “the wind is always
blowing somewhere”, the combined
output varies relatively smoothly so
that, with the help of a small amount
of fast-acting gas turbine backup, the
wind farm fleet will easily substitute
for coal-fired and other nasty polluting forms of generation to provide the
all-important base load requirement.
Close inspection of actual operational data shows that sadly, wind farm
performance falls far short of this ideal.
Furthermore, little can be done to improve the outcome. I have conducted
an analysis of wind farm operational
data for the full calendar year 2010. It
shows the following:
While the 30% figure is often met
and indeed exceeded, what is never
mentioned is that for some 70% of the
total time, wind farm output is less
than 10% of the installed capacity,
that the average value of 30% installed
capacity is met, invariably, by the wind
farm producing short bursts at up to
100% installed capacity during the
remaining 30% of the time. The consequence is that the output is extremely
erratic, extremely variable and almost
totally unpredictable.
The fact that the output varies right
across almost the full range means
that the required fast-acting (gas-fired)
backup has to be nearly equal to the
full installed capacity. In fact, it has to
siliconchip.com.au
be some 80% of the installed 2500MW
capacity, ie, 2000MW, instantly available at all times to meet sudden drops
in wind output.
During calendar year 2010, wind
farm output dropped to nearly zero on
109 occasions. Even one such dropout
in a proposed system of generation
desired to replace fossil-fueled plant
is unacceptable, but to countenance
over 100 such occurrences per year
is a totally preposterous and totally
irresponsible proposal.
This “common mode” failure has
nothing to do with reliability of the
wind farms. Instead, it is due entirely
to weather systems: large high pressure
systems frequently occupy the full
extent of the eastern Australian grid,
with the result that there is virtually
no wind anywhere. So even though
many more wind farms might be
built within the region of the eastern
Australian grid, the widespread lack
of wind during these high pressure
weather systems would still result in
minimal output.
Naturally, as the wind fleet increases
the size of the needed back-up also
increases. The increased swings in
wind output cause grid management
to become ever more difficult, adding
to the instability concerns. Indeed, we
learned recently that Snowy Hydro
is being drafted into this whole sorry
mess; the generators on the Upper
Murray are being used to ramp up and
down so frequently in attempting to
compensate for the wind’s variability
that massive erosion of the Murray’s
banks, resulting from the wild flow
fluctuations, is causing a significant
loss of valuable farmland (ABC Stateline-NSW: www.abc.net.au/news/
video/2013/04/05/3731094.htm)
Because the output of this large
wind farm fleet is so highly variable
and unpredictable, there is no useful
match to the grid operational requirements whatsoever (see Miskelly P,
2013) for the full details
As to the extent of the emissions
reductions, I refer readers to Inhaber
(2011). This careful study shows that
where wind penetration reaches or
exceeds 20% of the total installed
generation capacity on an otherwise
fossil-fired grid, because of the need
to back-up wind’s intermittency, the
net CO2 offset is negligible.
siliconchip.com.au
Many wish to believe that wind
and solar can fully supply our energy
needs and that “nasty” coal is easily
replaced by “wonderful renewable
technologies”. Wind’s colossal failure
can no longer be hidden by such wishful thinking.
Proposing a technology such as
wind energy that requires massive
amounts of energy storage on the
basis that such technologies are “just
around the corner” is pointless. Peter
Lang (Brook 2009) has provided the
costings for energy storage – they are
huge. Remember, that minimum base
load requirement of 17,000MW MUST
be met at all times.
“Smart metering” will not solve that
problem. It may provide a means of
smoothing the daily peak demand but
will not reduce the all-important essential services demand requirement.
Paul Miskelly,
Mittagong, NSW.
References:
(1) Brook B, 2009: Does wind power
reduce carbon emissions? Available at: http://bravenewclimate.
com/2009/08/08/does-wind-powerreduce-carbon-emissions/
(2) Inhaber H, 2011: Why wind power
does not deliver the expected emissions reductions. Renewable and
Sustainable Energy Reviews 15 pp.
2557–2562. Available at: http://docs.
wind-watch.org/Inhaber-Why-windpower-does-not-deliver-the-expectedemissions-reductions.pdf
(3) Lang P, 2012: 100 % renewable
electricity for Australia – the cost.
http://bravenewclimate.com/2012/
02/09/100-renewable-electricity-foraustralia-the-cost/
(4) Lang P, 2010: Pumped hydro
energy storage – cost estimates for a
feasible system. Available at: http://
bravenewclimate.com/2010/04/05/
pumped-hydro-system-cost/
(5) Lang P, 2009: Wind and Carbon
Emissions – Peter Lang responds.
Available at: http://bravenewclimate.
com/2009/08/13/wind-and-carbonemissions-peter-lang-responds/
(6) Miskelly P, 2013: Wind farms in
eastern Australia – recent lessons. Energy and Environment, Volume 23, No.
8, December 2012. Available at: http://
multi-science.metapress.com/content/
f1734hj8j458n4j7/?p=c039fb36cfd740
SC
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GSM Antenna - Magnetic Base
This small magnetic base GSM
antenna will enable you to connect your cellular module to the
outside world. It operates on 9001800 MHz attached to a 3 metre
RG174 cable. 7 to 8 dBi gain
vertically polarised. Standard male
SMA terminated.
SKU:LEA-001
Price:$10.95+GST
Loop Powered Temp Sensor
Simple DIN rail mount
measure your internal
cabinet temperature easily, 4-20 mA loop powered
temperature sensor with
measurement range from
-10°C to +125°C. Typical accuracy of
±0.5°C
SKU:KTD-267
Price:$49.95+GST
Large Dot Matrix Counter
10 cm tall digit, 5-digit
can see it 50 m away
large display pulse
counter features: excitation output for powering proximity switches,
2 programmable alarm relays. It accepts
NPN/PNP & dry-contact input signals. 24
VDC powered. Setup is done via a handheld
IR remote.
SKU:DBI-005
Price:$629.00+GST
Latching Relays, DPCO
DIN rail mount, multivoltage range from 12250 VAC/DC double pole
changeover latching relays
with maximum switching
current of 16 A <at> 250 VAC. Features 2 LED
indicators for relay output status.
SKU:NTR-006
Price:$49.95+GST
Current Transducer
Converts 0-30 A AC input
signal to 0-5 VDC output
signal. It features total
galvanic isolation between
input/output, high accuracy, low drifting by temperature & wide temperature
operational range.
SKU:WES-006
Price:$59.95+GST
Any Direction Micro-switch
2-position industrial micro-switch
with springy actuator triggers
when the actuator is pushed
or deflected in any direction.
It features 3 screw terminals,
a maximum switching current
of 10 A. The switch has a great
“clicky” sound to it and 2 mounting holes.
SKU:HES-204
Price:$12.95+GST
For OEM/Wholesale prices
Contact Ocean Controls
Ph: (03) 9782 5882
oceancontrols.com.au
December 2013 15
ELECTRIC SUPERBIKES:
very fast!
The Sounds of Silence
Amid the ear-shattering scream of superbikes hurtling down Brabham
Straight at around 280km/h came a couple of rather special bikes
doing not much less speed . . . but significantly less decibels! In fact,
compared to the rest, it was almost silent – just the whoosh of the wind,
a bit of chain noise and the (albeit minimal!) tyres-on-tarmac note.
W
e were at Sydney Motorsport Park (aka Eastern
Creek) to witness practice
day for the round of superbike racing
on the following two days. And while
the petrol superbikes were rather
impressive, that’s not what we were
there to see.
Instead, we had been invited to
watch purely electric-powered bikes
put through their paces by a couple of
Australia’s leading electric motorcycle
racing exponents, as part of the Electric
Formula Extreme Challenge.
Danny Ripperton had his own Ripperton bike while Jason Morris was
aboard a bike from Varley. They’re
perhaps better known for the electric
16 Silicon Chip
tugs used to pull jumbo jets around
airports!
But let’s wind the clock back a few
weeks and tell you how all this came
about.
Knowing of our interest in electric
vehicles, we were approached by the
promoter of the 2013 Electric Superbike series, Victor Fenech. Victor was
producing a series of TV programs for
the free-to-air community television
station TVS and wanted to know if
SILICON CHIP was interested in also promoting the electric superbike concept.
Hence this feature!
We received a considerable amount
of feedback from readers when we
featured the all-electric Nissan Leaf
car (August 2012) and the all-electric
Vectrix motorcycle (May 2008).
While some readers were quite critical of the concept of electric vehicles
the vast majority were most interested
in the technology and the way it had
advanced in recent times.
Therefore we were sure our readers
would also be interested in the concept
of electric superbikes. Who knows,
some of it might be a vicarious desire
to be screaming down the straight at
more than 200km/h!
What’s it like?
The electric superbike is not too
dissimilar to those petrol-powered
speed demons you’ve seen fanging
siliconchip.com.au
By Ross Tester
around Eastern Creek or Philip Island
(and other racetracks, both here and
overseas).
In fact, we’d already heard about
the electric superbikes’ prowess from
their involvement in the Isle of Man
Classic race, earlier in the year. In that
race, an electric superbike averaged
speeds greater than 160km/h.
But what makes the electric bike
quite different is, of course, that
there is not even a nanolitre of petrol
involved, nor is there any internal
combustion.
They are not hybrids – in the case
of the Ripperton bike (the red “No46”
above) they derive 100% of their
power from not one but two “tandem”
siliconchip.com.au
high performance, water-cooled 175V
electric motors, each rated at 50hp.
Both motors drive the one shaft; the
bottom motor has a sprocket and chain
to drive the rear wheel in a somewhat
conventional way.
It’s only somewhat conventional
because there is no gearbox or clutch.
As you would no doubt realise, an
electric motor delivers its maximum
torque at zero rpm, so there’s little need
to go “up through the gears” to deliver
maximum power when you need it.
Unlike fuel-powered bikes, the
electric-powered model has what
amounts to a “reverse gear” – very
handy for manoeuvring around the
often limited confines of the pits and
garage behind. It’s not a true reverse
gear – it’s simply a switch which swaps
two of the three motor wires and makes
them turn backwards!
A three-phase controller handles
delivery of power to the motors, dependent (of course!) on the amount of
“throttle” applied by the rider. Motor
speed is monitored by a Hall Effect
sensor on the main motor (the second
motor, by definition, must be rotating
at the same speed).
The controller is fan-cooled but also
relies (as does a lot of other cooling) on
the not inconsiderable cooling power
of a 200km/h airstream!
The motors are driven from a stack
of 42 very-carefully-managed Lithium
Polymer cells. On board the bike is a
range of engine and battery management technology which is available
for analysis after the race to ensure
optimum “tuning” next time out.
Safety is vitally important in electric
superbike racing: here you can see
the “big red button” which cuts off all
power to the bike (underside) along
with the large red light on top which
tells everyone the bike is powered.
There’s no screaming motor to warn
you!
The entire battery pack is removable
from the bike – it is charged outside
the bike. Each cell is individually
monitored during the charging process, with a shunt resistor across the
cell being brought into play if the cell
voltage exceeds the 4.15V intended
charge.
The battery pack weigha about 55kg
and measures around 750mm high
x 250mm wide x 220 deep and sits
basically under the rider and in the
bike frame, much where you’d expect
Here Victor Fenech, resplendent in his “SILICON CHIP” yellow shirt, is
interviewing two of the leading movers and shakers in the electric superbike
world for the TV show he’s producing: at left is Varley rider Jason Morris and in
the centre, Danny Ripperton.
December 2013 17
The 42-cell Lithium Polymer powerhouse sits vertically in a specially-designed
cradle underneath the rider’s seat. Extensive on-bike electronics monitors the
cell charge levels, temperature, loading, etc.
At 55kg, getting the battery pack out is no mean feat – and virtually impossible
from alongside the bike. Here Danny Ripperton stands on the supported bike to
extract the 750mm-deep pack.
to find the fuel tank and engine on a
“normal” superbike.
However, the shape of the battery
pack and motors means that a conventional bike frame is unsuitable for
electric power, so many iterations of
frame have been produced to find one
that gives that miniscule increase in
performance over other types. When
your lap times are measured in thousands of a second, any advantage you
can obtain is an advantage you DO
obtain!
Just as a fuel tank on a petrol bike
only holds a certain amount of energy,
so do the batteries. They typically last
about 5-7 laps around Eastern Creek,
although after four laps they’re getting
pretty hot. Again, battery temperature
is one of the parameters that’s carefully
monitored.
Only rechargeable batteries can
be used – one-time batteries could
achieve better results but these are not
permitted under race rules. Interestingly, the rules do permit more than
one driven wheel (eg, using in-wheel
motors) but so far, no bikes have been
entered with more than one wheel
driven. Yet!
Race rules say that the bike needs
to be able to complete 18+ kilometres
at race speeds, including the warm-up
lap (the warm-up lap is not so much
to warm the engine, as it is for petrol
bikes, it’s to get the rider used to the
bike at race speeds and heat the tyres –
which of course petrol bikes need too).
The day we went to Eastern Creek,
the first run of the Ripperton electric
bike, being ridden by Australian
Champion Kevin Curtin, achieved
less than two laps and ignominiously
returned to the pits on the back of a
recovery vehicle.
The pit crew spotted the problem in
an instant: the power lead which plugs
into the battery pack had somehow
vibrated loose and off. No power =
bike stops!
Later, the Varley bike, ridden by
Jason Morris, also impressed us on
the track.
Safety
Batteries are charged outside the bike with every cell monitored. A dedicated
computer gives instant feedback via “Batrium EV Suite” software.
18 Silicon Chip
While a bike is out on the track,
another battery pack (or packs) are
usually charging in the garage behind
the pits. It is mandatory for a competent team member to be present and
monitoring the charging process.
At Eastern Creek, we were able
to see the charging and monitoring
siliconchip.com.au
process with all cells being analysed
and displayed in real-time via a laptop computer. On the Varley bike the
batteries are not removable: they’re
chaged “in situ”
The Battery Management System
is a vital and compulsory component
as batteries could present a risk of
overheating and fire. The BMS must
provide a feedback loop to the charging system to disable charging in the
event that a cell or cells exceeds the
charge voltage limit specified by the
cell manufacturer.
It must also be capable of discon-
Like all racing bikes, off the track
the tyres must be kept warm for
maximum adhesion. At the same time
the motors, batteries and electronics
must be kept cool. Here a powered
tyre heater sits alongside a blower fan
– one heating, one cooling!
The Battery Management System and other monitoring circuitry takes a fair
amount of space (and adds weight) on the electric superbike. Weight must be
kept to a minimum to remain competitive.
siliconchip.com.au
necting power if the overall pack
voltage is greater than (or less than)
the cell manufacturer’s specifications.
The BMS is also (usually) the component responsible for regenerative
braking – that is, recovering energy
from the momentum of the bike under
braking, picking it up from the motor
powering the rear wheel. However, we
were told that given the short, sharp
braking typical of racing circuits, the
amount of energy that can be reclaimed
is miniscule.
The conventional (hydraulic) brake
is on the front wheel only.
The rules state that voltage is limited to a peak of 700V between any
two points. This means a maximum
of 700V DC or 700V peak for AC.
And in cases where the voltage of the
power circuit exceeds 42V, the power
circuit must be well insulated from the
onboard circuitry.
There must be two emergency stops
on each electric superbike. One is via
a lanyard which disconnects power
should the rider and bike become
separated. The second is via a “big
red button” on the back of the bike
(immediately behind the rider) which
is a mechanical switch, capable of being activated by anyone in the event
of an incident.
The circuitry must be set up so that
the voltage across the capacitors in
the power circuit falls to 65V or less
within five seconds if the general circuit power breaker is opened, or if the
December 2013 19
Duties of a scrutineer
Malcom Faed, photographed above with Victor Fenech, is well-known
to SILICON CHIP readers from his fuel-to-electric utility conversion
(SILICON CHIP, June 2009). Malcom is an electric bikes scrutineer for
the Electric Formula Extreme Challenge. Here he covers just some of
his role . . .
4-6 weeks before a bike first competes,
we review the TCF (compulsory Technical Construction File) documents of the
machine entering the series.
Over the following week or so clarification and additional information and photos
is requested from the team, or even a
visit to the bike in order to understand
the machines construction, technologies
and implementation of the technical rules.
This gives the teams sufficient time
to make any necessary modifications
required by the scrutineer.
2-3 weeks before the event, each team is
contacted to review any rule amendments
or concerns. Any modifications to the
machines are also reviewed and the TCF
documents updated accordingly.
On Race Day
Arrive bright and early to the venue.
(Sydney Raceway, Queensland Raceway,
Wakefield Park and Winton have hosted
previous events). Sign on with the organisers.
Meet the recovery crew and the ambulance crew and give a safety briefing on the
over-current sensors on the batteries
are tripped.
When the bike is in a powered-on
state, a flashing red light mounted on
the rear bodywork and visible from at
least 30m away, from both sides and
rear of the machine, must be activated.
All electrical cables inside the motorcycle must be protected by means
20 Silicon Chip
measures to take should a bike be involved
in an accident. This needs to occur three
times over the weekend as often there are
different crews each day.
Meet the teams and perform electrical
scrutineering before the event. This consists of verifying that the emergency stops,
horn and visual indicators are functioning
and meet the rules.
During the event – 3G coverage permitting – I will update the eFXC Facebook and
Twitter accounts with event information and
race times in order to promote the event.
There are also many people overseas keeping an eye on Australian developments.
The details for the electric Formula
Xtreme Challenge (eFXC) are available
www.formula-xtreme.com.au/xtremema.
nsf/1-FrontNewsPage
Thanks to the Australian Formula Xtreme
Challenge for hosting the fledgling sport
of electric superbike racing along with the
petrol bikes.
Over the course of the weekend notes
are recorded on the scrutineering, any incidents and notes to assist the organisers
in future events.
of over currents trips rated according to the diameter of the individual
conductors. There are also significant
rules regarding the battery mounting,
insulation and even its behaviour in
the event of an incident.
The entrant must ensure that the
electrical components used cannot
cause injury under any circumstances,
either during normal operation or in
foreseeable cases of malfunction.
Are they competitive?
When you look at top speeds of conventional bikes, you might think that
e-bikes are not really competitive. But
that’s not really the case because you
need to compare apples with apples.
The electric-powered bikes are on a
pretty steep development curve (three
years ago there was no such thing!).
But already, they’re managing about
205km/h or so down the long straight
at Eastern Creek.
The best riders on the best 1000cc
superbikes currently attain a top speed
of about 280km/h. But when you
look at the 450 and 600cc classes, the
electric bikes really are right up there.
450cc bikes can manage 195km/h and
the best 600cc with a top-notch rider
can push that up to about 220km/h.
So you can see that the electric bikes
are well in the race when it comes to
the 450 and 600cc classes.
It’s the aim of people like the Ripperton and the Varley teams, some of the
leaders in electric bike development,
to get them up there with the big boys
and they believe they are well on the
way to achieving that aim.
In fact, we at SILICON CHIP are in awe
of people like Ripperton and Morris –
and the teams behind them – who are
on the cutting edge of this technology.
As we mentioned earlier, three years
ago, there was no such thing as an
electric superbike but through sheer
persistence and “never say die” attitude, they have developed their bikes
to the point where they are today . . .
and are continuing that development
unabated.
What we are witnessing is the early
stages of a developing racing class. But
it’s a class that needs more entrants.
There is a real collaborative spirit in
the pits and a strong interest from various groups just wanting to get involved
in building a bike.
With no shortage of riders awaiting
the challenge of riding an electric superbike the next step is getting more
bikes on the grid.
If you are interested in getting
involved, or you would like the
challenge of building (or supporting the building of) a competing
bike please contact Victor Fenech at
victor<at>evmotorcycle.org
Act early and your bike could be
competing in 2014!
SC
siliconchip.com.au
Update your car’s
interior with
LED lighting
LED interior lamps in this 2004 Honda Accord
not only have much better colour rendition
than the original incandescents but give a
brighter and more even light than before.
By LEO SIMPSON
REPLACE THESE
WITH THESE
These LED lamps can be used to
replace a variety of incandescent
lamps in your car.
Are you hankering to replace your car even though it is still reliable
and has many years of life in it? It’s a common feeling but one way
to at least partially cure that hankering is to make some small mods
which make it look more up-to-date. Changing your car’s interior
lights to LEDs is an easy and cheap modification which is a really
worthwhile improvement.
L
ET’S FACE IT; incandescent lamps
are old hat and LEDs are the new
way. More and more cars are now fitted with LED stop and traffic indicator lighting and some are even using
high-intensity white LEDs for their
headlights. But some cars which use
LEDs for their headlights, such as the
22 Silicon Chip
latest Honda Accord V6, still use boring old incandescent lamps for their
interior lighting.
There are two major faults with
incandescent lamps for car interior
lights. First, they are often not bright
enough to let you read a map and
second, they pull too much current.
In fact, leaving your interior lights on
overnight can easily flatten your battery. Some cars have an inbuilt timer
which switches off the courtesy lights
if they are inadvertently left on but
many don’t. Back in the days when
cars only had one interior light, it
wasn’t such a problem but many cars
siliconchip.com.au
have quite a few incandescent lamps
and they can add up to a sizable drain
on the battery.
In my 2004 Honda Accord for example, there are three lamps in the roof
of the cabin and one in each door. The
cabin lamps each pull about 600mA
while the door lamps each pull 240mA
(at 12V). Hence, if I leave one of the
doors ajar, the total current drain is
just over 2A which is certainly enough
to flatten the battery overnight (fortunately, in the Honda Accord, the cabin
lamps turn off after a delay period).
However, while the current drain
is relatively high, the quality of lighting is poor and looking at them, I was
always thinking that they looked so
“orange” and old-fashioned. In fact,
they reminded me of the headlights on
6V cars (particularly on the VW beetle)
which were so feeble that you had to
light a match to see if they were on!
There is another disadvantage of
incandescent lamps for car lighting
and that is the lamps get so hot that
they can discolour and even char the
diffuser. After all, a 12V 600mA lamp
dissipates over 7W. Of course, as they
get older, the lamps also blacken and
that reduces their brightness even
further. Ultimately, they die and you
are left in the dark; quite disconcerting if it happens just when you want
to look at a map!
Recently, one of the interior lamps
in my car died and I decided to fix
them once and for all. Most car interior lighting either uses double-ended
“festoon” bulbs or so-called “wedge”
lamps which are all-glass construction
with connection wires on both sides of
the glass “wedge” which pushes into
a socket. Now the good news is that
there are countless LED equivalents
This photo clearly shows the effect of replacing the righthand front roof lamp
in this 2013 Honda Accord with a wedge LED lamp. Note the colour difference
between it and the original the incandescent lamp at left.
Both the front roof lamps in this 2004 Honda Accord have been replaced with
LED lamps. They not only have a cool white light but are also brighter and
generate considerably less heat than incandescent lamps.
to these incandescent lamps and you
can get them in a range of colours (cool
white for me, thanks, and one sugar),
with differing arrays of surface-mount
LEDs.
Some of these are based on a small
PCB with an array of four, six, eight
or more LEDs and some have a more
complicated construction where tiny
PCBs are assembled together to give
light radiation over wider angles.
Now as far as car interior lighting
is concerned, these fancier shapes are
unnecessary and defeat an advantage
of surface-mount LEDs which radiate
all their light in one direction. For
The door lamps in the 2004 Honda Accord were also updated with LED lamps and these two photos show the difference
between the old at left and the new at right. The cool white of the LED lamp is not only brighter but looks far better than
the orange light from the original incandescent lamp.
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 23
Which would you prefer – the original
interior incandescent lighting shown in
this photo . . .
interior lamps, there is no need to radiate light in many directions since they
will be fitted in a housing which only
lets light out in one direction anyway.
Identifying the lamps
The first step in this process is to
identify the particular types of lamps
in your car. This can be a bit of chore
as some of the diffusers can be quite
tricky to remove and there is a risk that
you might crack one when attempting
to do so. Having removed the diffuser
and the bulb, make note of its dimensions. Festoon bulbs come in various
sizes, eg, 31mm, 39mm and 42mm long
etc, and it is important that your LED
replacements fit properly.
The same comment applies to wedge
lamps – they also come in different
wedge sizes.
Armed with the type and size details, you are ready to start shopping.
Now you will find vast numbers of
LEDs and sellers on the internet and
undoubtedly many of them are cheap
and entirely satisfactory. I purchased
a number of different types on the
internet but I also visited my friendly
local Jaycar store to make sure that I
purchased the correct wedge lamps
for the doors in my car. I wanted to
check that I could buy the exact replacements because many of the LED
lamp illustrations on the net do not
really show the key dimensions. So
. . . or the LED lighting shown here? The
two photos have identical exposures
and the colours were not retouched.
you could buy them and then find they
simply don’t fit.
In my case, Jaycar had the correctsized wedge lamps (Cat. ZD-0390) I
needed for the doors of my Honda
Accord. And while Jaycar also have a
fine selection of festoon style and other
lamps for car lighting, including those
for brake and reversing lights, I had
already obtained a selection of festoon
lamps from on-line sellers on the net.
While you have to obtain festoon
lamps with the correct overall length,
you will also find they are mostly
based on a single PCB with an array
of six, eight or in one case that we
found, 24 SMD LEDs. Be aware that
these PCBs can be much wider than
the original festoon bulbs and if they
are too wide for the particular housing in your car, they simply won’t fit.
Nor should you make the mistake
of thinking that you should simply
fit the brightest LED lamps you can
get. There is no point in them being
needlessly bright. After all, they are
at close range and you don’t want to
be blinded.
Depending on which LED lamps
you choose, their current drain will
be a great deal less than the original
incandescent lamps. For example,
compared with the festoon lamp’s
600mA <at> 12V (800mA <at> 14.4V), the
LED equivalents I fitted with six SMD
LEDs each only pulled 36mA. So I
This rear interior ceiling
light in a 2013 Honda
Accord has been fitted
with a LED lamp on
the righthand side
only. Once again, the
difference in colour
temperature compared
to the incandescent lamp
on the left is obvious.
24 Silicon Chip
An incandescent
wedge lamp
(left) and its LED
replacement
lamp at right.
managed to reduce the total current
when a door is left ajar from over 2A
to just over 120mA. That’s about one
seventeenth!
By the way, there are no polarity
markings on the LED lamps. It’s just a
matter of trial and error to determine
which way around they go and there’s
no damage done if you get it wrong.
Colour variations
Another point to consider is that
even though you might purchase a
batch of LED lamps on the internet
for a bargain price, they will not all
necessarily be the same colour. We
found some that were not well matched
within the same batch. You certainly
don’t want LEDs of slightly different
colour in your car, as it can look quite
odd.
And while I prefer cool white LEDs,
other people may prefer warm white.
I just think that warm white is a poor
imitation of the same sickly colour as
incandescents. It certainly does not
provide better colour rendering; most
LED lamps are poor in this respect.
There is really not much more to say
on this topic. The photos accompanying this article show how effective LED
lamps are at lighting your car’s interior.
They certainly do improve the look of
the cabin at night and they should last
for the life of the car.
Finally, the total current drain of
the interior lamps will be drastically
reduced, meaning that you could leave
them on for several days without flatSC
tening the battery.
siliconchip.com.au
Does someone in your family need a hint for
YOUR Christmas gift?
Leave this page open where it can be “discovered”!
“discovered”!
PLEASE! GIVE ME A
GIFT
SUBSCRIPTION:
The Perfect
Christmas
Present!
p
4 It’s the gift that keeps giving, month after month after month
p
4 They’ll never miss an issue of their favourite magazine (newsagents do run out!)
4 It’s actually cheaper to subscribe than to buy over the counter
p
4 We pick up the tab for postage and handling
p
4 Your choice of 6 months, 12 months or 24 months subscription
p
4 You can also choose an online subscription (digital edition) or combined (digital & print)
p
Simply visit www.siliconchip.com.au/shop/giftsubs
and we’ll arrange everything, including a
special Christmas message from YOU!
Alternatively, call us on (02) 9939 3295 (9-4, Mon-Fri)
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 25
Electronic
By JOHN CLARKE
Bellbird
Photo by Sascha Wenninger – http://www.flickr.com/photos/sufw/9055617579/
Looking for a great school project or a really unique Christmas
decoration? This electronic Bellbird mimics the musical bell-like
sounds of a real Bellbird (or Bell Miner) and has a dynamic LED
chaser display as well.
Bellbirds
And, softer than slumber, and
sweeter than singing,
The notes of the bell-birds are
running and ringing.
The silver-voiced bell-birds, the
darlings of daytime!
They sing in September their songs
of the May-time;
from “Bellbirds”,
by Henry Kendall
26 Silicon Chip
K
NOWN FOR their characteristic
tinkling bell sounds, the Bellbird
(or more correctly the “Bell Miner”)
lives amongst the eucalyptus tree
canopies in South-Eastern Australia.
But while the bell-like sounds they
make are very musical, their presence
is not always completely appreciated.
Intrigued? – check out the “Bell Miners
& Dieback In Native Trees” panel for
more information on this.
By contrast, the SILICON CHIP Bellbird, which mimics the sound of a real
bellbird, will always be appreciated.
It’s presented here as a stand-alone
bell-shaped PCB with eye-catching
LED lighting effects and a piezo
transducer for the sound output. A 3V
lithium cell powers the unit which can
be hung on a hook or nail on a wall,
or even attached to a Christmas tree.
Like the real Bellbird, this electronic
Bellbird only make sounds during the
day or when there is sufficient ambient light. And like the real Bellbird,
the sounds it produces are sets of bell
sounds with randomised spacings
and repetitions. This randomisation
siliconchip.com.au
S1
+3V
POWER
10k
4
10k
λ
RB3/PWM
RA1
FREQUENCY
SET
10
RB4
RA0
RA2
S2
RB5
6
RB0
1 µF
MMC
MMC
3V
BUTTON
CELL
14
Vdd
MCLR/RA5
LDR1
1 µF
RA4/AN4
5
9
18
17
1
11
14
1
IC2: 74HC14
2
IC2a
3
240Ω
4
IC2e
11
IC2b
120Ω
13
62Ω
IC2d
9
12
IC2f
10
PIEZO
TRANSDUCER
56nF
1k
8
7
3
LED1 A
LED2 A
λ A
K
12
Vss
6
470Ω
IC1
PIC16LF88–I/P
470k
IC2c
λ
K
K LED8
RB6
13
RB7
16
RA7
15
RA6
2
RA3
7
RB1
8
RB2
LED3 A
λ A
λ
K
K LED9
LED5 A
LED4 A
λ A
λ A
λ
K
K LED10
λ
K
K LED11
LED7 A
LED6 A
λ A
λ A
λ
K
K LED12
λ A
λ
K
K LED14
5
SC
2013
λ
K LED13
LEDS
K
BELLBIRD
A
Fig.1: the circuit uses microcontroller IC1 to generate a PWM waveform at its pin 9 and this feeds Schmitt trigger
inverters IC2a-IC2f which in turn provide complementary (push-pull) drive to a piezo transducer. IC1 also drives
LEDs1-14 which are arranged in seven paralleled pairs to provide a chaser effect around the outside of the bell.
prevents the bell tones from sounding as though they are electronically
generated. A power switch at the top of
the PCB allows the unit to be switched
off if necessary.
As well as producing realistic bell
sounds, the unit drives 14 LEDs which
are arranged around the periphery of
the PCB. Whenever it produces a bell
sound, these LEDs chase downwards
on either side of the bell and then along
the base to the centre. The six LEDs
along the base then chase from the
centre to either side and then back to
the centre again, to simulate the final
“ringing” of the bell.
So unlike a real Bellbird which is
difficult to spot amongst the forest
canopy, our unit is highly visible. It
makes a great novelty project and is
ideal as a Christmas decoration.
Circuit details
Refer now to Fig.1 for the circuit
of the Bellbird. There’s not much to
it – just two ICs, 14 LEDs, an LDR and
a few sundry bits. A piezo transducer
siliconchip.com.au
reproduces the Bellbird sounds.
Inevitably, one of the ICs is a microcontroller (IC1). This is programmed
to produce the Bellbird sounds via its
pulse width modulation (PWM) output at pin 9. Twelve other outputs of
IC1 are used to drive the LEDs.
The PWM output is set to run at
around 2.8kHz with some variation
and its duty cycle is varied to alter
the volume. With a 50% duty cycle,
the volume is at its maximum and as
the duty cycle is reduced, the volume
falls. The duty cycle ranges from 50%
down to zero, with the minimum volume set at 0.2%.
Features & Specifications
Features
•
•
•
•
•
Unit produces lifelike Bellbird sounds
Bell-shaped PCB with LED chaser around outside; LEDs chase on bell sounds
Constant LED brightness as cell voltage varies
Bellbird sounds cease in darkness and low ambient light levels
Low current drain plus power on/off switch
Specifications
Power supply: 3V lithium cell
Current drain: zero when switched off, <1µA in darkness (100nA measured), typically
1.3mA average in light.
Cell life: 180 days expected with one hour per day usage
Bellbird tone: adjustable over a ±12% range in 0.375% steps
December 2013 27
DRI BLLE B
1 µF
56nF
1 µF
10k
A
A
NOTE: BUTTON
CELL HOLDER IS
UNDER PCB
62Ω
LED11
PIEZO1
LDR1
120Ω
LED4
240Ω
10k
LED10
470Ω
BUTTON
CELL
HOLDER
LED3
IC2 74HC14
A
A
LED9
To Piezo
+
LED2
1k
LED8
To Piezo
S1
LED1
A
A
08112131
BELLBIRD
A
IC1 PIC16LF88-I/P
A
S2
A
LED6 1 3 1 2 1 1 8 0LED7
A
LED5
470k
A
LED14
A
LED13
A
A
LED12
Fig.2: follow this parts layout diagram to assemble the parts onto the bell-shaped PCB. The piezo transducer is
mounted on M3 x 9mm Nylon spacers, while the button cell holder is mounted on the back of the PCB (see photo).
Note that it’s a good idea to mount the LEDs 5mm proud of the board so that they aren’t obscured by other parts.
The piezo transducer is driven via
IC2, a CMOS hex Schmitt trigger. IC2c
buffers and inverts the PWM output
from IC1, while paralleled stages IC2a
& IC2b re-invert the resulting signal to
drive the top of the piezo transducer.
IC2f also inverts the signal from
IC2c. Its pin 12 output in turn drives
IC2d & IC2e so that their outputs are inverted compared to those from IC2a &
IC2b. This allows the piezo transducer
to be driven in complementary fashion
with a nominal 6V peak-to-peak.
Basically, when IC2a & IC2b’s outputs are at 3V, IC2d & IC2e’s outputs
are at 0V and vice versa. Because the
two sets of outputs alternatively swing
to 3V, this gives a 6V peak-to-peak
drive (actually >5V peak-to-peak) for
the piezo transducer.
In effect, this doubles the output
voltage drive compared to just using
the PWM signal from IC1 as a single
output, with the second terminal of
the transducer connected to ground.
That arrangement would provide a
peak signal of less than 3V to the piezo
transducer.
Note that IC2d & IC2e drive the
lower piezo transducer connection
via a filter consisting of a 1kΩ resistor
and 56nF capacitor. This filter rolls
off the response above 2.8kHz and
thus removes the harmonics from the
square-wave outputs of the Schmitt
triggers. In effect, it ensures that a
“cleaner” sinewave signal is fed to the
piezo transducer.
while its paralleled twin LED8 is positioned at top right.
As shown on Fig.1, the LED anodes are commoned and driven by
IC1’s RA1, RA0, RA2 & RB5 outputs
via resistors. By contrast, each LED
pair is driven independently via the
cathodes, with LED1 & LED8 lighting
when IC1’s RB6 output goes low and
switching off when this output goes
high. Similarly, LED2 & LED9 light
when RB7 is low, LED3 & LED10 light
when RA7 is low and so on.
The 470Ω, 240Ω, 120Ω & 62Ω resistors can be individually driven by IC1
LED chaser
Table 2: Capacitor Codes
LEDs 1-14 are driven by IC1 as seven
sets of paralleled pairs. In practice,
they are arranged on the bell-shaped
PCB to give symmetrical lighting either
side of centre. For example, LED1 is
positioned at the top left of the PCB
Value
1µF
56nF
µF Value IEC Code EIA Code
1µF
1u0
105
0.056µF 56n
563
Table 1: Resistor Colour Codes
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
No.
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
28 Silicon Chip
Value
470kΩ
10kΩ
1kΩ
470Ω
240Ω
120Ω
62Ω
4-Band Code (1%)
yellow violet yellow brown
brown black orange brown
brown black red brown
yellow violet brown brown
red yellow brown brown
brown red brown brown
blue red black brown
5-Band Code (1%)
yellow violet black orange brown
brown black black red brown
brown black black brown brown
yellow violet black black brown
red yellow black black brown
brown red black black brown
blue red black gold brown
siliconchip.com.au
Bell Miners & Dieback In Native Trees
Parts List
The Bell Miner (Manorina melanophrys), commonly known as the Bellbird, is
found in the eucalyptus forests of south-east Australia. The birds feed mainly on
dome-shaped protective coverings made by a particular psyllid bug from its own
secretions. These bugs themselves feed on the eucalyptus from the leaves of
eucalyptus or gum trees.
Colonies of Bell Miners allow large populations of the psyllid bug to exist in their
territory by expelling other birds that also eat these bugs. They also maintain a
sufficiently large territory so that they don’t over-feed. This maintains the population of psyllid bugs and can lead to ‘die back’ in the eucalyptus forest.
1 double-sided plated-through
PCB, code 08112131, 91 x
73mm (bell shaped)
1 PCB-mount SPDT toggle
switch (Altronics S1421 or
equivalent) (S1)
1 SPST vertical mount micro
switch with 6mm actuator
(Jaycar SP-0603, Altronics
S1421) (S2)
1 20mm button cell holder (Jaycar
PH-9238, Altronics S5056)
1 CR2032 lithium cell
1 30mm diameter piezo
transducer (Jaycar AB-2440,
Altronics S 6140)
1 LDR 10kΩ light resistance
(Jaycar RD-3480, Altronics
Z1621) (LDR1)
2 M3 x 9mm tapped Nylon
spacers
4 M3 x 5mm screws
1 70mm length of 1.25mm
enamelled copper wire
or driven in various parallel combinations to power the LEDs. This allows
the LED current to be maintained at a
relatively constant value as the supply
voltage progressively drops from 3V
when the cell is new down to 2V as
cell discharges.
The voltage across the lit LEDs
always remains close to 1.8V which
leaves 1.2V across the resistors when
the button cell is at 3V and just 0.2V
across the resistors when the cell is
down to 2V. By selecting the appropriate resistance, we can set the LED
current to about 5mA regardless of
cell voltage.
In operation, each resistor is effectively switched into circuit when its
corresponding pin on microcontroller
IC1 is set high. Alternatively, a pin can
be set as an input to effectively disconnect its resistor and thus prevent
it from contributing to the LED drive.
For example, when RA1 is high,
the LEDs can be driven via this 470Ω
resistor. Alternatively, when RA1 is
set as an input, this resistor does not
contribute to any LED current. Similarly, when RA0 is high, it drives the
LEDs via the 240Ω resistor and so on.
If more than one output is set high,
the corresponding resistors are driven
in parallel. Taking them all high provides the lowest resistance possible
(since that are effectively connected
in parallel) and this is required when
the cell voltage is down to 2V.
When the cell voltage is 3.0V, just
the 240Ω resistor drives the LEDs.
For any voltage between 2V and 3V,
a suitable combination of resistors
is selected so that the LED current is
always close to 5mA.
Determining cell voltage
So how does IC1 measure the cell
voltage so that the appropriate resistors can be selected? It’s done by using
the AN4 input to measure the voltage
between the anodes of LEDs1 & 8 and
the positive supply when these LEDs
are driven via the 470Ω resistor at RA1.
In practice, the voltage across the
LEDs remains close to 1.8V regardless
of the variation in LED current and so
the measured voltage is proportional
to the supply (ie the cell voltage). As
previously stated, at 3.0V the voltage
measurement is 3.0 - 1.8V = 1.2V. With
a 2V supply, the voltage measurement
is 2 - 1.8V = 0.2V, and so on.
A look-up table in the software
specifies which resistors should be
selected for a given measured voltage.
LDR1 is used to monitor the ambient light, so that the LEDs only come
on during daylight or in high ambient
light conditions. This is done to conserve the cell and works as follows.
In darkness, the LDR’s resistance is
very high at several megohms and so
pin 6 of IC1 is held low (1V or less)
via its associated 470kΩ resistor. When
IC1 detects this low voltage, it goes to
sleep, stopping all operation and thus
minimising the current drain from the
cell. Typically, the current drain in
this sleep state will be less than 1µA
but our prototype was measured at
just 100nA.
As soon as light is received by the
LDR, its resistance falls to around
Issues Getting Dog-Eared?
Semiconductors
1 PIC16LF88-I/P microcontroller
programmed with 0811213A.hex
(IC1)
1 74HC14 DIP14 hex Schmitt
trigger (IC2)
1 DIL14 IC socket
1 DIL18 IC socket
14 3mm green high brightness
LEDs (LED1-14)
Capacitors
2 1µF monolithic ceramic (MMC)
1 56nF or 47nF MKT polyester
Resistors (0.25W 1%)
1 470kΩ
1 240Ω
2 10kΩ
1 120Ω
1 1kΩ
1 62Ω
1 470Ω
10kΩ and the voltage at pin 6 rises
to almost the supply voltage. This
causes the microcontroller to wake up
and begin playing the Bellbird tones
and driving the LEDs. Note that IC1
always checks the cell voltage each
Keep your copies
safe with these
handy binders
REAL
VALUE
AT
$14.95
PLUS P
&
P
Order now from www.siliconchip.com.au/Shop/4 or call (02) 9939 3295 and quote
your credit card number or mail the handy order form in this issue. *See website for
overseas prices.
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 29
Can It Be Made Louder?
Inevitably, some people will want to
make it louder and will want to know
what modifications are necessary to
achieve this. Hence, after the circuit
had been fine-tuned to give the most
realistic Bellbird sounds, we looked at
whether the low-pass filter in series with
the piezoelectric transducer could be
further tweaked to make it louder.
To that end, we reduced the 1kΩ
current-limiting resistor to 220Ω and
increased the associated filter capacitor
from 56nF to 220nF (the piezo transducer has a self-capacitance of 38nF).
The result was that it was slightly
louder but we judged that the sound
was a little more “clicky” (because of
the stepped modulation) and had also
lost some of the subtle echo effects
which make the Bellbird sound much
more realistic.
Another way of making the sound
louder would be to increase the supply
voltage to 4.5V by substituting a 3 x AAA
cell (alkaline) battery instead of the 3V
button cell. Note that this will increase
the peak signal voltage to about 7.5V.
Well, can the signal be fed to an
external amplifier? The answer is yes
but be aware that the signal has quite a
wide dynamic range and the peak signal
amplitude with a fresh 3V cell will be be
in excess of 5V (or 7.5V peak with a 4.5V
supply), so if the volume control is too
advanced, the amplifier and perhaps the
loudspeaker will be overloaded.
time it wakes up or when the circuit
is powered up (via S1), so that it can
correctly set the LED current.
Adjusting the tone
Switch S2 is used to adjust the
Bellbird frequency (or tone). This is
included because IC1 utilises an internal oscillator that runs with an initial
2% tolerance. As a result, the oscillator
frequency may need adjusting slightly
to give the correct bellbird sound.
When S2 is pressed, the resulting
low on RB4 is detected by IC1 and
the program then produces a series of
bell tones, with each tone varying by a
small amount (0.375%) for each step.
The switch is simply released when
the required tone is found. IC1 then
stores this tone setting in its EEPROM
so that the correct tone is used from
then on, even if the power is switched
off and on again.
If necessary, you can return to the
initial default tone by pressing and
holding down S2 as the Bellbird is
powered up with S1. Alternatively,
you can cycle through the available
tones by holding S2 down until the
centre frequency is reached. Since
there are 64 separate tones produced,
the centre tone frequency occurs 32
tones after the transition from maximum to minimum, a tone step that’s
readily noticed.
S1 is the power on/off switch. The
3V supply is decoupled using a 1µF
capacitor for IC1 and another 1µF
capacitor for IC2. The MCLR-bar pin
of IC1 is a power-on reset input and
30 Silicon Chip
This view shows how the cell holder
is mounted on the rear of the PCB.
It must be installed before mounting
the piezo transducer, so that you can
solder its leads.
pulling it high via a 10kΩ resistor
ensures that the microcontroller starts
correctly (ie, at the beginning of its
program) when power is applied.
Note that no reverse polarity protection is included to protect the ICs
against incorrect supply polarity.
That’s because the cell holder itself
does not make a connection to the
cell if the latter is inserted incorrectly.
Provided the cell holder is installed on
the PCB correctly and IC1 & IC2 are
both orientated correctly, the circuit
cannot be damaged by an incorrectly
installed cell.
That said, we recommend that the
supply polarity delivered by the cell in
its holder be checked before installing
IC1 & IC2 into their sockets. This is
detailed later under testing.
Assembly
Building this project is easy and
should take you no more than 45 minutes. There are no surface-mount parts
(SMDs) and all parts are installed on a
PCB coded 08112131 and measuring
91 x 73mm overall. This is bell-shaped
and will already be cut to shape if you
ordered the PCB from the SILICON CHIP
Online Shop or as part of a kit.
Fig.2 shows the parts layout diagram. As can be seen, all parts mount
on the top of the PCB except for the
cell holder which mounts on the back.
Begin the assembly by installing
the resistors. Table 1 shows the colour
codes but we also recommend using
a digital multimeter to measure each
resistor, just to make sure that each
is placed in its correct position. The
resistors must be pushed all the way
down onto the PCB, with the leads soldered and trimmed short on the back.
The IC sockets are next on the list
but make sure they are orientated as
shown on Fig.2 (ie, notched ends to
the left). Don’t install the ICs at this
stage though; that step comes later,
after some initial testing.
Follow with the capacitors and the
two switches, again pushing these
parts right down onto the PCB before
soldering. Note that S2 will only
mount with one orientation, as its pin
spacings differ between adjacent sides.
The LDR can now be installed (it
can go in either way around), after
which you can install the LEDs. The
latter must all be orientated with their
longer anode leads (A) towards the top
of the PCB. You can push the LEDs all
the way down onto the PCB if you like
but we suggest mounting them about
5mm proud of the PCB so that they
aren’t obscured by adjacent parts.
The best way to go about this is to
push each LED down onto a 5mm-high
cardboard spacer (slid between its
leads) before soldering it into position.
To make this process easier, the leads
can be soldered on the top of the PCB.
Next on the list are two M3 x 9mm
stand-offs which are used to mount the
piezo transducer. Secure these to the
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.3: this scope grab shows part of a sequence of Bellbird
“calls”. Note that each one differs in amplitude, modulation
and duration.
PCB using M3 x 6mm screws but don’t mount the piezo
transducer at this stage. Once these are in place, install the
cell holder on the rear of the PCB (ie, under IC2).
A hanging loop can now be made using a 70mm-length of
1.25mm-diameter enamelled copper wire. Cut it to length,
then scrape the enamel from the ends using a sharp hobby
knife before bending the wire into a loop. The wire ends
can then be bent at right angles and soldered to the holes
on either side of switch S1, at the top of the PCB.
Fig.4: this shows a 10-second sequence of Bellbird calls. The
scope has been over-driven to more clearly demonstrate the
dynamic range of the signal which has a peak voltage of
just over 5V. Again, note that there are a variety of “calls”,
to simulate a group of Bellbirds calling in a forest.
Testing
Now for some initial tests before installing the ICs and
the piezo transducer.
First, insert the cell into its holder, then switch the unit
on using toggle switch S1. That done, check the voltage
between pins 14 & 5 of IC1’s socket. You should get a
reading of +3V (ie, the cell voltage) on pin 14. Similarly,
pin 14 of IC2 should also be at +3V with respect to pin 7
of this socket.
If this is correct, switch off and install the ICs. Make
sure that both ICs are orientated correctly; ie, with the
notch or pin 1 indentation at one end of each IC towards
the notched end of its socket.
The piezo transducer can now be installed. It mounts
onto the stand-offs after first drilling out its mounting holes
to 3mm and is secured using M3 x 6mm machine screws.
Once it’s in position, trim its leads to about 35mm long,
strip 3mm of insulation from the wire ends and solder the
leads to the pads on the PCB marked ‘To Piezo’. It doesn’t
matter which way around you connect these leads; they
can go to either PCB pad.
And that’s it! You should now be greeted by musical
Bellbird sounds when the unit is switched on and the
LEDs should chase down the outside of the bell and along
the bottom. If necessary, you can now change the Bellbird
tone by pressing and holding S2 to set the Bellbird cycling
through its output frequency steps. Release the switch
when the required tone is heard.
If you want to return to the default frequency, switch the
Bellbird off and wait a few seconds, then press and hold
pushbutton switch S2 while you re-apply power. Finally,
after a second or so, release S2 and the unit will again be
SC
at the default frequency.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.6: the Bellbird signal is a heavily filtered sawtooth waveform which is modulated in steps. The low-pass filtering has
a -3dB point at about 2kHz.
Fig.5: this scope grab shows just one Bellbird call, taken
at a sweep speed of 20ms/div to show more detail of the
complicated modulation which is applied to each note.
December 2013 31
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support<at>atoz-electronix.com.au
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December
ecember 2013 33
HOWCASE 2013 CHRISTMAS SHOWCASE 2013
100W Digital Amplifier, Li-Po Battery . . .
PortaPAL-D
Powerful, Portable
Public Address
Loudspeaker System
by John Clarke
With battery operation, high efficiency loudspeakers and a class-D
amplifier, the PortaPAL-D PA system has enough power to blow your
socks off! It’s ideal for busking, sports events, meetings or anywhere
you need a powerful, portable PA system.
W
hile we have published
a portable public address
loudspeaker system previously (also called the PortaPAL), that
was more than 10 years ago, in February 2003.
The main semiconductors used in
that design have become unavailable
and technology has marched ahead
with efficient class-D amplifiers, along
with the advent of lithium batteries
which are much more energy dense.
Our new PortaPAL-D uses the
CLASSiC-D Amplifier published in
November and December 2012, along
with its matching speaker protector
from the same months and the DC-DC
Converter published in May 2013.
With that combination we have a
high-power amplifier that can be run
from a 12V battery. One year later, we
have added the preamplifiers, mixer,
tone controls and power supervision
necessary for the PortaPAL-D to function.
We are using two 8 200mm loudspeakers (with concentric tweeters)
34 Silicon Chip
in parallel to hand the full 100 watts
available from the amplifier. Buying
the commercial equivalent could
easily set you back by more than a
thousand dollars!
The PortaPAL-D is in a timber cabinet measuring 620 x 350 x 330mm and
weighing about 20kg. It is covered in
speaker carpet with corner protectors,
to guard against damage from bumps
and roadie use.
The two loudspeakers are mounted
behind protective steel grilles that
are themselves protected by being
recessed into the box.
On the rear is the main control
panel, again recessed into the box for
protection against damage.
A top hat socket, for use with a
speaker stand and a carry handle are
included.
The cabinet and chassis for the electronics can be made using standard
tools. And you need not be worried
by small imperfections while building
the cabinet since these will be covered
by the carpet anyway. The result will
be a PA box that looks professionally
finished.
Sealed enclosure
The cabinet includes an open section to mount the PortaPAL-D electronics but the rest of the box is an infinite
baffle design. This has advantages
over an open-back design in that the
sealed cabinet provides damping of
the speaker cone at low frequencies,
preventing the cone from being overdriven with high power bass signals
(or when accidentally dropping a
microphone onto the floor!).
Another advantage is that the microphone just needs to be positioned
behind the front edge of the speaker
cabinet to minimise acoustic feedback.
Two XLR sockets are provided
for balanced microphones with one
channel providing phantom power, if
required. Both inputs can be used with
dynamic microphones. Guitar input
is via a standard 6.35mm jack socket
while RCA stereo sockets mix left and
right line inputs into a mono signal.
siliconchip.com.au
PortaPAL-D Features
• Class D low-distortion power
amplifier delivering up to 100W
to the loudspeakers
• Portable 12V Li-Po batterypowered amplifier with charger
• Twin 200mm loudspeakers with
integral tweeters
• Two microphone inputs (4.5mV)
• Guitar input (50mV)
• Line input (1V) and output
• Individual level controls
• Bass and treble controls
• Standby power-down to
conserve battery power
• Low battery shutdown
• Standby indication
• Charger indication
• Thermostat-operated air
circulation fan
• Rugged cabinet with carpet, corner
protectors and speaker grilles
• Top hat included for use with
speaker stands
Each input has its own level control
and bass and treble tone controls are
provided.
A line output is also provided to
feed an additional amplifier, recorder,
etc.
Power source & management
The PortaPAL-D is powered via a
12V Lithium Polymer (Li-Po) battery
rather than the sealed lead acid (SLA)
type of the original PortaPAL.
This makes it much lighter. While a
typical 7.2Ah SLA battery will weigh
2.55kg, the much smaller 8Ah Li-Po is
less than a third of this. Plus, the Li-Po
battery can be discharged much more
deeply before recharging.
In effect, you get more than double
the SLA’s capacity for a fraction of the
weight and size.
As well as a main power switch,
a two-stage standby circuitry automatically powers down sections of the
circuit to reduce power drain if the
PortaPAL-D is not making noise. Two
LED indicators show the standby status.
siliconchip.com.au
Power
is restored
quickly
when an
input signal
is detected.
A low-battery shutdown is also
included which protects the battery
from over-discharge. We estimate
that the PortaPAL-D should run for
at least eight hours with normal use
and longer with periods of shutdown.
A commercially-made charger (intended for Li-Po cells) is set into the
front panel, so that its controls can be
accessed and its status LED visible.
This can be powered from a nominal
12V (11-15V) supply, with a current up
to 4.5A if the supply can deliver that.
The battery can be charged at any
time, regardless of whether the PortaPAL-D is in use or even switched off.
Typically a 12V plugpack would
be used to charge the PortaPAL-D,
although a larger battery could also
be used, either free-standing or in a
vehicle.
Circuit overview
Fig.1 shows the general arrangement of the PortaPAL-D. As already
mentioned, we use the CLASSiC-D
amplifier module, the loudspeaker
protector and the DC-DC Converter
published previously. Full details
for these projects can be found in the
November and December 2012 issues
for the amplifier and protector and
the May 2013 issue for the DC-DC
Converter. They can also be accessed
on-line via www.siliconchip.com.au.
The CLASSiC-D amplifier is used
mainly due to its efficiency (and
therefore power saving). It can run
at high power without generating too
much heat. This is a distinct advantage
December 2013 35
PROTECT
LK4
SIGNAL
CLASSIC-D
AMPLIFIER
IN
MIXER AND
PREAMPLIFIER
SPEAKER
OUT
OUT
(NOV/DEC 2012)
LK3
IN
8
COAXIAL
SPEAKERS
LOUDSPEAKER
PROTECTOR OUT
(NOV/DEC 2012)
+35V,
0V
SHUTDOWN
–35V
+12V
0V
CELL
MONITOR
CELL
EQUALISATION
– +
Li-PO 3-CELL
BATTERY
8Ah
Fig.1: the PortaPAL-D brings together several
recent and quite innovative projects into one
handy unit. The mixer and preamplifier sections
are new and based on proven designs but the
main amplifier, the CLASSiC-D 100W digital
amplifier, the DC-DC converter which powers it
and the loudspeaker protector which prevents
catastrophic failure are state-of-the-art designs
from the past twelve months. Also of note is the
use of the 12V Lithium Polymer battery, saving
significant weight and size, and the commercial
Li-Po battery charger with added battery
protection circuitry.
DC-DC
CONVERTER
(MAY 2013)
50°C
SWITCH
+
OUT
Li-PO
CHARGER
FAN
IN
–
CHARGER
SUPPLY
over conventional class AB amplifiers
which are nowhere near as efficient
and generate significant heat.
Another reason is that the amplifier
has proven reliable and has low levels
of distortion and noise with extra features such as temperature cut out and
over-current protection.
The CLASSiC-D amplifier is powered by a DC-DC converter, delivering
plus and minus 35V DC supply from
a 12V supply. With this, it can deliver
up to 100W into 4 for short periods
and 50W on a continuous basis.
CON3
MIC 2 IN
GAIN
IC1b
Battery-saving auto shutdown
To conserve battery when not actually being driven, the PortaPAL-D has
a two-stage shutdown.
First, after a short period of no
signal, the amplifier module is shut
down. This is controlled in part by
the power supervision section. In the
second stage, after a longer period of no
signal, the power supervision circuitry
VR1
BASS &
TREBLE
IC5b
IC3a
VR2
LEVEL + GAIN
GAIN
IC2
CON9
VR6
MIXER
IC5a
IC4a
CON10
CON8
VR3
LINE INPUTS
SIGNAL DETECTOR
(CON12)
TO CLASS D
AMPLIFIER
‘SHUTDOWN’
LED1
DELAY
VR4
Q3, IC7, Q4
G
S
POWER
LED3
POWER
SUPERVISION
(RELAYS 1-3)
+12V TO
PREAMPLIFIERS
& MIXER
36 Silicon Chip
RELAY4
IC6a, D1, D2, IC6b
10-WAY IDC
CONNECTORS
S1
SIGNAL
OUT
STANDBY1
LEVEL
L
R
LINE
OUTPUTS
LEVEL + GAIN
IC3b
GUITAR
INPUT
switches off the DC-DC Converter and
so powers down the system.
The power supervision circuitry also
controls the charging of the battery.
While power is applied, the charger
continually measures the voltage of
each cell, ensuring each is not over- or
under-charged.
Typically, the lithium-polymer cell
balancing leads would connect directly
to the charger. However, this could
mean the cells would discharge via the
charger over time and possibly flatten
the battery. To avoid this, we connect
VR5
LEVEL + GAIN
(CON10)
GAIN
IC1a
6-WAY SIL
HEADER
& SOCKET
CON11
MIC 1 IN
A small fan is switched by a thermostat when the amplifier heatsink
reaches 50°C, circulating cooling air.
(CON8)
BATTERY
LEADS
+35V
+12V SWITCHED
POWER
SUPERVISION
STANDBY2
LED2
Q5
D
DC-DC
CONVERTER
+12V SWITCHER
Fig.2: the circuit elements
in more detail. These are
explained in the text – and you
can compare these elements
with the circuit diagrams on
following pages.
siliconchip.com.au
the cell monitor leads via the power
supervision circuitry.
Detail of the preamplifier, mixer and
standby circuitry is shown in Fig.2.
Microphone inputs (Mic1 and Mic2)
and their gain stages (IC1a and IC1b)
are on their own PCB and connect
to the main PCB via a 6-way single
in line (SIL) header and socket. The
guitar input and line input plus the
line outputs are also on a separate PCB
and similarly connect via 10-way IDC
socket and plug.
The level potentiometers control
the gain, with additional gain provided after the level controls for the
microphone and guitar inputs. A mixer
combines the four signals (Mic1, Mic2,
Guitar and Line) and its output is fed to
the bass and treble tone controls. From
there the signal goes to the input for
the CLASSiC-D amplifier, to the line
outputs and also to a signal detector
which forms part of the shutdown
circuitry.
In “Standby 1” state, if the signal is
off for longer than 15s, relay 4 is triggered, shutting down the CLASSiC-D
amplifier. The amplifier is still powered but in shutdown. LED1 lights to
show this state. Any input signal will
instantly restore full operation to the
amplifier.
If there is still no input signal af-
PortaPAL-D Specifications
Output Power:
100W into 4 short term
50W into 4 continuous
Output sound level:
Typically 96dB (SPL) at 1W
Input sensitivity and
Microphone: 4.5mV; <20Hz-20kHz
Frequency Response (-3dB): Guitar: 50mV; 25Hz-25kHz
Line: 1V; <20Hz-50kHz
Tone Controls:
Bass +11dB and -14dB at 100Hz
Treble +9.5dB and -12.6dB at 10kHz
Signal-to-Noise Ratio:
-80dB with respect to 50W into 4 (inputs at
minimum gain; 20Hz-20kHz bandwidth);
Muting:
Threshold at <150mW output power
Standby modes (no input):
15s typical for Standby1
100s typical for Standby2
<1s return to normal operation
Battery consumption:
“Low battery” state activated – 8.5A
Standby2 – 45mA (DC-DC converter turned off)
Standby1 – 320mA (amplifier only turned off)
Powered, before either standby state – 730mA
“Low Battery” thresholds:
Typically 10.5V switches PortaPAL-D off
11.2V switches PortaPAL-D on
Battery Charger:
Input 11-15VDC, 4.5A charging current maximum
Dimensions:
620 x 350 x 330mm inclusive of corner protectors
Mass:
17.5kg
Here’s a view of
the electronics
module in its
metalwork,
removed from
the PortaPAL-D
speaker box.
A commercial
charger is
incorporated
because it is
perfectly suited
to the Li-Po
battery pack we
used and will
result in longest
battery life.
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 37
+12V
4
4
+12V
10k*
10F* 10k*
10k*
* THESE COMPONENTS
FOR PHANTOM POWER
MIC1
INPUT
1
3
2
CON1
1k
FB°
1k
1
IC1a
3
47F FB°
2
470pF
CON2
10k
FB°
MIC1
OUT
SIGNAL
GND
3
+Vref
150pF
3
1
IC1: LM833
22k
°FERRITE BEADS
1
150
6
150pF
Vref
22k
1k
6
7
IC1b
150
5
CON8
6
+12V
POWER
GND
SIGNAL
GND
6
2 x 47F
1k
3
10pF
2
CON4
7
6
IC2
LINE
INPUTS
R
CON6
R
LINE
OUTPUTS
SC
2013
10k
PORTAPAL-D
GND
LINE
IN
MIC2
LEVEL
1F
#
VR2
10k
LOG
+12V
8
9
1
9
+Vref
10F
4
#
LINE
IN
2
LINE
OUT
5
2.2F
MICROPHONE, GUITAR & LINE INPUTS & OUTPUTS
lights to show power is on.
Main power is controlled via switch
S1. If on, the battery voltage is monitored by the low voltage shutdown
section (IC8 and Q1).
Should the battery supply drop
below about 10.5V, the power to the
330nF
LINE
OUT
1F
VR3
10k
LOG
NP
5
GUITAR
LEVEL
7
Vref
Fig.3: the input circuitry for the two
microphones, guitar (which of course could
be used for other sources) and the line inputs
(suitable for audio players such as MP3s
or tablets) are quite conventional. Only
Mic1 input has provision for microphones
requiring phantom power but you can use
ordinary (dynamic) mics on this input too.
ter about 100s, “Standby2” state is
entered. Power is switched off to the
DC-DC Converter and this in turn
switches off the CLASSiC-D amplifier,
while LED2 lights showing Standby 2.
When there is audio, power is restored
to the amplifier within 1 second. LED3
38 Silicon Chip
GND
(10-WAY IDC
CONNECTOR)
L
6
3
+Vref
10F
CON7
4
8
2.2k
10F
CON10
+12V
GUITAR
IN
680pF
2.2k
1F
# POT BODIES
WIRED TOGETHER
WITH 330nF TO
EARTH
(6-PIN SIL
HEADER
SOCKET)
+Vref
1
7
2.2F
MIC1
LEVEL
VR1
10k
LOG
CON11
GUITAR
IN
1M
L
150
4
4.7k
+Vref
10F
3
TP3
4.7k
CON5
+12V
5
MIC2
10F
100nF
IC2: TL071
7
4
#
2
150pF
GUITAR INPUT
1
MIC1
(6-PIN SIL
HEADER)
22k
10k
MIC2
OUT
CON3
4
47F
3
+Vref
TP2
5
1k
100F
6
8
IC4b
TP1
8
2
10k
MIC2
INPUT
5
10k
47F
10k
10k
POWER
GND
22k
47F FB°
470pF
2
10F
100nF
150pF
+12V
#
LINE IN
LEVEL 10F
VR4
10k
LOG
2
(10-WAY IDC
CONNECTOR)
SC
2013
PORTAPAL-D
preamplifiers and mixer is removed
and the whole system shuts down.
Current draw is only that of the low
voltage shutdown circuitry at 8.5A.
Circuit detail
Balanced microphone inputs for
Mic1 and Mic2 are via XLR sockets,
with the signals fed to the inputs of
low noise op amps IC1a & IC1b. Assuming 600 microphones, these preamplifiers have a gain of 22. Both are
identical, except that the Mic1 input
provides phantom power for electret
microphones (if used).
Phantom power is limited to 0.5mA
or so, sufficient for the typical electret microphones used in PA systems
siliconchip.com.au
+12V
10F
100nF
150
100nF
1000F
CHASSIS
+Vref
IC5: TL072
10nF
15nF
100pF
8
IC3a
2
10F
18k
NP
2
3
TP4
10k
100k
IC5a
4
NP
TP7
CUT
VR5 100k LIN
1k
10k
TREBLE
+Vref
8
IC5b
7
10F
10k
CUT
VR6 100k LIN
x11 AMPLIFIER
47pF
6
5
1.5nF
BOOST
330pF
10F
BOOST
1F
1
30k
1k
+Vref
1
15k
18k
BASS
30k
3
100F
100nF
OUTPUT TO
AMPLIFIER
CON9
10
LK1
10k
47k
IC3: LM833
MIXER
5
100k
7
IC3b
6
4
15k
TP5
10k
1k
100k
IC4a
1
10k
15k
TP6
330pF
x11 AMPLIFIER
10k
MIXER & TONE CONTROL SECTION (MAIN PCB)
but not condenser microphones. If
more current is required, reduce the
10kresistors, possibly to 2.2k or
less.
High frequencies above 48kHz are
rolled off by the 150pF capacitors
across the 22kfeedback resistors. The
470pF capacitor shunting the balanced
input lines, in conjunction with the
microphone impedance, also roll off
the high frequencies.
Ferrite beads in the 1k input resistors help to reduce RF pickup, while
the use of 1% resistors in the balanced
microphone circuits ensures good rejection of common mode signals such
as mains hum.
The unbalanced outputs are each
siliconchip.com.au
TO POINT A
IN POWER
SUPERVISION
SECTION
(SIGNAL
DETECTION)
To whet your appetite
ready for the assembly
details next month,
this shot shows the
internal make-up of the
PortaPAL-D.
At left (vertical) is the
main CLASSiC-D amplifier
board, while at top right is
the mixer and tone control
PCB. Below that is the
mic, guitar and line input/
output board while the
long blue object is the Li-Po
battery. Its charger is the
“black box” almost hidden
at rear, along with the
DC-DC converter in its own
diecast case.
IC4: LM833
2
+Vref
Fig.4: from the audio input boards, signal is fed to level control
pots, more amplification and thence to the mixer and tone
control stages. The ouput from this goes to the CLASSiC-D digital amplifier.
x11 AMPLIFIER
3
10F
150
330pF
10F
1k
TONE CONTROLS
fed to level potentiometers VR1 & VR2
via a 150 stopper resistor and 10F
AC coupling capacitor. The signals are
then applied to op amps IC3a and IC3b,
both of which have a gain of 11. This
means that maximum gain for microphone signals before the mixer is 242.
Guitar input
The guitar input stage comprises IC2,
a TL071 Fet input op amp connected as
a non-inverting amplifier with a gain
of 2 for mid-band frequencies.
The guitar signal is coupled via two
47µF capacitors in series. These are
equivalent to a non-polarised capacitor and are included to cater for inputs
with a positive or negative bias voltage,
that goes beyond the voltage bias set
by the Vref (at half supply).
We have specified the high load
resistance of 1M to ensure optimum
high frequency response with the
relatively high inductance of typical
guitar pickups. With such a high load
resistance, you might wonder why we
have used such a large input coupling
capacitance. After all, to maintain a flat
response to below 20Hz, all you need
is an 8.2nF input capacitor. The reason
is to minimise noise, which occurs
when op amp IC2 sees as low a source
impedance as possible.
Output from IC2 is coupled to the
“guitar” level control, VR3, via a
150resistor and 10F capacitor. The
December 2013 39
+12V
FROM IC5b
PIN 7 IN
TONE
CONTROL
SECTION
100nF
10F
LED1
K
3
8
1
IC6a
2
1k
1F
A
CHARGER
OUTPUT
CHARGER
SUPPLY
OUT
CHARGER
SUPPLY
IN
220F
10F
1k
4
3
IC7
7555
6
2
10k
1M
C
B
10k
B
100k
SIGNAL
DETECTOR
8
7
A
10F
BATTERY
470k
470k
K
22pF
1k
A
7
IC6b
5
D1
1N4148
100F
CON12
6
K
4
470k
K
D3
4.7k
D2
1N4148
CLASS-D
AMPLIFIER
SHUTDOWN
RLY4
470k
TP9
DC-DC
CONV
MAIN
SUPPLY
A
STANDBY1
IC6: LM358
A
+12V’
10
SCHMITT
TRIGGER
C
1
Q3
BC337
K
E
Q2
BC337
A
E
10k
D4
1N4148
DELAY
CON13
+
–
+
–
+
–
+
–
+
–
4
5
7
L1 16H
1
2
10A
8
9
10
S1
CHASSIS
RLY1
o
11
K
POWER
D6
1N5404
12
13
RLY2
K
50
THERMAL
CUT-IN
(NO)
–
3
2
3
2
CELL SENSING
RLY3
A
4
D1– D4: 1N4148
A
1
CON14
270k
Li-PO
3-CELL
BATTERY
CON15
4
2.2M
12V
FAN
+
1
D5
1N4004
270k
+
A
–
CHARGE
SENSE
INPUTS
(CON13)
F1
6
SC
2013
PORTAPAL-D
K
1N4004
POWER SUPERVISION SECTION (MAIN PCB)
A
K
Fig.5: here’s where the PortaPAL-D excels over earlier mixers – it uses a Li-Po battery and a commercial charger to give
much more “bang for buck” when it comes to portable use. For a full explanation, see the accompanying text.
signal is then fed to op amp lC4a, which
is identical to IC3a & IC3b.
Line signal
Stereo line inputs (eg, from a CD
player or MP3 player) are mixed to a
mono signal with 2.2k resistors and
fed to potentiometer VR4 via a 2.2F
coupling capacitor.
Signals from all four input sources
are mixed via 15k resistors for the
mic and guitar signals and a 10k
resistor for the line signal in inverting
amplifier IC5a. This has a gain of minus
two for the first mic and guitar signals,
with slightly higher gain for the line
input signals (due to the 10kresistor
40 Silicon Chip
to compensate for a slight gain loss in
the resistive mixing of the stereo line
inputs).
IC5a drives the tone control stage
comprising IC5b, VR5 and VR6 and
associated resistors and capacitors.
IC5b’s output signal is fed to three
separate places; the line output via
RCA and 6.35mm jack sockets, the
signal detection stages involving IC6a
and the input to the CLASSiC-D power
amplifier.
All of the op amps in the circuit used
as signal amplifiers are biased via the
Vref line, which is at half supply (about
+6V). This is derived from the +12V
line by a voltage divider consisting
of two 10k resistors with the centre
point bypassed by a 100F capacitor.
The bypassed supply is then buffered
by op amp IC4b to provide the Vref
line. All these biased op amp outputs
will sit at about half the battery voltage,
with the audio signal rising and falling
about this DC voltage
Shutdown
As noted above, we have incorporated signal detection into the circuit
to shut down the power amplifier in
order to reduce current consumption
when no signal is present. Op amp
IC6a is a non-inverting amplifier with
a gain of 471, set by the 470k and
siliconchip.com.au
5
+12V’
A
+12V
STANDBY2
LED2
K
10k
Q5
IRF9540
4.7k
S
G
10k
D
10k
B
A
POWER
C
Q4
BC337
E
LED3
3
(CON13)
K
TO DC-DC
CONVERTER
SWITCHED
INPUT
4.7k
+12V
2200F
25V
1F
MMC
LOW
ESR
2
3
S
+12V’
Q1
IRF9540
G
8
V+
HYST
D
100k
100k
4
IC8
OUT
MAX8212
THRESH
GND
5
LOW VOLTAGE SHUTDOWN
BC337
B
LEDS
E
K
A
C
IRF9540
1N5404
G
A
K
D
D
S
1kfeedback resistors. The 22pF capacitor rolls the gain off above 15kHz,
while the 10F capacitor in series
with the 1k resistor rolls off signals
below 15Hz.
The amplified signal from IC6a is
then fed to a diode pump circuit consisting of diodes D1 & D2 and the 1F
& 10F capacitors connected to them.
Peak level of the signal from IC6a will
be stored in the 10F capacitor which
is continuously being (slowly) discharged via the 1M resistor across it.
IC6b, connected as a Schmitt trigger inverter, monitors this voltage.
A 470k resistor between pin 5
and pin 7 applies positive feedback
siliconchip.com.au
to give hysteresis. This makes the
comparator output switch cleanly
between high and low, and to prevent
oscillation at the switching threshold.
The inverting input of IC6b is set
at +2.1V (ignoring the effect of the
470kfeedback resistor) using the
470kand 100kresistors across the
12V supply.
When power is first applied to the
circuit, the 10F capacitor between
the 12V supply and the inverting input to IC6b is initially discharged and
therefore pulls pin 6 low, causing the
output (pin 7) to be high. This turns
on transistor Q2, so relay 4’s contacts
close and the CLASSiC-D amplifier is
shut down.
At the same time, transistor Q3 is
turned off so IC7’s inputs (pins 2 and
6) are high due to the 220F capacitor
connecting to the 12V supply being
initially discharged. The output (pin
3) is low so Standby 2 LED (LED2) is
lit. The low output holds both Q4 off
and Mosfet Q5 off. This removes power
from the DC-DC converter switch and
as a result the CLASSiC-D amplifier
is off.
When audio signal is detected by
IC6b, the input (pin 6) will go above
the 2.1V at pin 5 so the output (pin
7) goes low, switching off Q2 and the
relay. Diode D3 quenches the backEMF of the collapsing relay coil field .
There is still a low current flow
through the relay coil and Q3 – not
enough to pull the relay in but enough
to turn Q3 on. This provides a path to
ground (via the 1k resistor) which
charges the 220F capacitor.
The now-low input to the 7555
cause its output (pin 3) to go high,
switching on power LED (LED3)
and transistor Q4 and switching off
the Standby 2 LED. Mosfet Q5 also
switches on and the DC-DC Converter
is powered, in turn powering the
CLASSiC-D amplifier.
Low battery
Regardless of the battery type, it
is important that it not be over-discharged and permanently damaged.
While the Lithium-Polymers used in
the PortaPAL-D are better than SLAs in
this regard, care still needs to be taken.
Low battery voltage is detected using IC8, a micropower voltage monitor
that compares the voltage at pin 3 to
an internal 1.15V reference. With a
12V supply, the voltage divider across
IC8s input will ensure that pin 3 is
always above 1.15V. However, as the
battery discharges, this voltage will
drop. Below 10.5V, IC8s output (pin
4) will go high, turning off Mosfet Q1.
This removes power from the rest of
the circuit thus preventing the battery
being discharged any further.
Pin 2 provides hysteresis, stopping
the circuit oscillating back and forth
around the 1.15V threshold. While
ever the voltage at pin 3 stays above
1.15V, pin 2 is effectively connected
to the supply rail, thus shorting out
the 270k resistor to 12V.
However, if the pin 3 voltage drops
below 1.15V pin 2 is effectively open
circuit. So that extra 270k resistance is added to the voltage divider,
which drops the voltage at pin 3 even
lower (just over 1V with a 10.5V supply). Therefore the battery needs to
be charged to more than 11.6V before
the output (pin 4) goes low, allowing
the Mosfet to power the circuit again.
Power
Power from the battery passes
through the 10A fuse, F1 and power
switch S1. Inductor L1 and the 2200F
capacitor filter the supply, helping
prevent DC-DC converter switching
noise from entering the supply for the
audio op amps. Additional filtering is
provided with the 10 resistor and
the supply decoupling capacitors on
the 12V rail.
Note that the high current supply
required by the DC-DC Converter is
tapped off before the switch. Only
the low power switching current to
control the DC-DC Converter is at the
output to Q5.
Reverse polarity protection is via
diode D6: this will blow the fuse if
the supply polarity is inadvertently
connected back to front.
Charging
Three relays are used to switch in
the charger connections. The supply to the charger is tapped at pins
10-13 of CON13 so that when power
is available, relays (Relay1, Relay2
and Relay3) will be switched on. The
charger output is switched to the battery positive via relay 1 contacts while
the cell balancing outputs from the
battery are connected to the charger
via relay 2 and relay 3 contacts.
When there is no power applied to
the charger input, the relay contacts
open and completely disconnect the
charger from the battery.
December 2013 41
PortaPAL-D – Parts List
Main PCB (Mixer and power supervision)
1 PCB coded 01111131, 212 x 100mm
1 10-way IDC PCB mount socket (CON10)
2 10-way IDC line plugs
1 100mm length of 10-way IDC cable
1 6-way SIL socket (CON11)
1 2-pin header, 2.54mm spacing (LK1)
1 2-pin polarised header, 2.54mm spacing (CON12)
2 2-way pin header sockets
1 jumper shunt
6 DIL8 IC sockets (optional)
2 M205 PCB fuse clips
1 M205 10A fast blow fuse (F1)
1 iron powdered toroid 28 x 14 x 11mm [Jaycar LO1244] L1
5 2-way PCB mount screw connectors (5.08mm pin spacing)
(CON13)
1 3-way PCB mount screw connectors (5.08mm pin spacing)
(CON13)
1 vertical PCB mount RCA socket (CON9)
2 RCA line plugs
1 12V 10 or 16A SPDT relay [Altronics S4197, S4170A, Jaycar
SY-4050] (RELAY1)
2 12V 1A DPDT relays] Altronics S4150, Jaycar SY-4059]
(RELAY2,RELAY3)
1 12V SPST DIL reed relay [Altronics S4101A, Jaycar SY-4032]
(RELAY4)
4 16mm single PCB mount 10klog potentiometers and nuts
(VR1-VR4)
2 16mm single PCB mount 100klinear potentiometers and
nuts (VR5,VR6)
6 knobs to suit above potentiometers (4 blue, 2 grey)
3 M3 tapped spacers 15mm long
1 solder lug
4 M3 x 10mm machine screws
2 M3 x 15mm machine screws
6 pot nuts (providing for an extra nut under potentiometer)
1 3S 250mm 2xJST-XH parallel balance lead
[http://hobbyking.com.au/hobbyking/store/__32036__JST_
XH_Parallel_Balance_Lead_3S_250mm_2xJST_XH_.html]
1 1.5m length of 1mm diam. enamelled copper wire for L1
1 150mm length of 7.5A rated green hookup wire
1 150mm length of single core screened cable
1 270mm twin figure-8 light gauge wire
1 190mm length of 0.7mm diam. tinned copper wire
1 100mm cable tie
2 PC stakes
Semiconductors
2 LM833 dual low noise op amps (IC3,IC4)
1 TL072 dual op amp (IC5)
1 LM358 dual op amp (IC6)
1 7555 CMOS 555 timer (IC7)
1 MAX8212 voltage monitor (IC8)
2 IRF9540 P-channel Mosfets (Q1,Q5)
3 BC337 NPN transistors (Q2-Q4)
4 1N4148 diodes (D1-D4)
1 1N4004 1A diode (D5)
1 1N5404 3A diode (D6)
3 3mm high brightness LEDs (LED1&2 [red]; LED3 [green])
42 Silicon Chip
Capacitors
Electrolytic (PC type)
1 2200F 25V low ESR
1 1000F 16V 1 220F 16V
3 100F 16V 12 10F 16V
1 10F NP 50V 1 2.2F NP 50V 4 1F 16V
1 1F 50V NP
MKT polyester
1 330nF
4 100nF 1 15nF
1 10nF
1 1.5nF
Ceramic
1 1F monolithic multilayer (MMC)
3 330pF 1 100pF 1 47pF
1 22pF
Resistors (0.25W, 1%)
1 2.2M 1 1M
4 470k 2 270k 6 100k
1 47k
2 30k 2 18k 3 15k 15 10k
3 4.7k
7 1k
2 150 2 10
Guitar input, line input and output PCB
1 PCB coded 01111133, 109 x 35mm
2 PCB mount 6.35mm switched jack sockets (CON4,CON7)
2 stereo RCA vertical stacked PCB mount (CON5,CON6)
1 10-way IDC PCB mount socket (CON8)
1 DIL8 IC socket (optional)
Semiconductors
1 TL071 single op amp (IC2)
Capacitors
Electrolytic (PC type)
2 47F 16V
2 10F 16V
1 100nF MKT polyester
1 2.2F 16V PC
1 680pF ceramic
Resistors (0.25W, 1%)
1 1M 1 10k 2 4.7k
2 2.2k
1 10pF ceramic
1 1k
1 150
Microphone input PCB
1 PCB coded 01111132, 64 x 73mm
2 PCB mount XLR female connectors [Altronics P 0883]
(CON1,CON2)
1 right angle 6-way pin header with backing plate removed (CON3)
1 chassis mount 6.4mm spade terminal
1 female spade 6.4mm quick connector
4 ferrite beads 4mm ID x 5mm long [Jaycar LF-1250 or
equivalent]
1 DIL8 IC socket (optional)
4 4g x 6mm self tapping screws or M3 x 6mm screws
1 M3 x 10mm machine screw
1 M3 nut
2 3mm star washers
Semiconductors
1 LM833 low noise dual op amp (IC1)
Capacitors
4 47F 16V PC electrolytic
1 100nF MKT polyester
4 150pF ceramic
2 10F 16V PC electrolytic
2 470pF ceramic
Resistors (0.25W, 1%)
4 22k
7 10k
4 1k
2 150
siliconchip.com.au
Extras
1 CLASSiC-D amplifier set for a ±35V output
(see SILICON CHIP November & December 2012)
1 speaker protector for the CLASSiC-D set for a 35V supply
(see SILICON CHIP, November/December 2012)
1 50°C NO thermostat (Jaycar ST-3831)
1 10F 16V PC electrolytic capacitor (used in speaker protector)
1 DC-DC Converter for the CLASSiC-D (see SILICON CHIP, May ’13)
1 10k0.25W 1% resistor (used in DC-DC converter)
1 Li-Po 11.1V battery (ZIPPY Flightmax 8000mAh 3S1P 30C)
(http://hobbyking.com.au/hobbyking/store/__19530__ZIPPY_
Flightmax_8000mAh_3S1P_30C_AUS_Warehouse_.html)
1 HobbyKing E4 Li-Po balance charger
(http://hobbyking.com.au/hobbyking/store/__14633__
HobbyKing_E4_Balance_Charger.html)
1 Polymax 5.5mm Gold Connector plug and socket set [Jaycar
KG55001 set of 10 but only one plug and one socket required]
(http://hobbyking.com.au/hobbyking/store/uh_viewitem.
asp?idproduct=18659)
1 strap handle [Jaycar HS-8022, Altronics C 3660]
1 1.8m x 3m speaker box carpet [Jaycar CF-2755]
8 corner protectors [Jaycar HM-3843 (or HM-3829 – pack 8),
Altronics C 3620 or C 3623]
1 speaker box “top hat” mount [Jaycar HS-8035, Altronics C 3602]
2 200mm speaker grilles [Jaycar AX-3594, Altronics C 3708]
2 8 200mm coaxial speakers [Altronics C 2005]
1 40mm 12V fan [Jaycar YX-2502, Altronics F 0010]
1 SPST mini rocker switch (S1)
2 9mm M3 tapped standoffs (for fan)
2 M3 x 10mm countersunk screws (for fan mounting standoffs to
chassis)
2 M3 x 15mm machine screws (for fan mounting to standoffs)
1 solder lug
1 “P” cord clamp with M3 x 10mm screw, nut and washer
2 6.4mm crimp female spade connectors
1 200mm length of 10mm diameter heatshrink tubing (for
covering charger and battery bracket)
1 red right angle banana plug [Jaycar PP-0394]
1 black right angle banana plug [Jaycar PP-0395]
1 2.5mm DC panel connector
1 2.5mm DC line plug
2 aluminium sheets 295 x 295mmm, 1mm gauge
[Jaycar HM-9500]
1 350mm length of 12mm x 3mm aluminium
6 M3.5 tapped right angle (RA) bracket standoffs
[Jaycar HP-0872]
16 M3 x 10mm machine screws (for mounting PCBs to chassis
RA brackets to chassis – see note in construction article)
7 M3 x 15mm machine screws (3mm aluminium brackets to
RA brackets, through 12mm standoffs on brackets 3mm
aluminium to standoffs)
1 M3 x 20mm machine screw
10 M3 x 6mm countersunk screws (DC-DC Converter mounting,
battery and charger brackets, RA brackets to chassis)
12 M3 nuts (RA brackets)
2 small cabinet handles (45mm long x 15mm high x 6mm wide
or similar) (optional)
1 2-way 15A terminal strip (optional for extension speaker)
1 1m length of 7.5A figure-8 wire for speaker connections
3 1m lengths of 7.5A hookup wire (1 each red, black, green)
2 25mm length of 6mm heatshrink tubing (1 each red & black)
2 25mm length of 10mm heatshrink tubing (1 each red & black)
2 100mm cable ties
Box Hardware
8 8g 12mm panhead wood screws (for speaker mounting)
24 6g 16mm countersunk wood screws (bronze) (for attaching
corner protectors)
5 4g x 16mm panhead screws (for mounting the chassis to the
cabinet)
1 500ml tin of contact adhesive
2 strips of putty adhesive (eg, Blu-Tack)
2 cushion bags of polyester wadding (eg, Innerbond)
1 3m length 18mm x 18mm DAR (dressed all round) pine
1 6m length 12mm x 12mm DAR pine
2 900mm x 600mm x 16mm sheets of MDF (or single 1800 x
600mm x 16mm sheet )
Resistor Colour Codes
Total No. Value
o
1
2.2MΩ
o
2
1MΩ
o
4
470kΩ
o
2
270kΩ
o
6
100kΩ
o
1
47kΩ
o
2
30kΩ
o
1
27kΩ
o
4
22kΩ
o
2
18kΩ
o
3
15kΩ
o 22
10kΩ
o
4
4.7kΩ
o
2
2.2kΩ
o 12
1kΩ
o
3
150Ω
o
2
10Ω
siliconchip.com.au
4-Band Code (1%)
red red green brown
brown black green brown
yellow violet yellow brown
red violet yellow brown
brown black yellow brown
yellow violet orange brown
orange black orange brown
red violet orange brown
red red orange brown
brown grey orange brown
brown green orange brown
brown black orange brown
yellow violet red brown
red red red brown
brown black red brown
brown green brown brown
brown black black brown
5-Band Code (1%)
red red black yellow brown
brown black black yellow brown
yellow violet black orange brown
red violet black orange brown
brown black black orange brown
yellow violet black red brown
orange black black red brown
red violet black red brown
red red black red brown
brown grey black red brown
brown green black red brown
brown black black red brown
yellow violet black brown brown
red red black brown brown
brown black black brown brown
brown green black black brown
brown black black gold brown
Capacitor Codes
Value F Value IEC Code EIA Code
330nF 0.33F 330n 334
100nF 0.1F 100n 104
15nF 0.015F
15n 153
10nF 0.01F
10n 103
1.5nF 0.0015F 1.5n 152
680pF
NA
680p
680
470pF
NA
470p
470
330pF
NA
330p
330
150pF
NA
150p
150
100pF
NA
100p
100
47pF
NA
47p
47
22pF
NA
22p
22
10pF
NA
10p
10
NEXT MONTH:
We’ll present Part 2 with all the
construction details, including
making & wiring the electronics.
SC
December 2013 43
The new
PIC3
C322MZ
microcoo n tr
microc
trooller
By GEOFF GRAHAM
We first introduced Microchip’s then new PIC32 microcontroller
to SILICON CHIP readers back in March 2011. At the time, we
marvelled at its capabilities and went on to use it in our popular
Maximite series of computers. Now Microchip has an updated
version which was released just a few weeks ago. It’s called the
PIC32MZ.
The PIC32MZ has over three times
the speed and four times the memory
capacity of its predecessor and
includes a new central processor and
better peripherals. Photo courtesy
Microchip.
This photo shows one of the TSMC semiconductor fabrication plants located in
Hsin Chu, Taiwan where the PIC32MZ is manufactured. Photo courtesy Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd.
I
N REALITY, the PIC32MZ is more
than just a simple update. With over
three times the speed and four times
the memory capacity of its predecessor, it’s better described as a leap forward. This new chip also has a new
central processor, better peripherals
44 Silicon Chip
and new features such as the ability
to remap I/O pins to make the PCB
layout more efficient.
Speed & memory
The headline features of this new
chip are its vastly improved speed
and memory capacity. The PIC32MZ
will run at up to 200MHz and has up
to 2048KB of flash memory and 512KB
of RAM (both four times that of the
PIC32MX series).
There are chips on the market with
a higher speed and with support for
more memory – such as the ARMbased processors typically found in
mobile phones. However, these generally require additional RAM and
flash memory chips, increasing PCB
siliconchip.com.au
This is an example of the silicon wafer
on which the PIC32MZ is fabricated.
It is the percentage of working
chips on the wafer (the yield) that is
important to the profitability of the
manufacturer. Photo courtesy Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd.
complexity, or else have significantly
less RAM and flash. By contrast, the
PIC32MZ integrates all of these features and more onto a single chip.
Because the PIC32MZ is a complete
microcontroller, it’s simple for designers to use. It just needs a supply of
2-3.6V (a couple of 1.5V cells will do)
and some decoupling capacitors – no
other support circuitry is required.
You then have a very fast chip that has
plenty of capacity for almost any job
you could think of – even if it requires
multiple communications stacks, full
colour graphics, audio processing and
more.
The main programming language for
the PIC32MZ is C and as long as you
are happy writing in this language, you
will find that developing software for
this chip is relatively painless. This
is due to the chip’s easy-to-use 32-bit
architecture and the free support software provided by Microchip which includes the development environment,
compilers and application libraries.
size or 32-bit mode for speed and computational power.
The processor can run at up to
200MHz, which means that it will run
your code at roughly three times the
speed of the older series. This core is
also backwards-compatible with the
M4K core used in the earlier PIC32
microcontrollers, so existing firmware
can be easily be ported.
To improve performance, large RAM
caches are used for both the instruction and data streams. The instruction
cache is especially important because
flash memory is quite slow and without a cache the processor would run
at just one-half of its capability.
Performance is also helped by a bus
matrix which connects the input/output interfaces directly to the memory
and bypasses the central processor.
This frees up the processor since it is
not required to copy each data byte to
the interface.
Perhaps the most exciting feature
of the microAptiv MPU core is that it
contains a Memory Management Unit
(MMU) which is required by advanced
operating systems like Linux. So in all
probability, we will see Linux running
on the PIC32MZ in the future.
Another important feature of the
PIC32MZ is that it’s economical in its
power consumption and draws just
200µA per MHz of clock speed. At its
maximum clock speed of 200MHz,
the PIC32MZ will draw about 40mA
which is half the current drawn by
previous PIC32 chips when running
at 80MHz.
Die shrink
Faster speed, increased complexity and less power all point to what
the semiconductor industry calls
a “die shrink” – a reduction in the
dimensions of the transistors used
in the chip. By shrinking the transistors, more can be crammed onto the
same-sized chip and because they are
smaller, each transistor will switch
faster while drawing less current.
For the PIC32MZ, the die shrink involved moving from a 180nm process
to a 90nm process. This isn’t at the
leading edge of technology (which can
be as small as 14nm) but it’s excellent
for a low-cost chip.
The downside of a die shrink is
that it’s harder to make the chip and
the production process has to be carefully managed to ensure that enough
working chips are produced on each
silicon wafer. This is the “yield” and
a manufacturer can live or die on this
statistic.
Peripherals
While a high-speed processor is
important, it’s the peripherals that
make it practical to use the device in a
circuit. These peripherals are the subsystems and include timers, I/O ports,
communications interfaces and so on
– all the things that make the chip useful as an embedded microcontroller.
New CPU
The PIC32MZ uses the new 32-bit
microAptiv MPU processor core from
MIPS (Fig.2). This is an advanced
pro
cessor consisting of millions of
transistors and can operate in either
16-bit instruction mode for small code
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the internals of the PIC32MZ are complicated and more like a full-sized
computer than a microcontroller. Two important features are the “High Speed
Bus Matrix” and the “Peripheral Bus” which facilitate interconnections to
peripherals without the involvement of the CPU. Diagram courtesy Microchip.
December 2013 45
Fig.2: the MIPS microAptiv MPU core is the central processor for the
PIC32MZ. It includes the 32 bit optimised pipeline processor and
supporting circuitry such as the instruction cache to speed execution of
code stored in flash memory. Diagram courtesy MIPS.
The PIC32MZ can communicate
with external devices in many different ways. One is via a 10/100 Ethernet Media Access Controller (MAC)
which is integrated on the chip. With
the addition of a driver chip (called
a “PHY”), you can then connect the
PIC32MZ to an ethernet network.
Another important interface is the
USB 2.0 high-speed interface which
can work both as a host and as a device. This means that you can design
an appliance which allows the user to:
• plug in a USB memory stick or USB
printer; or
• connect the PIC32MZ to a computer
as a device for uploading and downloading data.
Other communications interfaces
integrated on the chip include CAN
(which is used in OBD2 for the automobile industry), serial UARTs, SPI,
I2C and parallel ports. One very useful
feature is that you can select what I/O
pins most of these interfaces appear
on. This simplifies board layout and it
means that you do not have to resolve
a conflict when multiple interfaces
want to use the same set of I/O pins.
Audio & graphics
Furthering this high level of integration, the PIC32MZ includes peripherals which make it easy to generate
high-quality graphics and audio outputs. The External Bus Interface (EBI)
Fig.3: the Harmony Library was introduced
with the PIC32MZ and consists of ready to use
code modules for handling peripherals such
as the Ethernet, USB, CAN, etc. This code is
supplied free of charge and can dramatically
reduce development time.
and Parallel Master Port (PMP) interfaces facilitate communications with
graphical LCDs and other parallel
devices.
The SPI/I2S module provides a synchronous serial interface that is useful
for communicating with digital audio
devices and external serial devices.
I2S is the standard for communicating
with digital audio converters (DACs)
and with the right DAC, the PIC32MZ
can generate very high quality audio.
There are many more features of this
chip that are outstanding (eg, a 12 bit
analog converter, a DSP instruction set
and a real time clock) but rather than
describe them all, it’s sufficient to say
that the PIC2MZ is packed with almost
everything that you might want in a
microcontroller.
Applications
Most PIC32 chips have ended up
in general consumer or industrial applications. Microchip would like to
build on this market with the PIC32MZ
and a focus on connectivity, graphics
and audio.
The attention to connectivity is
particularly important as electronic
devices are becoming increasingly
interconnected, especially via the
internet. In our review of the Altronics A2696 Internet Radio (elsewhere
in this issue), we saw how it uses
the internet to retrieve details of the
radio stations that are available. In the
future, more appliances will follow
this trend.
It could be a printer that connects
to the internet to order fresh ink supplies when they are running low, a
TV set that downloads programming
information or a home medical appliance that emails medical updates to
the patient’s doctor.
Another example where connectivity could be exploited is a photocopier
where the rental cost is based on the
number of copies made. The copier
could automatically “phone home”
with this data. Even better, the photocopier could include its own web
server so that the customer could use
a browser to access it and monitor
the number of copies per day and the
associated cost.
Internet of Things
All this can be easily handled by
the PIC32MZ and is part of a new concept called the “Internet of Things”.
This is an evolving term and refers to
46 Silicon Chip
siliconchip.com.au
Because the PIC32MZ uses very fine dimensions for each transistor, any minute imperfection or dust particle could ruin
the chip during manufacture. This means that cleanliness is important inside the fabrication plant, Photo courtesy Taiwan
Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd.
intelligent devices that can exchange
information between themselves and
master servers. Examples include alarm
systems, home automation, vending machines, fleet management and
other applications that require remote
monitoring.
The idea is that people do not need
to handle mundane tasks such as diagnosing a fault in an item of equipment.
Instead, the equipment itself could
signal a fault to its service centre and
a technician would be automatically
dispatched with the appropriate spare
part.
This is not as outlandish as it sounds.
Already in large data centres, equipment such as disk arrays are remotely
monitored and a technician is dispatched if a disk drive has failed.
Because the array has built in redundancy, the operators of the data centre
are often not aware of the fault until the
technician arrives on their doorstep
with the spare part.
Everyday tasks
If you are an experimenter, you are
siliconchip.com.au
probably wondering “would I have a
use for such a powerful chip?”. The
answer is “yes”, because you do not
have to use everything it offers. In
fact, it’s quite cost efficient for the
experimenter who wants to use it for
all sorts of everyday tasks.
If you do not want to use the audio
interface or the DSP instructions or
some other feature, it doesn’t matter.
You can simply leave them turned off
and they will not consume any power.
At a price of $US9.64 to $US14.35 for
a single chip direct from Microchip,
the cost of the unused features can be
regarded as trivial.
The chip is forgiving when it comes
to a power supply (2-3.6V) and the
32-bit environment makes programming relatively simple. Throw in the
free software tools and C compiler
provided by Microchip and you have
an inexpensive and easy solution for
your next microcontroller project.
About the only issue with the
PIC32MZ is that it comes in a TQFP
package with a pin spacing of 0.5mm.
These days, that shouldn’t be a barrier
because the chip can be easily soldered
to an adaptor board which will bring
the chip’s pins out to a connector with
an easy 0.1-inch pitch. If you Google
“tqfp adapter”. you will find many
sources.
Harmony Software Library
One area where programming could
be difficult for the earlier PIC32 is
when interfacing to items such as
USB, ethernet, SD memory cards and
other complicated devices. In the
past, Microchip provided individual
software modules to cover these requirements but with the introduction
of the PIC32MZ, they have launched
the “Harmony Software Library” to
provide this support.
This is an integrated library of code
modules that wraps support for most
of the PIC32MZ’s features into easy-touse functions that can be called from
your C program. A good case in point
is the TCP/IP library which includes
a web server, FTP, Telnet, email and
more.
Using Harmony, these functions
December 2013 47
Creating A New PIC Microcontroller
The PIC32MZ is an international
affair. Designed in Arizona, the chips
are fabricated in Taiwan and packaged
in Thailand. The development process
started in March 2011 and over the following 2½ years, a core group of about
30 engineers worked on the design.
They were supported by many others
in marketing, test and production.
The first stage of development involved the creation of a 90nm library
of components like transistors, gates,
I/O pads, etc. At the same time, the
specifications for the main chip and
each module inside the chip were developed. These came from Microchip’s
assessment of what features customers would demand of the chip and the
target price once it was in production.
Design engineers then worked for
more than a year to turn the specifications into a register-transfer level (RTL)
design. RTL is a high-level description
of the flow of signals between registers
and is used in the semiconductor industry to specify the logic of the chip
in detail.
The largest component of the design
was the processor core which was sup-
The PIC32MZ “Embedded Connectivity
Starter Kit” from Microchip.
can be conveniently added to your
firmware.
Other examples include USB support (both as a host and a device),
FAT16 and FAT32 file systems for SD
cards and USB memory sticks, graphics
libraries and protocols such as CAN,
serial, SPI and I2C. These modules
have all been tested and it only takes a
little work to integrate them into your
program.
The library also contains a num48 Silicon Chip
plied by MIPS as an RTL package. The
design of a 32-bit processing core such
as this is a complex process which is
why most semiconductor manufacturers licence a design from specialist
companies like MIPS and ARM, rather
than try to design and support their own.
The RTL description was then converted to a gate-level description of the
circuit by a logic synthesis software
package. The results were then used
by other software tools to place the
components and route the interconnects to create the physical layout of
the chip. At this stage, engineers could
run software simulations to verify that
the logic worked as expected.
With the chip layout prepared, the
first batch of chips became available for
testing in March 2013. Subsequently, a
number of silicon revisions were produced as bugs and other issues were
found and corrected. It takes some time
to test every possible configuration of a
device containing millions of transistors
and the task, involving numerous test
engineers and willing customers, took
almost a year.
In addition, documentation needed
ber of Real Time Operating Systems
(RTOS) and all of the modules in
Harmony are designed to work with
an RTOS. This is significant because
with the complex tasks that this chip
will be expected to undertake, the programmer needs an operating system to
partition the software into manageable
sections while still efficiently responding to real world events.
According to a recent survey (2013
Embedded Market Study by UBM
Tech), almost two thirds of the cost of
an embedded processor project was in
writing and debugging the firmware.
This is where a software library like
Harmony becomes important – if you
can simply drop in a complex module
rather than write it yourself, it will
have a large impact on the project’s
overall development cost.
The PIC32MX250
While we’re talking about the PIC32
line, we should also briefly mention
the PIC32MX250 which was launched
late last year. This is a slower version
of the PIC32 (it runs at 40MHz) and
to be written, training courses prepared, support engineers trained and
the software drivers for the Harmony
library had to be written and tested. As
an indication of the work involved, the
data sheet and reference manual for
the new PIC32MZ micro runs to over
2000 pages.
The actual production of the chip is
subcontracted by Microchip to TSMC,
located in Hsin Chu, Taiwan. TSMC is
a “silicon foundry” specialising in the
production of semiconductor chips for
other companies. These plants can
cost billions of dollars to set up which
is why companies such as Microchip
prefer to outsource the manufacturing
process rather than tie up so much
capital in a specialist plant.
In the final step of production, the
raw chips are sent to Microchip’s own
facility near Bangkok, Thailand where
they are tested, mounted and packaged to make them ready for shipping.
It is a truly enormous effort by a
world-wide team of engineers and specialists to develop the chip and deliver
it into your hands, along with the supporting documentation and software.
is intended for less demanding applications. It contains the full MIPS
Mk4 32-bit processing core, 128kB of
flash memory and 32kB of RAM, along
with most other features of the larger
PIC32MX line.
It comes in a 28-pin dual-in-line
package which is easy to solder and
can be plugged into an IC socket. It is
also very affordable at just US$3.80 in
single quantities (direct from Micro
chip).
The PIC32MX250 is perfect for the
hobbyist because it is simple to use yet
has most of the power of the 32-bit line.
We used this chip in the GPS Tracker
published last month and it handled
the task with ease and with plenty of
capacity to spare.
With their sharp prices and performance advantages, Microchip’s 32-bit
processors are taking over most of
the jobs previously reserved for 16bit processors. In addition, low-cost
variants like the PIC32MX250 make a
better choice for simple tasks that were
previously relegated to the aging but
SC
similarly priced 8-bit chips.
siliconchip.com.au
CHRISTMAS
CELEBRATIONS
DECEMBER EDITION
Online & in store
Prices valid until 26/12/2013
4 Channel DVR Surveillance Package
Records video from the four day/night colour CMOS 350TV line cameras either constantly, scheduled or when motion is
detected. View live or play back video on a TV, computer monitor or access over the Internet using a standard web
browser or Smartphone/iPhone® free app. Includes remote, mouse,
4 x 18m cables and 12V power supply.
$
• D1 (704 x 576) recording resolution
• 500GB of storage for up to 300 hours
of continuous video recording
QV-3028 WAS $379.00
34900
SAVE $30
Also available 4CH DVR (Standalone unit without cameras)
QV-3029 $229.00
5.8GHz Wireless AV Sender
with Wideband IR Extender
Transmit quality audio and video around the home
or office without running cables. Works with a
range of remotes including Pay TV remotes.
USB Mini Inspection Camera - 7m
• 50m range, interference free
AR-1910
A water resistant inspection camera with
7m flexible cable.
• 4 white LEDs (brightness adjustable)
• Hook, magnet
and 45° mirror
attachments
included
• Length: 7m
QC-3374
$
Also available in 1.5m
Flexible Cable QC-3373
NEW $39.95
Spare receiver available
separately:
AR-1911 NEW
$49.95
NEW
NEW
$
7995
In store ONLY. Limited stock. Not available online.
Temperature Controlled
Soldering Station
See pages 4-5
An ideal entry-level
soldering station for the
hobby user. Comes with
a lightweight iron with
anti-slip grip and tip
cleaning sponge.
for more
tools!
• Temp range:
150°C-450°C
• 40W power
• Size: 135(L) x
82(W) x 70(H)mm
TS-1620
DUE EARLY
DECEMBER
5995
Spare 0.5mm conical tip:
TS-1622 $8.95
$
5995
GPS Data Logger/Tracker Kit
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag November 2013
Precisely records where your car or boat has travelled over time, which you can playback on
software such as Google Earth to map your journey. Kit supplied with silk-screened PCB,
enclosure with label, pre-programmed PIC, GPS module, and electronic components.
The SMD components are already pre-soldered to the PCB to save you the hassle.
• Records onto an SD card (available separately)
• Records point-of-interest at the touch of a button
• 12VDC powered
DUE LATE DECEMBER
KC-5525
WISHING YOU A MERRY
CHRISTMAS & A SAFE HOLIDAY
From The Jaycar Team
Arduino Experimenters Kit
Servo motor, lights, buttons, switches,
sound, sensors, breadboard, wires and
more are included with a Freetronics Eleven
Arduino compatible board in this extensive
hobby experimenter and starter kit.
• Comprehensive instructions included
• No soldering required
XC-4262
LED light Sabre
Like the light sabre seen in the Star Wars®* movies, it hums
whilst stationary and makes a swooshing noise when waved
around. Changes colour and glows quite brightly.
• Requires 3 x AA batteries
• Suitable for ages 8+
• Size: 710mm long
GT-3520
*Star Wars is a registered
trade mark of Lucasfilm (inc).
In store ONLY. Limited stock.
Not available online.
$
1995
NEW
$
14900
NEW STORE OPENING!
Unit 5,
161 Mornington-Tyabb Rd
MORNINGTON
3931 VIC
Ph: (03) 5976 1311
2 FOR $30
SAVE $9.90
Salt Water Fuel Cell Engine Car Kit
An educational kit demonstrating alternative means
of propelling cars of the future with a salt powered
automotive engine. Assemble, add salt
water, and off the car goes!
Electronic Bug Maze
A fantastic electronic bug habitat set.
• Suitable for ages 5+
• Includes two 45mm long bugs
YG-2893
$
1995
• Suitable for ages 8+
KJ-8960
See pages
2-3 for more
ARDUINO!
siliconchip.com.au
$
$
8995
To order call 1800 022 888
1995
Ramp not included
Want more bugs?
4 colours available
YG-2891 $4.95
December 2013 49
www.jaycar.com.au
ARDUINO
Arduino Compatible Boards
LeoStick
A tiny Arduino-compatible board that's so small you
can plug it straight into your USB port without requiring
a cable!
• Analogue & digital I/O
• User-controllable RGB LED
• ATmega32u4 MCU with 2.5K
RAM and 32K Flash
XC-4266
Also available
LeoStick Prototyping
Shield XC-4268 $7.95
$
2995
Includes onboard Ethernet,
a USB-serial converter, a
microSD card slot for
storing gigabytes of web
server content or data,
and even Power-overEthernet support.
Arduino Books
Getting Started with
Sketches
An entry level book introduces the
Arduino programming language and
then describes the basic
configurations
of Arduino modules.
• Soft cover, 162 pages
• 138 x 215mm
BM-7133
$
1795
The "Eleven" is just like an Arduino Uno - but better!
It's a microcontroller board based on the ATmega328
with 14 digital input/output pins (of which 6 can be
used as PWM outputs), 6 analogue
inputs, a 16MHz crystal oscillator,
a USB connection, a power
jack, an ICSP header, and
a reset button.
XC-4210
$
EtherTen
• ATmega328P MCU
running at 16MHz
• 10/100base-T Ethernet
built-in
XC-4216
Eleven
$
6995
3995
The ultimate network-connected Arduino-compatible
board: combining an ATmega2560 MCU, onboard
Ethernet, a USB-serial converter, a microSD
card slot for storing gigabytes of web
server content or data, power-over
Ethernet support, and even an
onboard switchmode voltage
regulator so it can run on up
to 28VDC without overheating.
• 10/100base-T Ethernet built-in
• 54 digital I/O lines
• 16 analogue inputs
XC-4256
Also available: Mega Prototyping
Shield to suit XC-4257 $17.95
This is a practical project oriented
book describing lots of projects based
around the Arduino microcontroller.
• 30 practical
projects
• Soft cover,
191 pages
• 220 x 275mm
BM-7134
$
ProtoShield Basic
Low-cost Arduino prototyping shield that enables you
to make more durable or permanent projects. It fits
directly to the "Eleven" (XC-4210).
• Gold-plated surface
• Top and bottom overlay
• Yellow solder mask
XC-4214
4
$ 45
• Soft cover,
464 pages
BM-7136
$
50 Silicon Chip
2 To order call 1800 022 888
Guides you through the construction of
7 robots that roll, walk, talk, slither and
even sling insults
at you.
3495
$
3695
ProtoShield Short
Terminal Shield
• Gold-plated surface
XC-4248
• Gold-plated surface
• Large prototyping area
XC-4224
A dedicated short version prototyping shield for
EtherTen (XC-4216) and
EtherMega (XC-4256) and
designed to fit neatly behind
the RJ45 Ethernet jack.
4
This shield enables your Arduino to control a door lock
using an electric strike plate and
one of a number of commonly
available RFID modules.
$
A special prototyping shield for
Eleven (XC-4210) and USBDroid
(XC-4222) that provides handy
screw terminals on both edges for
easy and secure connection.
$
$ 95
• Supported readers include
ID12, ID20, RDM630,
RDM880, and HF MultiTag
XC-4215
29
Arduino is an open-source electronics prototyping
platform based on flexible, easy-to-use hardware
and software. It can be used to develop interactive
objects, taking inputs from a variety of switches or
sensors, and controlling a variety of lights, motors,
and other physical outputs (includes Jaycar stepper
motors). Arduino projects can be stand-alone, or
they can be communicated with software running
on your computer. These Arduino development kits
are 100% Arduino-compatible. Designed in
Australia and supported with tutorials, guides, a
forum and more. A very active worldwide
community and resources are available with many
projects, ideas and programs available to freely
use. Learn more at www.jaycar.com.au/arduino
• Soft cover,
197 pages
• 215 x 275mm
BM-7135
• Red and green
user-defined LEDs
• Gold-plated surface
XC-4220
95
11900
WHAT IS ARDUINO?
A project oriented book written around
Android-type mobile phones and the
Arduino
microcontroller.
RFID Lock Shield Kit
$
$
6995
Arduino Robot Builder's
Bonanza
433MHz Receiver Shield
Lets you intercept 433MHz OOK/ASK signals,
decoding them in software on your Arduino. All the
Arduino headers are broken out to solder pads, and
GND and 5V rails are provided for convenience.
• Built-in charger
XC-4222
Arduino + Android Projects
for the Evil Genius
3495
Arduino Shields
Specially designed to be compatible with the Android
Open Accessory Development Kit enabling
you to build your own Android
peripherals to connect your
phone to whatever you like.
$
EtherMega
30 Arduino Projects for
the Evil Genius
USBDroid with Onboard
Android/USB Host
2995
1695
Security Sensor Shield Kit
Allows up to 4 security
sensors to be connected to an
Arduino with full End-Of-Line
(EOL) support to detect
tampering with the sensors or
cable. EOL technology allows
the system to detect a variety
of events using a single cable
pair to the sensor.
• Status LEDs on each channel
XC-4217
See website for full range of ARDUINO SHIELDS
$
2795
siliconchip.com.au
www.jaycar.com.au
Savings off original RRP. Limited stock on sale items
ARDUINO
Arduino Modules
Power Regulators
Sound & Buzzer Module
Power Regulator 28V
(Switchmode)
This versatile piezo-element module can be used for
both input or output! Includes a built-in
1M resistor to allow the piezo element
to detect shocks.
A high tech switchmode supply
with a selectable 5V or 7VDC
output and up to 1A output
current The input voltage
range of 6 to 28VDC is
very flexible and it
will not overheat
at higher input
voltages like the
7805 and other linear
regulators may.
• Size: 21(W) x
33(H) x 6(D)mm
XC-4258
$
• Sound pressure level
at 10cm: 75dB (min)
• Size: 23(W) x 16(H)
x 5(D)mm
XC-4232
$
19
95
Power-over-Ethernet Regulator
802.3af Compliant
Send power to your Arduino project over the
network! This regulator module fits onto the
Freetronics EtherTen or EtherMega to make them
compatible with commercial 48V
Power-over-Ethernet switches. It
includes built-in smarts to
communicate with the
switch and negotiate a
power rating for the
device, then uses a
switch-mode
regulator to efficiently
drop the 48V supplied
via the LAN cable down
to 7.5V for use by the
Arduino compatible board.
XC-4252
$
2995
N-MOSFET Driver &
Output Module
In store ONLY. Limited stock.
Not available online.
995
Full Colour RGB LED Module
An LED with a brain! This smart
module can be daisy-chained, so
you can connect a number of
these together in a string and
drive each of the module
colours individually from
your microcontroller.
This high-power N-MOSFET
module lets you switch highcurrent loads using a tiny
microcontroller.
• Maximum 60V / 20A
switched load
• Drive directly from an
Arduino digital output
• Size: 23(W) x 18(H)
x 5(D)mm
XC-4244
$
695
Microphone Sound Input Module
Give your project ears with this sound response and
sound pressure level sensing module. Designed to
connect straight to an Arduino
compatible, microcontroller
analog to digital converter or
many other circuits.
• Size: 23(W) x 16(H)
x 8(D)mm
XC-4236
• Size: 18(W) x 18(H) x
5(D)mm
XC-4234
$
995
$
995
Temperature Sensor Module
Sprinkle these around your house to collect
temperature data using your Arduino. Two sets of
header connections to allow easy daisy-chaining.
Hall Effect Magnetic
& Proximity Sensor Module
• -55 to +125˚C temperature range
• +/-0.5˚C accuracy
• Selectable 9 or 12 bit precision
• Unique device ID coded into
every sensor
• Size: 23(W) x 16(H) x
6(D)mm
XC-4230
• Green "triggered" LED for
easy setup and use
• Size: 21(W) x 16(H)
x 4(D)mm
XC-4242
$
Sense magnetic presence, rotating wheels and
magnets, door and arm sensors, and anything else
magnetic nearby this sensor.
1695
$
995
ICSP Programmer
Program new applications into a wide range of
microcontrollers using this ICSP programmer with a
USB interface.
• Compatible with Arduino
boards (ZZ-8726)
ATmega328P MCU
• Fully supported by
the Arduino IDE
XC-4237
$
2495
In store ONLY.
Limited stock.
Not available online.
ATmega328P MCU with Arduino
Uno Bootloader
An Atmel AVR ATmega328P microcontroller to build
customised Arduino compatible projects.
Includes 16Mhz Crystal Oscillator.
• Pre-installed Arduino Uno
bootloader
ZZ-8726
$
Arduino Displays
128x128 Pixel OLED Display Module
High resolution, full colour OLED display module!
Perfect for graphics, gauges, graphs, even make
your own video game or interactive display.
• 16,384 full colour RGB
pixels in a 128 x 128
format
• Active display area
28.8 x 26.8mm,
(1.5" diagonal)
XC-4270
$
4995
siliconchip.com.au
To order call 1800 022 888
USB Lipo Charger
Charge Li-Po cells from any USB source, USB
plugpack, laptop or PC.
• 3.7V output for a single Li-Po cell
• Micro-USB jack
XC-4243
$
995
1295
16 x 2 LCD Display
Blue Dot Matrix LED Display Panel
• 2 rows of 16 characters
• Software-controlled backlight
XC-4218
• 32 x 16 high brightness
Blue LEDs (512 LEDs
total) on a 10mm pitch
• Viewable over 12
metres away
XC-4251
Handy 16-character by 2-line display ready to plug
straight in to your Arduino, with a softwarecontrollable backlight and 5 buttons for user input.
The display can be panel mounted if required.
$
2995
This large, bright 512 LED matrix panel has onboard
controller circuitry designed to make it easy to use
straight from your board.
Also available
Red Large Dot Matrix LED
Display Panel XC-4250 $39.95
Note: Can for comparison only
$
8995
December 2013 51
www.jaycar.com.au
3
Meters & Testers
Multimeter with
Data Hold
True RMS Autoranging
DMM with Temperature
A handy digital multimeter with
lots of features at a great price.
Supplied with holster and probes.
Includes non-contact voltage testing,
backlit LCD, and a carrying pouch.
• 4000 count
• Powered by 1 x 9V
battery (included)
• Size: 138(L)
x 68(W) x
37(D)mm
$
QM-1551
• 2000 count
• Transistor & Diode test
• 10A DC current
• Size: 145(L) x 65(W) x 35(H)mm
QM-1523
$
Multifunction
Environment Meter
1495
Combines the functions of a sound
level meter, light meter, humidity
meter and temperature meter.
• 4000 count
• Non contact voltage
• Size: 170(H) x 78(W) x 48(D)mm
QM-1594
NEW
5995
$
9900
1MHz Handheld Function Generator
10MHz Rechargeable Pocket Scope
• Backlit LCD
• Built-in rechargeable battery
• Size: 114(H) x 74(W)
x 29(D)mm
QT-2304
• LCD display
• Built-in rechargeable battery
• CRO probe and USB charge cable supplied
• Size: 114(H) x 74(W) x
29(D)mm
QC-1914
A complete portable oscilloscope! Aside from standard
scope features, it has nifty tools for measurement of
RMS speaker power, display hold function, and memory
storage for 2 signals. Housed in a durable rubber
surround. See website for full specifications.
A signal generator with the features of a bench top
generator in a portable size! Produces sine, square,
and triangle waveform signals with output frequency
adjustment from 1Hz to 1MHz with maximum
amplitude of 8Vpp. See website
for specifications.
$
19900
Accessories Must Haves!
HQ Banana Piggyback
Test Leads
$
2495
Jumper Lead kits
Ideal for connecting devices for testing.
Standard
WC-6010 $6.95
Heavy Duty WC-6020 $11.95
$
FROM
695
Testers Under $50
Autoranging SMT DMM
Specifically designed for SMT work
with interchangeable probes and
tweezer probes.
• Autoranging
• Continuity test
• 6000 count
• Size: 110(H) x 36(W) x 1(D)mm
QM-1496
$
3995
In store ONLY. Limited stock. Not available online.
52 Silicon Chip
4 To order call 1800 022 888
• 3m length
WT-5334
24900
Professional Laser Distance Meter
with Smartphone App
Retractable
Alligator Test
Lead Set
Set of 3 heavy duty
red, black, and green
leads on a retractable
3m reel, terminated
with insulated alligator
clips. Ideal for testing
and troubleshooting
electronic systems.
A set of factorymoulded piggy-back
style banana plugs,
each connected by
one metre of
high-quality
500VDC 12A rated
cable.
• Contains 2 x black, 2 x red
and 1 each of blue, yellow
and green leads - 7 in all
WT-5326
$
Can be paired with a Smartphone to
email measurements with a picture or
upload to the cloud. The unit will
measure distance, area, and volume
and will store the last 20
measurements for easy comparison
and referral.
$
• Digitech LDM app available for
Android and iOS devices
• Requires 2 x AA
batteries
QM-1624
1495
NEW
$
Professional Multimeter Probes
Suitable for inserting and holding in 4mm banana
sockets. Probe safety cover with slot for delicate
work. Comfortable and
ergonomic grip.
$ 95
17
• Sold as
a pair
WT-5338
Digital Thermometer
with K-Type Thermocouple
Suitable for the lab, workshop or in the
field. It features an excellent
measurement range from -50 to 750˚C
and a hold function to lock the reading
on the display. Thermocouple and
battery included.
• LCD
• Pocket size
QM-1602
Electrical Tester with
Polarity Checking
The unit will indicate the nearest
voltage up to 690V with polarity
indication. It will also check for low
impedance, continuity, do a single
pole phase test and show rotary
field indication. Includes 2 x AAA
batteries.
• IP64 rated
• Size: 240(H) x 78(W) x 40(D)mm
QP-2286
$
4995
20900
$
3995
Automotive MultiFunction Circuit Tester
Designed to test the electrical system
of 12/24V vehicles and sends voltage
to components to test functionality
without jumper wires. It also tests
polarity, voltage, short/open status,
lights and more.
• Size: 240(L) x 78(H) x 40(W)mm
QM-1494
$
4995
siliconchip.com.au
www.jaycar.com.au
Savings off original RRP. Limited stock on sale items
Hand Tools
Side Cutters
Long Nose Pliers
High quality small side cutters with
2mm thick blades and comfortable
soft plastic spring loaded handles.
$
$
13 95
$
NEW
$
1495
Sturdy adjustable frame, with 4 nylon
retaining posts to enable a good safe grip
on the watch case. The frame could then
be held in a vice, freeing
up your hands.
NEW
TH-1934
Remove and reinstall the fiddly little bracelet pins.
It comes with a 1.0mm and
0.8mm pin removal insert.
TH-1923
NEW
8
$
• 4 piece
TH-1932
NEW
1495
$
30m Cable Rolls
Braided Hook and
Loop Loom Wrap
FROM
1995
ROLL
$
4495
Multi-Filament Zipper Wrap
1.5m 30mm WH-5661 $19.95
1.5m 50mm WH-5663 $29.95
NEW
$
$
FROM
14
95
FROM
1995
Extra HD Speaker
Flex - 30m
• 30m roll
WB-1709
• 79/0.2mm figure 8
• 30m roll
WB-1713
High quality speaker cable for
connecting speakers to your
amplifier. 24/0.20mm figure 8 with
trace.
siliconchip.com.au
To order call 1800 022 888
Convenient and cost effective
with polarity stripe to make
wiring easier.
2495
$
ROLL
Pre-cut Heatshrink
Tubing - Trade Pack
Glue lined heatshrink in an array of
sizes to suit all needs - 60 pieces in
total. Supplied in see through nylon
snap shut case.
• 95mm long
WH-5521
2495
2995
$
29
95
6495ROLL
50A Anderson® Connectors
Easily adapt or extend your 50A Anderson®
connector with the following options. Adaptor
includes 300mm cable length. Extension lead
includes 5m cable length.
Eye Terminals (shown)
15A Cigarette Plug
15A Cigarette Socket
2-Way Splitter
5m Extension
NEW
$
Note: Cable not included
$
Heavy Duty Speaker
Flex - 30m
$
ROLL
Filament zipper wraps to combat the
problem of messy cables! Simply insert
the cable and do up the zip. Double
filament for extra strength and durability.
• 15 piece
TD-2069
$
• 30m roll
WB-2014
Wraps around your cables and
secures them with hook and loop.
1.5m 32mm WH-5654 $14.95
1.5m 51mm WH-5656 $17.95
2495
RG6 75 Ohm Coax Cable
Wire up your TV antenna
with quality coax cable
designed for today's
DIGITAL TV environment.
Available in black or white.
This handy set will fit the
bill for all those microscopic
fasteners. The ergonomic
handles are colour coded
for easy identification and
they come in a sturdy
storage case. See
website for contents.
• 30 piece
TD-2107
NEW
Great for domestic TV & pay TV
installations! Austar/Foxtel approved.
RG59 75 Ohm
Coax Cable
Micro Driver Set
An excellent tool kit for
electronic or computer
repairs with all the essentials
- cutters, pliers, screwdrivers
(Phillips head, slotted,
Posidrive), nut drivers etc.
See website for full
contents.
Kit includes watch case opener/holder,
retaining lugs, dusting bulb pump,
no.7 tweezers and fine dusting
brush.
• Supplied in quality
compartment case
TH-1928
$
2995
Electronic Tool Kit
2995
Watchmakers' Kit
A selection of the little spring bars that get broken/
bent/lost even by the most careful wearers. Consists
of 340pcs in total of the most common sizes.
NEW
9
NEW
95
Watch Bracelet Link Removal Pliers
$ 95
Wrist Strap Spring Bar Assortment
• 30m roll
$
Features 6 different heads, 4 steel ones, a brass one
and acrylic plastic one. Ball pein on the opposite end.
• 185mm long
TH-1927
Watch Case Holder
Black WB-2005 $19.95
White WB-2001 $21.95
1495
Watchmakers Mallet with
Interchangeable Heads
$
Note: Watch not included
• Includes wire guide
TH-1827
ALL DUE EARLY DECEMBER
Watch Case Opener Set
This set consists of an adjustable
opener that engages the little
recesses on the back
of a watch and
the other half of the
set looks like a small
oyster shucking knife.
TH-1929
Designed for easy wire stripping, cutting
and crimping, all types of cable from
AWG 10-24 gauge (0.13 - 6.0mm).
• Built-in wire cutter
TH-1834
13 95
Watch Repair Tools
$
Solid box joint & crimping dies, comfortable
handles and spring-loading make this an
easy crimper to use all day.
• Stainless steel
TH-1893
• Stainless steel
TH-1890
HD Wire Stripper / Cutter /
Crimper with Wire Guide
Crimping Tool for
Non-Insulated Lugs
Perfect for adjusting and bending
components, picking up dropped nuts
etc. Comfortable spring loaded handles.
FROM
1295
PT-4444
PT-4446
PT-4448
PT-4442
PT-4440
$12.95
$14.95
$14.95
$29.95
$64.95
PT-4444
December 2013 53
www.jaycar.com.au
5
Kits 4 Kids
Robotics
Remote Control
Robot Kit
Includes a collection of components
ready to assemble, once complete
you will have a fully remote
controlled robot unit.
$
• Suitable for ages 8+
• Requires 6 x AAA batteries in total
KJ-8952 WAS $29.95
29
2495
SAVE $5
• Suitable for
ages 3+
KJ-8925
3 in 1 All Terrain Tracked Robot
$
SAVE $15
• Suitable for Ages 12+
KJ-8916
Construct up to six different projects. Everything
snaps together for easy assembly.
• Projects: robot, helicopter, plane, windmill, airboat
& three wheeler
• Suitable for ages 10+
KJ-8936 WAS $14.95
Build any one of six different
projects ( windmill, car, dog, plane,
airboat, revolving plane). No tools,
soldering or glue required. All the
parts snap together with spring
terminals for the wiring.
$
SAVE $5
Gifts Under $25
995
KJ-8970
Simple snap together electronic project kits. Both kits are great
educational tools with fun bright coloured pieces.
$
Car and Boat Project Kit
• Finished project acutlly moves!
• Requires 2 x AA batteries
KJ-8972
1995
$
2495
7 in 1 Solar Rechargeable
Station Kit
Initially assembles into a
recharging station and can then
be transformed into a truck.
Can also build concept car,
racer, dump truck,
bulldozer or solar
powered car.
1495
SAVE $5
• Suitable for
ages 8+
KJ-8964
WAS $19.95
54 Silicon Chip
6 To order call 1800 022 888
$
995 ea
SAVE $5
Wind Powered Eco-biker
Build this model bicycle rider kit and
mount it on the handlebars of your
bike. If the wind is strong enough it
turns the arms and legs, and
generates enough electricity to
run the bike's LED headlight!
• Suitable for ages 8+
KJ-8923
Buy 2
for $12.00
Save $7.90
KJ-8972
Includes the chassis, 2 x tracks,
the hull, a turret, 2 gun
tubes, one gun support
and all the wheels.
Assemble the
pieces and you
will have a fully
functioning tank
ready to roll out!
• Suitable for ages 8+
KJ-8950 WAS $29.95
995
This kit is an excellent way to teach how solar power is
used to drive a small motor.
Perfect for train enthusiasts!
$ 95
• Suitable for ages 10+
KJ-8929
$
$
Mini Solar Bullet Train Kit
Remote Controlled Tank Kit
$
NOW
• Suitable for ages 8+
• Car size: 60(L) x
30(W)mm
Wind Powered
KJ-8838
Solar Powered
KJ-8839
Were $14.95
NEW
Snap-on Project Kits for Kids
4995
Very simple to build and comes
with construction details to
explains how alternative energy
can generate electricity.
• Suitable for ages 10+
KJ-8926
995
$
Buy KJ-8916 &
KJ-8917 for $75
SAVE $9.90
Wind and Solar
Powered RC Cars
6-in-1 Solar Educational Kit
6 in 1 Solar Educational Robot Kit
SAVE $10
Capable of 5 separate movements and can
easily perform complex tasks. The arm is
supplied as a kit of parts and makes an
excellent project for anyone interested in
robotic construction. 100g lift capacity.
Add computer control via
USB to your Robotic Arm
KJ-8917 $34.95
Green Power Kits
6995
Robot Arm Kit with Controller
3495
• Suitable for ages 13+
• Requires 4 x AA
batteries
KJ-8918 WAS $49.95
Snap-on Electronic Kit
• 80 snap on projects
KJ-8970
• Suitable for ages 14+
KR-3120 WAS $79.95
In store ONLY. Limited stock. Not available online.
A robust all terrain tracked robot kit with detailed
instructions included. Comes with 6 terrestrial
tracks/crawlers. Can be reconfigured to operate
as a gripper, rover or forklift
type mechanism. Electric
motors included.
• Suitable for ages 5+
Asuro is a kit developed at the German
Centre for Air and Space Travel for an
autonomous multi-sensor robot. It has
two odometers and several display
elements. The supplied duplex
infrared interface permits
wireless programming, as well
as a remote control with a PC.
The "brain" of the robot is a RISC
processor that also permits the
processing of complex programs.
This is not a kit for the fainthearted! Some soldering required.
$
Construct up to 8 different kits (car, riverboat,
octopus, spaceship, solar LED, robot, windmill &
space alien). The finished projects are solar
powered, but can also be powered by the
light from a
household
$
95
50W halogen
light.
Give a Jaycar
Gift Card for
Christmas
$
Asuro Programmable
Robot Kit
8 in 1 Solar Educational Kit
2495
SAVE $5
9
Buy 2 for $12.00
Save $7.90
In store ONLY. Limited stock. Not available online.
siliconchip.com.au
www.jaycar.com.au
Savings off original RRP. Limited stock on sale items
Kits - Build Them
Speed Control Kit for Induction Motors
ct
An advanced proje
ed
for an experienc
constructor.
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag April/May 2012
Control induction motors *up to 1.5kW (2HP) to
run machinery at different speeds or
controlling a pool pump to save money. Also
works with 3-phase motors. Full form kit includes
case, PCB, heatsink,
cooling fan, hardware
and electronics.
KC-5509
$
24900
USB Port Voltage Checker Kit
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag July 2013
An easy way to test a USB port to see if it is dead,
faulty or incorrectly wired to help prevent damaging
a valuable USB device you plan to connect.
Voltage is indicated using three LEDs. Kit supplied
with double sided, soldermasked and screenprinted PCB with SMDs pre-soldered, clear
heatshrink, USB connectors and components for
USB 2.0 & 3.0.
$
29
95
Garbage and Recycling
Reminder Kit
• PCB: 75 x 47mm
KC-5518
29
NEW
$
5995
Battery Saver Kit
Cuts off the power between the battery and load when the battery becomes flat
to prevent the battery over-discharging and becoming damaged. Suits SLA, Liion, Li-Po and LiFePO4 batteries between 6 to 24V. Uses very little power
(<5uA) and handles 20A (30A peak). Supplied with double sided,
soldermasked and screen-printed PCB with SMDs presoldered (apart from voltage setting
resistors) and components.
NEW
$
29
95
Short Circuits Series
Short Circuits - Volume 1
Acts as an introduction to
electronics, NO previous
knowledge of electronics
is needed.
• Softcover - 96 pages
BJ-8502
$
995
To order call 1800 022 888
$
• PCB size: 74 x 47mm
KA-1732
1995
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag September/October 2010
Marine growth electronic antifouling systems can cost
thousands. This project uses the same ultrasonic
waveforms and virtually identical ultrasonic transducers
mounted in a sturdy polyurethane housings. Standard
unit consists of control electronic kit and case,
ultrasonic transducer, potting and gluing
components and housings. The single transducer
design of this kit is suitable for boats up to 10m
(32ft); boats longer than about 14m will need two
transducers and drivers. Basically all parts
supplied in the project kit including wiring.
• 12VDC
• Suitable for power or sail
• Could be powered by a solar panel/wind generator
• PCB: 104 x 78mm
KC-5498
Also available Pre-built:
Dual output, suitable for vessels up to 14m (45ft) YS-5600
WAS $899.00 NOW $799.00 SAVE $100.00
$
24900
Quad output, suitable for vessels up to 20m (65ft) YS-5602
WAS $1199.00 NOW $999.00 SAVE $200.00
Includes
Epoxies
Learning electronics is fun with this short circuits books with their own series of construction projects. All books are
geared towards specific levels of electronics knowledge. Size: 205 x 275mm.
Short Circuits - Volume II
Assumes the constructor has the basic
skills and knowledge of
electronics. It contains 20
exciting projects and
introduces the novice to
soldering etc.
• Softcover - 148 pages
BJ-8504
See www.jaycar.com.au/shortcircuits for list of projects
siliconchip.com.au
Runs on 12-15V DC and
switches the on-board
relay once or repeatedly
when the switching time
is reached. Switching
time can be set between
7 seconds and 2 hours in
fixed steps.
Ultrasonic Antifouling Kit for Boats
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag October 2013
Like modern cars, this kit will turn your car
headlights on automatically if you forget to turn
the lights on when it gets dark. It can also turn the
lights off when you park to avoid a flat battery. See
website for full features.
• Kit supplied with double sided, solder-masked and
screen-printed PCB, die-case cast, buzzer and
electronic components. Cabling not included
KC-5524
DUE MID DECEMBER
9995
GIve a Jaycar
Gift Card for
Christmas
95
Automatic Headlights Kit for Cars
$
The 'Flexitimer'
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag January 2013
Easy to build kit that reminds you when to put which
bin out by flashing the corresponding brightly
coloured LED. Up to four bins can be individually set
to weekly, fortnightly or alternate week or fortnight
cycle.Kit supplied with silk-screened PCB, black
enclosure (83 x 54 x 31mm), pre-programmed PIC,
battery and PCB mount components.
$
• PCB: 34 x 18.5mm
KC-5523
Ref: Silicon Chip Mag April 2009
Allows the speed of a 240VAC motor to be controlled
smoothly from near zero to full speed. The advanced
design provides improved speed regulation & low
speed operation. Also features soft-start,
interferences suppression, fuse protection and
over-current protection. Kit supplied with all parts
including pre-cut metal case.
Note: Not for use with
induction motors.
KC-5478
*Does not work for motors with
centrifugal switch
• PCB: 44 x 17mm
KC-5522
10A Deluxe Motor Speed Controller Kit
$
12 95
Short Circuits - Volume III
This is the definitive electronics training manual.
After the constructors have
built any or all of the
described projects, there is
no reason why they would
not be able to tackle any of
the construction projects
published in the electronis
magazines.
• Softcover - 128 pages
BJ-8505
$
1495
December 2013 55
www.jaycar.com.au
7
Happy Holidays
Gifts Under $100
Sign-Up NOW !!!
The Jaycar Rewards programme
will entitle you to accumulate one
point with every dollar spent* at
any Jaycar Store* and be rewarded
with a $25 Rewards Cash Card
once you reach 500 points.
Portable Guitar Practice Amp
Register online today by visiting
7900
Feature packed with 32 built-in live rhythm drum
patterns, volume, gain, distortion, overdrive, tone
controls and AUX-IN jack.
• Headphone jack for private practice
• Built-in E-string tuner
• 2W Mono speaker
• Requires 1 x 9V battery
$
for up to 8 hours play
• Size: 180(L) x 90(W) x
SAVE
155(H)mm
CS-2553 WAS $99.00
www.jaycar.com.au/rewards
*Conditions apply, company stores only and only available
for retail transactions in Australia and New Zealand. See
website for full terms and conditions.
Portable Stereo
Speakers/Charger
Turntable with Speakers &
Audio Output
• 3.5mm headphone jack
• Line level output
• Stereo amplifier
• Automatic stop
• Mains powered
GE-4136
WAS $49.00
$
$
Note: iPhone not included
• 2WRMS mono speaker
• Size: 91(W) x 54(H) x
20(D)mm
AR-1738
$
1495
Hi-Fi Bluetooth® Headset
Listen to MP3 music from a mobile
phone or a PC without any cables.
Perfect for the commuter, student, or
multi-tasker.
• Allows 2 devices
to be connected
simultaneously
AA-2082
$
iPad®/iPhone® not
included. See website
for device compatability.
Outdoor USB Solar
Charger
Provides a 5V USB port suitable for
charging devices such as media
players and Smartphones. Attach it to
a backpack, tent, or bike using the
elastic strap and clips to charge on
the go.
• Output
Voltage:
5VDC
MB-3593
Note:
iPhone® not
included
5995
9900
SAVE $20
• Controllable turret
• Up to 20m range
• Requires 6 x AA
batteries
• Suitable for ages 14+
GT-3599 WAS $119.00
5995
®
$
Record videos and take snapshots of your adventures
and playback or view from your Smartphone or tablet.
• 30 pin Apple connector
• Dual 2" full range drivers
• Requires 4 x AAA batteries
AR-1889
SAVE $10
Compact and portable, listen to
songs on the go or share with others.
Simply charge via
USB using the
supplied cable.
Wi-Fi Rover 2.0 with Video Recording
®
3900
Mini FM Radio with MP3
Player
In store ONLY. Limited stock. Not available online.
Portable, versatile and suitable for use
in a small room or on the go.
Simultaneously charges the
iPhone/iPod® when mains powered.
Listen to vinyl collections directly from
the unit and its built-in speakers.
$20
$
39
Portable Cooler and
Warmer
Use as a cooler to keep drinks and
salads fresh and cold without using
ice or use it as a warmer to keep preheated meals warm, ready to eat
while on the road.
• Compact,
lightweight
• Insulated
construction
• 12V, 6L
capacity
GH-1374
$
95
3995
Note: Cans not included
YOUR LOCAL JAYCAR STORE - Free Call Orders: 1800 022 888
• AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
Belconnen
Fyshwick
Ph (02) 6253 5700
Ph (02) 6239 1801
• NEW SOUTH WALES
Albury
Alexandria
Bankstown
Blacktown
Bondi Junction
Brookvale
Campbelltown
Castle Hill
Coffs Harbour
Croydon
Erina
Gore Hill
Hornsby
Liverpool
Maitland
Newcastle
Penrith
Ph (02) 6021 6788
Ph (02) 9699 4699
Ph (02) 9709 2822
Ph (02) 9678 9669
Ph (02) 9369 3899
Ph (02) 9905 4130
Ph (02) 4620 7155
Ph (02) 9634 4470
Ph (02) 6651 5238
Ph (02) 9799 0402
Ph (02) 4365 3433
Ph (02) 9439 4799
Ph (02) 9476 6221
Ph (02) 9821 3100
Ph (02) 4934 4911
Ph (02) 4965 3799
Ph (02) 4721 8337
Port Macquarie
Rydalmere
Sydney City
Taren Point
Tuggerah
Tweed Heads
Wagga Wagga
Warners Bay
Wollongong
• NORTHERN TERRITORY
Darwin
C
Ph (08) 8948 4043
• QUEENSL AND
Aspley
Browns Plains
Caboolture
Cairns
Caloundra
Capalaba
Ipswich
Labrador
Arrival dates of new products in this flyer were confirmed at the
time of print but delays sometimes occur. Please ring your local
store to check stock details. Savings off Original RRP.
56 S
Ph (02) 6581 4476
Ph (02) 8832 3120
Ph (02) 9267 1614
Ph (02) 9531 7033
Ph (02) 4353 5016
Ph (07) 5524 6566
Ph (02) 6931 9333
Ph (02) 4954 8100
Ph (02) 4226 7089
Prices valid from 24th
November 2013
to 26th December 2013.
ilicon
hip
Ph (07) 3863 0099
Ph (07) 3800 0877
Ph (07) 5432 3152
Ph (07) 4041 6747
Ph (07) 5491 1000
Ph (07) 3245 2014
Ph (07) 3282 5800
Ph (07) 5537 4295
Mackay
Maroochydore
Mermaid Beach
Nth Rockhampton
Townsville
Strathpine
Underwood
Woolloongabba
Ph (07) 4953 0611
Ph (07) 5479 3511
Ph (07) 5526 6722
Ph (07) 4926 4155
Ph (07) 4772 5022
Ph (07) 3889 6910
Ph (07) 3841 4888
Ph (07) 3393 0777
• SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Adelaide
Clovelly Park
Elizabeth
Gepps Cross
Reynella
Ph (08) 8231 7355
Ph (08) 8276 6901
Ph (08) 8255 6999
Ph (08) 8262 3200
Ph (08) 8387 3847
• TASMANIA
Hobart
Launceston
Ph (03) 6272 9955
Ph (03) 6334 2777
• VICTORIA
Cheltenham
Coburg
HEAD OFFICE
320 Victoria Road, Rydalmere NSW 2116
Ph: (02) 8832 3100 Fax: (02) 8832 3169
Ph (03) 9585 5011
Ph (03) 9384 1811
Ferntree Gully
Frankston
Geelong
Hallam
Kew East
Melbourne
Mornington
Ringwood
Roxburgh Park
Shepparton
Springvale
Sunshine
Thomastown
Werribee
NEW
NEW
Ph (03) 9758 5500
Ph (03) 9781 4100
Ph (03) 5221 5800
Ph (03) 9796 4577
Ph (03) 9859 6188
Ph (03) 9663 2030
Ph (03) 5976 1311
Ph (03) 9870 9053
Ph (03) 8339 2042
Ph (03) 5822 4037
Ph (03) 9547 1022
Ph (03) 9310 8066
Ph (03) 9465 3333
Ph (03) 9741 8951
• WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Joondalup
Maddington
Mandurah
Midland
Northbridge
Rockingham
ONLINE ORDERS
Website: www.jaycar.com.au
Email: techstore<at>jaycar.com.au
Occasionally there are discontinued items advertised on a special / lower price in this promotional flyer that has limited to nil stock in
certain stores, including Jaycar Authorised Stockist. These stores may not have stock of these items and can not order or transfer stock.
Ph (08) 9301 0916
Ph (08) 9493 4300
Ph (08) 9586 3827
Ph (08) 9250 8200
Ph (08) 9328 8252
Ph (08) 9592 8000
siliconchip.com.au
PRODUCT SHOWCASE
Second-Generation USB DSOs from Virtins Technology
This new generation of USB DSOs features a unique hardware-based DSP
algorithm which enhances the performance and functionality dramatically
without adding extra hardware cost.
When used in conjunction with Multi-Instrument software, these USB
DSOs convert any desktop, laptop, or tablet PC into a powerful oscilloscope,
spectrum analyzer, multimeter, data logger, signal generator and so forth,
all of which work simultaneously.
Some unique features are:
1) As the sampling rate goes down, the bit resolution of the ADC goes
up (up to 16 bits).
2) Streaming mode supported and thus virtually unlimited memory depth
3) Adaptive anti-aliasing filter
4) Individually calibrated, user recalibration supported
The price is from $US199.95. The software can be downloaded and tried
using a sound card as the ADC and DAC device.
Contact:
Virtins Technology
Blk 248, Kim Keat Link #02-67
Singapore, 310248
Tel: (+65) 62580357 Fax: (+65) 62531836
Website: www.virtins.com
Pi NoIR Raspberry Pi Camera Module from RS
Into the Raspberry Pi? Here’s a tiny camera
module specifically for the Pi. It was developed
for diverse applications including those requiring
night vision (eg security and monitoring nocturnal animal behaviour), hyperspectral imaging,
astronomy, and paranormal investigation. Pi NoIR
is capable of taking still photos with a resolution
of 2592 x 1944. The tiny module, which measures
just 20mm x 25mm x 9mm, can also record up to
1080p HD videos at 30 frames per second, allowing
users of Raspberry Pi models A and B to build video
applications. The board will plug into the currently
unused CSI pins on the Raspberry Pi, using the I²C
interface for control.
To get started with Pi NoIR, users will need a
Raspberry Pi board, an SD card with OS installed
and a battery pack or power supply.
Optional extras include an infrared Contact:
lamp, a Raspberry Pi camera stand, RS Components
and various cables for HDMI, VGA and 25 Pavesi St, Smithvield NSW 2164
Ethernet connectivity. All components Tel: 1300 656 636 Fax: 1300 656 696
are available direct from RS stock.
Website: http://australia.rs-online.com/
The Team at QualiEco Circuits
Pty Ltd is well known
for providing excellent
quality electronic manufacturing services and
solutions.
This vibrant, growing
company offers outstanding technical support and attention to detail. Having bases in Australia, New
Zealand, China and India allows for tight control on orders, which
are fulfilled in management approved facilities in China. Economies
of scale result in exceptionally low prices.
Proud of providing
reliable services for
more than 10 years,
QualiEco Circuits is
currently a market
Contact:
leader in New Zealand.
QualicoEco Circuits Pty Ltd
The company is now
Aust: Unit 5,3 Whitburn St, Clayton, Vic 3168
enjoying a successful
Tel: 1300 BUYPCB (1300 289 722)
second year of operaWebsite: www.qualiecocircuits.com.au
tion in Australia after
NZ: PO Box 75474, Manurewa, Auckland
launching at the 2012
Tel: (649) 269 6915 Fax: (649) 269 6926
Electronex Expo in
Website: www.qualiecocircuits.co.nz
Sydney.
siliconchip.com.au
PicoKit’s Christmas Star – with sound!
PicoStar is the perfect project to bring Christmas cheer
for the whole family: DIY fun for everyone and a movement
sensor to confuse the hell out of the dog! Simply assemble
the PicoStar (soldering required) to light up your tree and
play some Christmas songs.
As do all the exciting kits from PicoKit, PicoStar has a
Microchip PIC for a brain. This PIC controls everything
from the colourful LEDs to the
five Christmas songs. You’ll be
fascinated at such holiday fun
with the PicoStar. Order online at the website below.
Contact:
PicoKit
7 Weaber St, Clontarf,
Qld 4019
Tel: (0402) 239 363
Fax:(07) 3465 0154
Website: www.
picokit.com.au
December 2013 57
SERVICEMAN'S LOG
Servicing: variety is the spice of life
You have to be versatile to survive in the
servicing business, which is why I’m never
reluctant to take on odd-ball jobs. They not
only help pay the bills but also give me a
break from the often routine computer jobs.
I
’VE TALKED BEFORE about the
need to diversify a technical support
business if the serviceman wants to
stay up with – or better still, stay ahead
of – the rest of the field. The reality
is that keeping up with current best
practice can be demanding and many
servicemen spend a lot of their time
up-skilling in order to remain competitive. It’s also necessary to ensure
they can competently handle anything
that comes through the workshop door
(within reason, of course).
Car mechanics are a classic example, given that the car repair field has
changed significantly in the last 20
or so years. Gone are the days when
all you needed were a few spanners,
a screwdriver and a rag to be able to
repair pretty much any vehicle on the
road. These days, you need an array
of specialised (and often expensive)
tools and a broad knowledge of the
many different systems used in the
modern motor car. Those who haven’t
kept up with these changes will have
58 Silicon Chip
trouble coping with anything but the
most basic repairs.
In my own business, I’ve never been
shy about taking on new challenges.
I’ve also never been shy about turning
down work not directly related to my
field of expertise if I don’t think I’m
the person for the job. The trick here
is to know my limitations; I don’t
know everything about everything so
if I consider I’m not up to providing a
professional level of service for a job,
I’m not afraid to say “no”.
Oddball jobs
Recently, a situation arose that has
become fairly common in post-quake
Christchurch. As part of my service, I
usually carry the customer’s hardware
out to their car. And on this particular
occasion, when I placed a computer
I’d repaired on the back seat, I spied
several other electronic devices sitting there.
When the client noticed me noticing
his gear, he asked me half-seriously if I
serviced those devices as well
and if not, did I know someone who did. Lately, I’ve
encountered several people
doing the same thing – that
is, lugging several dead
electrical/electronic devices around and asking
others if they know someone who can fix whatever
it is they have.
This is happening because so many appliance
repair companies have
now disappeared due to
the quakes and former
customers no longer know
where to go for repairs.
What’s more, the insur-
Dave Thompson*
Items Covered This Month
•
Hunter’s camera and an oddball fridge
• Palec M-52 multimeter resurrection
*Dave Thompson runs PC Anytime
in Christchurch, NZ.
Website: www.pcanytime.co.nz
Email: dave<at>pcanytime.co.nz
ance companies, which took a real
pasting after the earthquakes, are tightening their belts. More than ever, they
are now demanding detailed assessments and written reports to determine
if any given device is worth repairing
and if it is, how much it might cost.
It’s ironic how things work out; after
the quakes, many people assumed that
those of us in the computer repair
business would be swamped with
customers demanding new machines
and wanting their office networks
rewired. However, this imagined glut
of work never materialised, driving
many service businesses out of the
game altogether.
In my case, necessity really is the
mother of invention, which is why I
now consider taking on repair work
that I haven’t done in the past and why
I found myself with a few rather oddball jobs sitting on the incoming shelf.
Trail camera
The first of these oddball jobs was
a device commonly called a “trail” or
“hunter’s” camera. These are basically
rugged, weatherproof, set-and-forget
digital cameras with motion sensors
and night-vision technology and are
typically used to monitor animal activity at trap locations, remote hunting
grounds and game trails.
This particular model boasts a rubberised hard-plastic case with leafpattern-camouflage and has an array
of infrared illuminating LEDs which
take up the front half of the case above
the lens aperture and PIR sensor. It’s
battery-powered (4 x D-cells) and can
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be set to take photos, video or a burst
sequence of still photos, with the captured data stored on an SD memory
card (accessible through a flexible
rubber flap in the base of the unit).
The camera also has a multiprogrammable timer which allows
it to be set to take any combination
of video and stills at various times
of the day or night. In addition, the
PIR sensor (which is both height and
width-adjustable) can be used to trigger the camera’s recording function by
detecting nearby movement.
The owner used this and two other
identical cameras on his hunting
trips, setting them up to record deer
movements on various trails. With
their contoured cases, they can be
easily cable-tied to a tree or attached
to a standard tripod using one of two
built-in mounting points.
This type of camera retails for
around $300, so I’d be a bit paranoid
about leaving such a device out in the
woods for fear it would go walkabout.
However, because it’s camouflaged,
it would be very hard to spot when
well-placed, unless someone was
specifically looking out for it.
Unfortunately, this particular camera had “just stopped working” and
its owner wanted to either repair or
replace it, depending on the problem.
Troubleshooting
The first thing to try would be new
batteries. The client couldn’t remember when he’d last replaced them so
I opened the battery compartment to
check the state of things there. When
I did this, I could immediately see a
serious problem; there were pools of
leaked battery “juice” throughout the
moulded plastic bays.
That didn’t bode well and when
I pulled the batteries out (wearing
1
gloves and eye protection because
this stuff is nasty), my fears were
confirmed. The batteries had leaked
badly and the liquid had gone everywhere. In fact, two of the screws inside
the battery bay were that corroded
I couldn’t engage them sufficiently
with a Phillips-head screwdriver to
undo them.
I removed whatever screws I could
in the normal way and then carefully
drilled out the two I couldn’t budge in
order to split the case. Once opened,
the true extent of the damage was obvious. Much of the circuit board was
covered with brown sludge and many
tracks and surface-mount components
were now fuzzy green outlines of the
original parts. So at that stage, it wasn’t
looking too hopeful.
The first thing to do was clean
everything up as best I could. This was
done by scrubbing the affected areas
using an old toothbrush and a 50/50
water and vinegar mix in a plastic
spray bottle. A tray of clean water
placed on a heavy plastic bag made
an excellent cleaning bath and the bag
Rigid PCBs (up to 32 layers),
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also kept the majority of the sludge off
my workbench during this procedure.
I also used a clear plastic full-face
shield because brushing is a messy
business and I didn’t want any of this
stuff near my eyes. Judging by the
number of brown spots on the face
shield after I’d finished, it was a sensible precaution to wear it. The smell
of the sludge alone was bad enough
and I could almost taste the toxicity
in the back of my throat as I cleaned
it up (my solder-fumes fan came in
handy here was well).
Having completed the cleaning, I
could then assess the full damage to
the board. Several tracks were affected
and some were missing altogether. The
pads of a couple of surface-mount transistors and several other components
also appeared to be somewhat corroded
but everything measured OK in-circuit.
I couldn’t find any circuit diagrams
anywhere for these cameras, so any
troubleshooting that required schematics simply wasn’t going to happen.
Given the circumstances, the best I
could do was replace the burned and
ualiEco
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December 2013 59
Serr v ice
Se
ceman’s
man’s Log – continued
damaged PCB tracks with light-gauge
insulated hook-up wire, before connecting it to my bench power supply
to try it out. I wound the current right
down and switched the voltage to lowrange (0-4V). I then set the voltage to
3V and switched on.
As I gradually wound up the current, things started happening. A small
on-board relay chattered as it tried to
engage and a power LED lit up faintly.
The current drain was as expected,
so I turned it off, selected the 4-30V
range on my bench supply and set the
output to 6V.
At this voltage and with the current
stable at about 150mA, I then pushed
a couple of buttons and the voltage
sagged as the current exceeded the
set limit. As a result, I increased the
current limit and continued pushing
buttons to test the unit. All seemed
well, so I turned it off and refocused
my attention on the case.
Extracting the corroded screws
proved relatively straightforward but
the battery bay terminals were a bit
more challenging to fix. Two of them
had all but dissolved into useless
rusting lumps. Fortunately, I make
it a practice of keeping the battery
contacts if throwing away old toys
or other battery-operated gear for just
such occasions.
I soon found a couple that were
fairly close to the originals in terms of
60 Silicon Chip
size and shape. A little tweaking using
some long-nosed pliers and a small
grinder soon had the new terminals
sitting in place and I then soldered the
connecting leads to them.
Finally, I reassembled the PCB into
the case and found a couple of screws
to replace the ones I’d drilled out. Four
new batteries completed the restoration and it was now all fixed and ready
to “shoot” game once more.
Of course, it may very well fail at
some point further down the track
(no pun intended!) due to corrosion.
However, it was working for now so
its owner could at least get some more
use out of it.
Odd-ball fridge
The second odd-ball appliance I recently took on was a small fridge. This
wasn’t one of those so-called “bar”
fridges but an even smaller noveltytype fridge that ordinarily wouldn’t
be worth repairing.
This one was different in that it was
branded with a well-known whiskey
maker’s motif and thus was almost
a collectible to the right person. So
regardless of what it was worth in
dollar terms, it had sentimental value
to the owner and he wanted to know
if it could be fixed.
According to its owner, the problem
was that it no longer cooled anything
down. When plugged in, a fan bur-
ied somewhere underneath the unit
spooled up and the little LED lamp
inside the fridge came on when the
door was opened but that was about it.
I left it running for about 15 minutes but after that time, it was just as
warm inside as it was outside. So the
customer was right – it wasn’t cooling down.
This type of fridge doesn’t employ
complicated heat exchangers, compressors and ozone-depleting gases
to achieve its cooling but instead uses
an extremely simple (but very clever)
thermoelectric system that is surprisingly effective in coolers of this size.
These systems exploit what is known
as the Peltier effect (after Jean Peltier who discovered it in the 1840s),
whereby passing a current through the
junctions of certain materials either
cools or heats those junctions, depending on the direction of the current flow.
While early thermoelectric-based
refrigeration systems were written off
as inadequate novelties, subsequent
advances in the manufacture of increasingly efficient Peltier modules
has reversed that situation. This type
of refrigeration is now quite common
and some high-end cars now include
cooler compartments based on these
devices, to keep one’s bubbly at just
the right temperature for those “apresski” picnics.
Pulling the fridge apart was no challenge whatsoever. Removing four large
PK screws was all it took to remove the
base and reveal the workings of the
fridge, the process taking no more that
just a few minutes. There wasn’t much
to look at; a computer-sized fan sat on
a rather crude aluminium heatsink and
this in turn was screwed down onto
the Peltier module itself.
The cause of the problem was immediately apparent – a red wire, which
I assumed should have been attached
to the Peltier element, floated free. My
guess was that simply reattaching it
would get the fridge working but there
was just one problem – the wire didn’t
have any obvious terminal to connect
to on the element and on closer inspection of the still-intact black cable, it
looked like it was terminated directly
into the Peltier element itself.
This type of element looks like two
small, thin squares of white ceramictype material sandwiching rows of
silver-coloured core material. Red and
black wires normally exit the matrix
from opposite sides of the element and
siliconchip.com.au
these connect to a DC power source.
Depending on which way around
it’s wired, you can have the element
heating or cooling. In this case, it was
obviously wired to cool things down.
As the module cools, the heatsink temperature also drops and the fan then
forces the resulting cold air through
the walls of the fridge.
The Peltier element in this fridge
measured 40 x 40mm and going by
the numbers printed on it, is rated
at about 30W, making it a mid-range
unit. The problem, as mentioned, was
that I couldn’t reattach the red wire to
the element because there was nothing left to connect it to. The silver
core material looked almost powdery
where the wire attached and solder
certainly wouldn’t stick to it, nor was
there anything in the element to crimp
a wire to.
No matter; replacement elements
are surprisingly inexpensive and
readily available at the usual hobby
electronics outlets. A quick reference
to one such company’s website and a
trip down-town to pick one up was
all it took to find a replacement for
the damaged module. Installation was
simple; remove the old element, insert
the new one with some new heatsink
compound and tighten everything
back down.
I also cable-tied all the flying leads
tightly onto adjacent parts or case
mouldings to minimise the chance
of vibration and possible future wire
breakage.
This time when I powered it up, it
only took a few minutes to confirm that
it was cooling down, so it turned out to
be a very simple and inexpensive fix.
Not only was the client happy to have
his chintzy novelty bar-fridge back
in action but it also gave me a break
from the usual computer-centric fixes
I usually fill my days with.
After all, variety really is the spice of
life. Admittedly, I’m not ready to put a
“Dave’s Fix-it Barn” sign up over the
workshop door just yet but I’m happy
to take on some of these oddball jobs
in order to make a decent living.
Resurrecting A 50-Year-Old Palec M-52 Multimeter
The Australian-made Palec multimeters from the 1950s were top-notch
instruments renowned for their accuracy and reliability, at least by the
standards of the day. J. G. of Carlton
North, Victoria recently rescued and
restored an old Palec M-52 to working
order. Here’s his story . . .
I love fossicking around for treasures
in junk shops. Recently, I came across
a Palec M-52 multimeter that had seen
better days.
The Australian company Palec (Paton Electric) was established by Fred
Paton in 1938 and had a reputation for
high quality. The M-52 had a springloaded jewel-bearing movement, relaybased overload protection, range steps
of 1, 3 & 10 and could measure AC
currents up to 30A.
Touted as a “top-of-the-line” model,
it was advertised in the April 1958 issue of Radio Television and Hobbies
for £43 (“terms available”), an amount
equivalent to somewhere between
$500 and $1000 in today’s currency.
The specimen in the junk shop was
so deeply encrusted in dust that its
meter face was barely visible. In addition, the “semi-hard” rubber case was
beginning to perish but for $68, I just
had to snap it up.
After a preliminary clean-up to
remove half a century of grime, the
first task was to see if there was any
hope of restoration. A quick check
revealed that the meter coil was intact.
However, when I tested the meter on
the 10V scale, the needle swung to
midway and stuck there.
I removed the front cover of the
siliconchip.com.au
movement and found that the pointer’s
counter-weight was fouling the magnet, suggesting that the meter had been
dropped heavily. After gently bending
the counter-weight back into position,
the needle moved freely and there
was no other sign of damage. When I
placed the meter on its side and tilted
it forwards and backwards, the needle
stayed exactly at zero, indicating that
the movement was correctly balanced.
A preliminary check of the DC voltage ranges showed that the calibration
was still reasonably accurate so the
next step was a look inside. Fortunately, the batteries had been removed
and although the battery clips were
slightly corroded, the interior was in
remarkably good condition. There was
a sensitive “hair trigger” latching relay
for overload protection, some rather
ancient capacitors and composition
resistors, and a current transformer
for AC current measurements. Unfortunately, I was unable to find a circuit
diagram on the web and the question
now was what should be done first?
I decided to start with the red pushbutton selector switch which was
very erratic when switching between
the x1 and x3 ranges, no doubt due
to dirty contacts. Cleaning up with
DeOxit® spray helped, after which
the contacts were lightly burnished
using a fine diamond nail file to give
reliable operation.
What about the internal components? Composition resistors are notorious for “going high” in value and a
few measurements showed that a 1kΩ
resistor was now about 2.5kΩ, while
This photo shows the old Palec M-52
multimeter before restoration. It was
covered in dust and grime and had
several internal faults.
an 800Ω resistor was now about 1kΩ.
In the end, I decided to replace all the
composition resistors with modern
carbon-film types.
There were also numerous other
resistors painted in red enamel, which
appeared to be precision types. Their
values were difficult to read and I decided to leave them alone. I also left the
numerous wirewound resistors alone,
as they were likely to be OK.
Behind the battery board were two
original Ducon capacitors: an 8µF
500V electrolytic and a 0.5µF 500V
waxed-paper type. It seemed likely
that the electro would now be dried
out and the paper capacitor leaky, so
I replaced them both. However, when
I subsequently checked them, both
December 2013 61
Serr v ice
Se
ceman’s
man’s Log – continued
These photos show the Palec M-52’s appearance after cleaning and restoration.
The original diodes in the rectifier had to be replaced with Schottky diodes to
get the AC voltage ranges working (see text).
had minimal leakage and were close
to their nominal capacitance, much to
my surprise.
In fact, the ESR of the 50-year old
electro was 0.75Ω, which is well
within current specifications. I wonder
if current electros will fare this well
in 50 years!
My next step was to check how the
meter performed on the DC voltage
and current ranges. I was pleasantly
surprised to find that these all worked
perfectly and were within about 3% of
the correct values at full scale when
compared with an Avo Model 8 analog
meter and a Digitech digital meter.
The resistance ranges were next.
The M-52 uses two 1.5V cells for the
low-ohms ranges and a 30V battery for
the highest ohms range. However, the
clips were designed for batteries that
are no longer made so I replaced the
low-voltage clips with plastic holders
for C-type cells. When I subsequently
tested it, I found that I also had to re-
place the 800Ω resistor in series with
the ohms-adjustment potentiometer
with a 470Ω resistor before I could
correctly set the unit to “zero ohms”
at full scale.
After that, the low-ohms ranges
seemed to function correctly and
resistance readings at mid-scale were
within 3% of the correct values. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to find a suitable
30V battery for the Ω x 1000 range.
The meter’s junior brother, the Model
M-32, uses an external 30V series
source for this range, so I decided to
adopt the same approach. As a result,
I joined the clips for the 30V battery to
allow this scheme to be implemented.
The meter’s AC ranges were totally
dead and I assumed that the rectifier
diodes were the most likely cause of
this fault. However, when I looked for
these diodes, they were nowhere to be
found. Eventually, I did find the rectifier which was hidden inside a small
circular plastic container located un-
Servicing Stories Wanted
Do you have any good servicing stories that you would like to share in The Serviceman column in SILICON CHIP? If so, why not send those stories in to us? In doesn’t
matter what the story is about as long as it’s in some way related to the electronics
or electrical industries, to computers or even to car electronics.
We pay for all contributions published but please note that your material must
be original. Send your contribution by email to: editor<at>siliconchip.com.au
Please be sure to include your full name and address details.
62 Silicon Chip
derneath one of the selector switches.
A Google search revealed that multimeters from this period used speciallydesigned copper-oxide rectifiers. These
consisted of a stack of copper and
copper-oxide discs connected in a fullwave bridge configuration and sealed
in a plastic case. No wonder I couldn’t
find them when I first started looking!
Four fine wires emerged from the
rectifier but which was which? After
making a drawing of the connections,
I unsoldered all four. If all four diodes
were intact, the leads would be easy
to identify simply by measuring the
forward and reverse resistance. Unfortunately, as anticipated, the rectifier
was indeed faulty and that meant I
now had to identify the leads by some
other method.
The first clue was a red spot that
seemed likely to be the positive output
(ie, the diode cathodes). In addition,
two white wires seemed to be the likely
candidates for the AC input, because
their polarity would be irrelevant.
So, if the logic so far was correct, the
remaining wire had to be connected
to the anodes.
The resistance between the white
wires was 0Ω in both directions, indicating that at least two diodes were
short circuited. Fortunately though,
the resistance between the wire with
the red spot and the two white wires
was higher and dependent on the
direction of the test current. These
resistance tests clearly showed that the
red spot indicated a cathode.
Radio & Hobbies to the rescue
So I needed to replace the rectifier
diodes but I was unknowingly getting out of my depth. Fortunately, I
was rescued by a beautifully-written
article by Neville Williams titled “How
To Build An AC/DC Multimeter”,
as published in the June 1944 issue
of “Radio and Hobbies” (it’s on the
Radio, TV & Hobbies DVD). Until I read
Neville Williams’ article, I had no idea
of the subtle problems and ingenious
solutions that went into AC voltmeters
at that time.
It was (and still is) standard practice
to calibrate meters in terms of the
RMS (root mean square) value of a
sinewave voltage. The RMS value of
a sinewave is the peak value divided
by √2, or 0.707 times the peak value.
However, d’Arsonval moving-coil
meters respond to what is termed the
“average” value of a sinewave, which
siliconchip.com.au
is twice the peak value divided by π,
or 0.637 times the peak value.
From this, it follows that if a meter
uses the same multiplier resistors for
both the DC and AC voltage ranges,
the scale for the equivalent AC range
will be 0.637 ÷ 0.707 = 0.9 of the
equivalent DC range. Alternatively, if
the AC and DC ranges are to have the
same full-scale mark, the sensitivity of
the movement for the AC ranges has
to be increased.
d’Arsonval movements of the time
generally had a full-scale sensitivity
of 1mA (giving a loading of 1kΩ/V).
However, in order to use the same
full-scale mark for both AC and DC,
multimeter movements often had a
full-scale deflection of 0.9mA which
was used for AC measurements. For
DC measurements, a shunt of nine
times the coil resistance was added to
give a full-scale sensitivity of 1.0mA.
In this way, the same multiplier resist
ances could be used for both the AC
and DC ranges.
The Palec M-52 and its M-32 little
brother both used this strategy.
Diode characteristics
All diodes have highly non-linear
resistance characteristics, with the
resistance greatest at low current (or
low forward voltage). This means that
measurement errors will be greatest at
low voltages and AC meter scales had
to be specially calibrated to take this
into account.
Copper oxide rectifiers are no longer
available and that meant I would have
to replace them with something else.
But could replacement diodes with
similar characteristics be found, so
that the meter calibration would still
be accurate?
As a first step, I decided to try 1N914
silicon diodes in a bridge configura-
siliconchip.com.au
tion, simply to test my logic. When
I applied an AC voltage, the needle
swung up most gratifyingly, verifying
that I had guessed the connections
correctly. Unfortunately though, the
errors were enormous which was to
be expected. At 4V, the readings were
25% too low and at 1V they were 57%
too low. But at least I had guessed the
bridge connections correctly!
My first thought was that the errors
reflected the well-known forward voltage drop of silicon diodes. Germanium
diodes have a lower forward voltage
than standard silicon diodes (0.2V
versus 0.6V), so I tried substituting
1N34 germanium diodes. The results
were nearly as bad – the error at 3V
input was -20%; at 1.5Vs input it was
-25%; and at 1.0V it was -17%.
The big problem here is that the
maximum current through the diodes
at full-scale deflection is only 0.9mA.
It was time to do some basic tests so
I set up a DC power supply with a
100kΩ series resistor and measured the
forward voltage versus forward current
for a number of different diodes. The
results were interesting.
The “knee” point (ie, where saturation begins) for silicon diodes was
about 0.25mA and 0.55V. Even assuming that the forward characteristic up
to this point is linear (which it isn’t),
this would correspond to a resistance
of about 2.2kΩ. The coil resistance of
the meter was measured at 92Ω, so the
error would be substantial, in accord
with the observed results.
I had no detailed information about
the forward characteristics of the copper oxide rectifier used in the M-52 but
the evidence clearly indicated that I
needed diodes with a low saturation
voltage and also low forward resistance in the region prior to saturation.
Schottky diodes have a much lower
saturation voltage than silicon diodes,
typically 0.2-0.3V, so would they fill
the bill?
I tried several different Schottky
diodes, including 1N5822, 1N5819
and BAT46/48. Of these, the 1N5819
seemed to best fit the requirements.
When put to the test, the 1N5819 was
nearly a perfect substitute for the copper oxide diodes.
Perhaps this is not so surprising,
since the copper/copper-oxide interface can be regarded as a primitive form
of Schottky diode. However, I was a
little surprised to find that while the
higher-power 1N5822 Schottky diodes
have virtually identical forward characteristics, they gave significantly greater
errors. Using the 1N5819 diodes, the
AC voltage readings were close to
perfect (within 3%) from 240VAC (the
highest I was able to measure) down to
0.4VAC and they were only 10% high
at 0.2VAC.
The only function of the meter that
I have not yet been able to resurrect
is measurement of AC current. The
instructions for the M-52 state that
the overload protection relay is not
functional on current ranges. I was
unable to find a circuit diagram but it
appears that the secondary winding of
the current transformer is open circuit.
Unfortunately, it’s unlikely that this
can be fixed.
It’s a tribute to Fred Paton that he
produced an instrument of such quality
that it required only minimal repairs
and retained high accuracy for more
than half a century.
References: (1) Neville Williams –
“How To Build An AC/DC Multimeter”; Radio and Hobbies, June 1944.
(2) Neville Williams: “Fred Paton;
From Screwdriver & Pliers To PurposeBuilt Test Equipment”; Electronics
SC
Australia, December 1993.
December 2013 63
More reception
modes for the
SiDRADIO & SDRs
By JIM ROWE
Wondering if there’s anything else you can do with your software
defined radio (SDR) set-up using a DVB-T dongle – besides receiving
AM, NFM, WFM, CW, SSB and DRM? Other applications are becoming
available all the time. Already there’s one that lets you receive DAB+
digital radio and another to receive some of the many different types
of narrowband digital mobile radio (DMR).
M
OST DVB-T dongles come with
bundled software that allows
them to be used for receiving SDTV
and HDTV signals, as well as DAB+
digital radio and conventional FM
signals. But if you’re using a dongle as
part of an SDR set-up, it’s a bit messy
to also use it for DTV/DAB+ reception
on the same PC. That’s because you
have to disconnect it and plug it into
a different USB port from the one you
are using for the SDR.
This is necessary because the USB
driver for DTV/DAB+/FM reception
using the bundled software is quite
different from the one that Zadig
installs for use with SDR software.
Fortunately, there is a way baround
this problem.
What we are going to do here is
show you how to get DAB+ reception
while leaving the dongle as part of an
SDR configuration (or even as part of
the SiDRADIO described in the October and November 2013 issues). In
other words, you will no longer have
to unplug the dongle and plug it into
a different USB port. All you have to
do is install and run some additional
software.
Now it’s true that most of the DVBT dongles use the Realtek RTL2832U
COFDM demodulator chip, which
already has internal ‘hardware’ to
decode DAB+ digital radio signals.
In fact, this function is used by the
bundled software that comes with
the dongles.
However, as yet, the programmers
64 Silicon Chip
working on SDR apps (applications)
haven’t discovered how to make use
of this internal hardware of the RTL
2832U chip. Instead, they use the
RTL-SDR driver (installed by Zadig) to
switch the chip into its ‘radio’ mode.
In this mode, it simply passes on the
quadrature (I and Q) samples coming
from the dongle’s tuner chip and sends
them to the PC via a USB cable. It’s
here that the SDR application software
(SDR#, ADSB#, Dream or whatever)
does the decoding/demodulation.
Eventually, someone is bound to
work out how to make use of the
RTL2832U chip’s ‘internal decoding
hardware’ for DAB+ reception and
more. But until then, you’re going to
have to use the ‘software decoding’
TABLE 1: CURRENT VHF BAND III
CHANNELS USED FOR DAB+
DRMTs IN AUSTRALIA
METRO AREA
CHANNELS USED
ADELAIDE
9B, 9C
BRISBANE
9A, 9B, 9C
MELBOURNE
9A, 9B, 9C
PERTH
9B, 9C
SYDNEY
9A, 9B, 9C
CHANNEL
CENTRE FREQUENCY
BANDWIDTH
9A
202.928MHz
1.536MHz
9B
204.640MHz
1.536MHz
9C
206.352MHz
1.536MHz
NOTE: ALL OF THESE TRANSMISSIONS
ARE VERTICALLY POLARISED
DRMT = DIGITAL RADIO MULTIPLEX TRANSMITTER
approach, if we want to receive DAB+
transmissions with dongle-based SDRs
such as the SILICON CHIP SiDRADIO.
Receiving DAB+
As luck would have it, a public domain software package which allows
DAB+ signals to be received using a
DVB-T dongle-based SDR has been
made available in the last few months.
Called “SDR-J” and released by Dutch
programmer Jan van Katwijk, the latest
version (V0.96 at the time of writing)
is available as a free download from
his website at www.sdr-j.tk
Two versions of SDR-J are available:
(1) a Linux version (as a suite of source
code files) and (2) a Windows version
which consists of a zip file containing
the executables. Note, however, that
the heavy processing requirements of
DAB+ software decoding mean that
you need a relatively modern computer to run it. Also, the Windows version
is currently only suitable for 64-bit
versions of Windows 7 or Windows 8.
If you’re running a 32-bit version of
Windows, you’ll still have to use your
dongle’s bundled software for DAB+
reception – at least for the time being.
Assuming you’re running a 64-bit
version of Windows, you might want
to try downloading and installing
SDR-J V0.96 to see how it performs.
While you’re downloading the software, you should also download Jan
van Katwijk’s user manual from www.
sdr-j.tk/dab-manual.pdf
As mentioned, the software comes
siliconchip.com.au
as a zip file. To extract the files, you
have to run dabreceiver.exe. This
should install everything ‘ready to
go’ and you’ll find a shortcut icon on
your desktop labelled “DAB RADIO”.
When you double click this icon,
you’ll first see a command line dialog
box open up – just like the one shown
at the top of Fig.1. This box will display the actions of SDR-J’s software
‘engine’ as it proceeds. After a short
time, it will be joined by a second
window similar to the lower one in
Fig.1. This is the control panel for SDRJ, although both it and the command
line dialog box are displayed all the
time that SDR-J is running.
To begin using SDR-J, check the four
rectangular buttons at lower left in the
control panel window, just below the
black ‘constellation’ display window
at upper left. Look first at the button
at far left and if it is not displaying
“dabstick” as shown in Fig.1, click on
the associated down arrow and select
“dabstick” from the drop-down menu.
Next, move along to the third button
and confirm that SDR-J is currently set
to look for DAB+ signals in BAND III
(again, as shown in Fig.1). If not, click
on its down-arrow and select BAND
III from the drop-down menu.
Before going further, check that
Band III channel(s) are being used for
DAB+ broadcasts in your area. At present, DAB+ signals are broadcast only
in Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne,
Perth and Sydney.
Table 1 shows the channels used by
the digital radio multiplex transmitters
(or DRMTs) for DAB+ broadcasting in
these metropolitan areas. Only channels 9A, 9B and 9C are currently being
used, with only two of them in use in
some of the smaller capitals.
If you find this a bit puzzling, bear in
mind that up to 18 different DAB+ signals can be multiplexed onto a single
DRMT ‘channel’ and each channel is
1.536MHz wide. Just how many DAB+
signals are packaged into each DRMT
channel block depends on the data bit
rate used by each one.
Once you know which DRMT channels are present in your area, you can
continue setting up SDR-J. First, click
the down-arrow associated with the
fourth button at lower left and select
the channel you want from the dropdown menu. Fig.1 shows that channel
9C has been selected in our case. This
channel carries the ABC and SBS
DAB+ broadcasts in Sydney.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: SDR-J first opens up a command line dialog box, followed by a second
control panel window. Both are displayed while ever SDR-J is running.
Then click the large START button
at centre right of the control panel and
SDR-J will start searching for DAB+
signals in the selected channel and
you should see each of the signals it
finds in the ‘list box’ just to the left of
the START and QUIT buttons.
Fig.1 shows some of the signals
found within channel 9C in Sydney in
the list box. It also shows the spectrum
display that SDR-J has produced for
Sydney channel 9C DAB+ multiplex,
ie, in the spectrum box at upper right
of the control panel window.
Next, look at the long rectangular
button at bottom right on the control
panel, which initially will probably
be labelled “select output”. Click on
its down arrow and select one of the
options from the drop-down menu. In
most cases, this will be an audio output
device like “Microsoft Sound Mapper
– Output” or “Speakers (Realtek High
Definition)”.
Then click on one of the entries
shown in the list box, to select it. You
should then see some activity in SDRJ’s upper command-line dialog, while
it achieves synchronisation with that
signal. Finally, after a few seconds,
you should hear that signal’s audio
from your PC’s speakers.
And that’s all there is to it!
If you want to change to another
station in the same multiplex, all you
need do is click on it in the list box.
After a few seconds delay, you’ll then
start to hear the audio from that station.
Other DRMT multiplexes
What if you want to search for
signals in one of the other DRMT
multiplexes in your area? That’s also
quite easy. All you need do is select
the channel ID for the multiplex you
want (eg, say 9A or 9B) by clicking on
the down-arrow at the end of the fourth
button at lower left. SDR-J will then
generate a new list of DAB+ stations
(ie, the stations associated with that
multiplex) in the list box and show a
new spectrum display at upper right.
Then all you need to do to receive a
station is click on its name in the list
box, as before
Other controls
What about all of those other controls and displays scattered around
SDR-J’s control panel? Jan van KatwiDecember 2013 65
VHF/UHF
ANTENNA
HF ANTENNA
RF PREAMP
AND
PRESELECTOR
HF UPCONVERTER
DVB-T
DONGLE
Fig.2: the hardware/software configuration for a DMR (Digital Mobile
Radio) receiving set-up using SDR#, Virtual Audio Cable (VAC) & DSD.
The DVB-T dongle can be in the SiDRADIO or free-standing.
USB
CABLE
ORIGINAL
SDR SOFTWARE
SDR APPLICATION
(I.E., SDR#)
RTL-SDR
DRIVER
ADDED SOFTWARE
FOR DMR
VIRTUAL
AUDIO
CABLE
DMR
DECODING APP
(I.E., DSD)
(INSTALLED
BY ZADIG)
SiDRADIO ‘FRONT END’
PC
SOUND CARD
OR ONBOARD DACS
INTERNAL
OR EXTERNAL
AMPLIFIERS
SPEAKERS
EXTENDED SDR CONFIGURATION FOR DMR RECEPTION USING DSD
jk’s user manual isn’t all that helpful
when it comes to many of these, so you
will have to work them out for yourself. But some are fairly self-evident if
you look at them closely – or at their
label, where they have one.
For example, in the lower centre
of the control panel shown in Fig.1,
you’ll see SDR-J’s title: “sdr-j DAB(+)
0.96”. And below this you can see
the name of the station I had tuned
to: “ABC Classic FM DAB+”, with its
programming language and summary
shown to the left.
Just above the SDR-J title, you can
see two numbers, displayed in 7-segment format: 196617 and 2048000. The
first of these apparently indicates the
length of the data frames detected in
the multiplex signal (it should normally read about 196617, as shown),
while the second shows the total bit
rate used in that multiplex. The latter
always seems to read 2048000, suggesting a total bit rate of 2.048Mbps.
Just above the list box, you can also
see the label “SY ABC&sbs RADIO”,
which is presumably the name of the
DRMT multiplex signal itself.
At lower right, just to the left of
SDR-J’s “Output Select” button, there’s
a small box displaying a single digit
(“8” in Fig.1). Just to its left, there’s a
label reading “dabstick gain” and if
you click on one or other of the small
direction arrows on its right, you’ll
find that the spectrum display moves
up or down as the displayed gain digit
increases or decreases.
This seems to be the way SDR-J allows you to adjust the RF gain of your
DVB-T dongle, for optimum DAB+
reception (presumably “dabstick” is
what DVB-T dongles are called in
many parts of Europe).
One last suggestion: the row of
display boxes at bottom left has fairly
66 Silicon Chip
cryptic labels, making it difficult to
work out their significance unless
you’re an expert on DAB+. However
the “bit rate” label just below the fifth
one from the left suggests that it
shows the bit rate of the particular
signal in the multiplex currently being decoded. In this case, it’s showing
“80”, while the third last line in the
command line box above also shows
80 as the bit rate of the ABC Classic
FM signal being received at the time.
This means that the ABC uses a bit
rate of 80kbps for this signal, which is
encoded using the HE-AAC compression codec.
Receiving DMR
OK, so much for using SDR-J to receive DAB+ broadcasts. Now let’s take
a brief look at yet another application
for SDRs based on a DVB-T dongle.
As Kevin Poulter explained in his
article on “Narrow Band Digital TwoWay Radio” in the October 2013 issue
of SILICON CHIP, professional 2-way
radio communications is rapidly making the transition from analog to digital
technology. This is because digital encoding offers more efficient use of the
spectrum, allowing more users to be
crammed into limited spectrum space.
So narrowband 2-way radio is fast
becoming “DMR” or digital mobile
radio. That may sound simple but
the catch is that there are many different digital encoding formats and
modulation modes. These can make
it quite difficult to receive and decode
DMR signals – especially as many of
the formats allow for the signals to
be encrypted or scrambled for high
security communications like those
of the military, intelligence services
and police.
For example, there’s NXDN or Next
Generation Digital Narrowband tech-
nology, developed jointly by Icom and
JVC Kenwood. This allows two 6.25kHz
wide narrowband digital channels to be
fitted into a single 12.5kHz wide VHF
communications channel.
Then there’s Project 25 (P25/APCO25), a suite of digital radio communications formats which were developed in
the USA to allow reliable and secure
2-way radio communications within
specific federal and state government
agencies and between these agencies.
Another variant is the set of protocols developed by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute
(ETSI) for professional DMR, or ‘PMR’.
There’s also Motorola’s DMR/MOTOTRBO, ProVoice EDACS, and so on.
Fortunately, an open source software package recently became available to allow a DVB-T based SDR setup to receive and decode at least some
of this plethora of DMR formats and
modulation systems. Called Digital
Speech Decoder or “DSD” for short,
it can decode the following DMR formats and modulation types (providing
they’re not encrypted):
• P25 Phase 1
• ProVoice EDACS digital voice
• NXDN – 9600-baud/12.5kHz
NEXEDGE and 4800-baud/6.25kHz
NEXEDGE/IDAS
• X2-TDMA – Motorola public
safety TDMA
• DMR/MOTOTRBO
• C4FM modulation, GFSK modulation and QPSK/LSM modulation
The DSD package can be downloaded from: http://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/Digital_Speech_
Decoder_(software_package) The
version you’ll need in order to run DSD
on Windows PCs is currently called
“Windows Port With P25/DMR Filter
1.6.0 Beta”.
When you download this file, you’ll
siliconchip.com.au
Software For SDR Applications Using
DVB-T Dongles & Where To Find It
A. For basic SDR (AM, WFM, NFM, CW-L, CW-U, USB, LSB, DSB reception) you’ll need:
(1) The RTL-SDR driver, which is installed using the installer program Zadig. A compressed file containing Zadig can be
downloaded from sourceforge.net/projects/libwdi/files/Zadig but note that (a) there are two versions of Zadig, one for
Windows XP and the other for Windows 7; and (b) both versions can only be downloaded as compressed files in ‘.7z’ format,
so they must be extracted using 7-Zip rather than Winzip.
7-Zip can be downloaded from either sourceforge.net or from www.7-zip.org but note that it too comes in two versions
– one for Windows XP and the other for Windows 7.
(2) An SDR decoding and display application, such as SDR#. This is open source and comes in three separate files – two
of which can be downloaded from http://sdrsharp.com/downloads, while the third (rtlsdr.dll) must be downloaded from
the Osmocom website at http://sdr.osmocom.org/trac/wiki/rtl-sdr/
For more information on downloading, installing and using these basic SDR software components, refer to our article in
the May 2013 issue of SILICON CHIP.
B. For receiving, decoding and displaying the ADS-B broadcasts from aircraft flying overhead, you’ll need:
(1) the RTL-SDR driver which is installed using the installer program Zadig (see item A.1 above).
(2) An ADS-B decoding application like ADSB# or RTL1090. These are both open source and ADSB# can be downloaded
from http://sdrsharp.com/downloads/adsbsharp.zip
There’s also a quickstart guide for ADSB# written by Henry Forte and available as a pdf file from http://www.atouk.com/
wordpress/?p=247 The RTL1090 application can be downloaded from http://rtl1090.web99.de/
(3) An ADS-B processing and display application like ADSBScope, Virtual Radar Server or PlaneSpotter. ADSBScope can
be downloaded from http://www.sprut.de/electronic/pic/projekte/adsb_en.html#downloads; Virtual Radar Server from
http://www.virtualradarserver.co.uk; and PlaneSpotter from http://www.coaa.co.uk/planespotter.htm
For more information on downloading, installing and using these ADS-B software components, refer to our article in the
August 2013 issue of SILICON CHIP.
C. For receiving and listening to DRM (Digital Radio Mondiale) signals, and decoding them via RTL-SDR, you’ll need:
(1) The RTL-SDR driver which is installed using the installer program Zadig (see item A.1 above).
(2) An SDR decoding and display application such as SDR# (see item A.2 above).
(3) A ‘virtual audio cable’ program like Virtual Audio Cable (VAC), to direct the digital audio output from SDR# to the input
of the DRM decoding application. Virtual Audio Cable can be downloaded from either software.muzychenko.net/vac.htm
or download.cnet.com/Virtual_Audio_Cable
(4) A DRM decoding/receiver application, like DREAM. This open source application can be downloaded from sourceforge.
net/projects/drm/files/dream/ You will also need the precompiled faad2_drm.dll, which is used for DRM decoding using
the AAC codec. This must be downloaded from: https://mega.co.nz/#!m5RUHIDQ!SqcGUBSGMFSTAm09XX78RDYR
oIJW0T545QQRJ_dFuE
For more information on downloading, installing and using these software components, see the article in the November
2013 issue of SILICON CHIP.
D. For receiving and listening to DAB+ digital radio broadcasts as described in this article, you’ll need:
(1) A PC running a 64-bit version of Windows 7 or Windows 8.
(2) The Windows version of the DAB+ receiving application SDR-J V0.96, developed by Dutch programmer Jan van Katwijk
and available free from his website at www.sdr-j.tk There’s also a user manual for it at www.sdr-j.tk/dab-manual.pdf
E. For receiving and listening to digital mobile radio (DMR) transmissions, as described in this article, you’ll need:
(1) The RTL-SDR driver which is installed using the installer program Zadig (see item A.1 above).
(2) An SDR decoding and display application such as SDR# (see item A.2 above).
(3) A ‘virtual audio cable’ program like Virtual Audio Cable, to direct the digital audio output from SDR# to the input of the
DMR decoding application (see item C.3 above).
(4) A digital speech decoder application like Digital Speech Decoder (DSD). This is an open source program and can be
downloaded from http://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/Digital_Speech_Decoder_(software package)#Downloads
The version to download for PC’s running Windows is currently “Windows Port with P25/DMS Filter 1.6.0 Beta”.
(5) The Linux emulation layer cygwin1.dll, which is needed by Digital Speech Decoder (DSD) to run on Windows systems.
This can be downloaded from http://cygwin.com/install.html by clicking on the link “setup-x86.exe”.
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 67
Fig.3: a typical DMR signal as shown in the spectrum and waterfall displays
of SDR#. Note that you have to select Virtual Audio Cable (VAC) as the output
option (see text) to send the signal to the PC for software decoding.
find it’s an executable called DSD160.
exe, which you can install simply by
creating a folder called (say) C:\Program Files\DSD\ and then copying
DSD160.exe over into it.
Don’t try to run it as yet though,
because DSD was originally written
to run under Linux. As a result this
Windows ‘port’ needs a special Linux
emulation program in order to actually
run on Windows. This emulation program is an application extension called
cygwin1.dll, which is part of a suite of
programs you need to download and
install separately from: http://cygwin.
com/install.html
All you need to do is go to this page
and click on the link setup-x86.exe
(note: there’s another link called setupx86_64.exe but this is not needed for
running DSD because the latter is a
32-bit package).
When the Cygwin package has
been downloaded and installed (it
automatically installs itself in the root
directory, usually C:\cygwin\), you’ll
find the all-important cygwin1.dll file
in the \bin subdirectory. The next step
is to copy this file and paste it into
the same folder as DSD itself (ie, C:\
Program Files\DSD\).
Note that this program doesn’t communicate directly with your DVB-T
dongle via the RTL-SDR driver. In68 Silicon Chip
stead, like Dream (the DRM30 decoding application that we looked at in the
November 2013 issue of SILICON CHIP),
it ‘listens’ to the digital audio output
from your SDR application (eg, SDR#).
In order to do this it needs Virtual
Audio Cable (VAC), the same miniport
digital audio driver used by Dream.
So before you can run DSD, you’ll
need to download and install both
SDR# and VAC – and perhaps even
the RTL-SDR driver, if you haven’t
already done so.
Fig.2 shows the overall hardware/
software configuration for a DMR
(Digital Mobile Radio) receiving setup using SDR# plus VAC plus DSD.
Note that although this diagram shows
the DVB-T dongle fitted inside our
SiDRADIO project, the dongle can be
free-standing for DMR reception if you
wish. That’s because you’ll only find
DMR signals on the VHF and UHF
bands at the moment.
Receiving DMR – or trying
The procedure for using your SDR
set-up to receive DMR is to first start
up SDR# with its digital audio going
to your PC’s speakers in the usual way.
This allows you to search around on
the VHF and UHF bands for any likelylooking signals. The best places to start
in Australian metropolitan areas are
in the 162-174MHz, 470-520MHz and
860-890MHz regions.
By the way, it’s a good idea to set
SDR# for NFM reception, with a filter
bandwidth of either 12.5kHz or 25kHz.
Some of the reference information on
DMR reception also suggests that the
Filter Order should be set to a low figure, such as 10, instead of the default
300 or 400.
Search around on one of these bands
using SDR# until you find a signal that
looks a bit like that in the centre of the
display in Fig.3. If it’s a DMR signal,
you won’t hear any audio at this stage
apart from digital noise.
Next click the Stop button at top
left in the SDR# dialog and then move
down to the Output label in the Audio
section below. If you now click on
the down-arrow in the text box to its
right, you will be presented with a
drop-down list showing “Virtual Audio Cable” (VAC) as one of the output
options. If you click this option, SDR#
will now send its digital audio output
to VAC instead of the speakers.
Before you set SDR# running again,
fire up DSD by clicking on its icon
on your desktop. You’ll then see its
command-line interface, with the
heading “dsd160” – see Fig.3.
Now when you click the “Play”
button at top left in the SDR# dialog,
you’ll probably see some activity in
the DSD dialog box as well. Just what
you’ll see in the DSD dialog depends
on what type of signal you’ve tuned to,
its signal strength, the DMR encoding
system being used, the modulation
mode and whether or not the signals
are encrypted/scrambled.
The same qualifications apply as to
whether or not you’ll hear any audio.
In my case, I spent quite a few hours
trying to find a DMR signal that I could
decode with very little success. I did
receive a few seconds of audio on one
occasion but that was it.
In fact, my impression is that a lot
of the DMR signals nominally available in my area are either encrypted
or ‘locked up’ in trunking systems.
There is an open-source program
called “UniTrunker”, which is supposed to allow you to decode some
kinds of trunked DMR. You can download it from http://wiki.radioreference.com/index.php/UniTrunker but
I can’t say whether or not it’s worth
the effort. In my opinion, it’s for the
real enthusiast only and you’d better
SC
have a lot of patience!
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formulas. It covers the basics of all the main motor types, DC
permanent magnet and wound field, AC induction and steppers and
gives a very good description of how speed control circuits work with these
motors. Soft covers, 444 pages.
NEWNES GUIDE TO TV & VIDEO TECHNOLOGY
By KF Ibrahim 4th Edition (Published 2007) $49.00
It's back! Provides a full and comprehensive coverage of video and television technology including HDTV and DVD. Starts with fundamentals so is
ideal for students but covers in-depth technologies such as Blu-ray, DLP,
Digital TV, etc so is also perfect for engineers. 600+ pages in paperback.
RF CIRCUIT DESIGN
by Chris Bowick, Second Edition, 2008. $63.00*
The classic RF circuit design book. RF circuit design is now more important
that ever in the wireless world. In most of the wireless devices that we use
there is an RF component – this book tells how to design and integrate in a
very practical fashion. 244 pages in paperback.
AC MACHINES
By Jim Lowe Published 2006 $66.00*
Applicable to Australian trades-level courses including NE10 AC Machines,
NE12 Synchronous Machines and the AC part of NE30 Electric Motor
Control and Protection. Covering polyphase induction motors, singlephase motors, synchronous machines and polyphase motor starting. 160
pages in paperback.
PRACTICAL VARIABLE SPEED DRIVES &
POWER ELECTRONICS
Se
e
by Malcolm Barnes. 1st Ed, Feb 2003. $73.00* Review
An essential reference for engineers and anyone who wishes
to design or use variable speed drives for induction motors.
286 pages in soft cover.
Feb
2003
BUILD YOUR OWN ELECTRIC MOTORCYCLE
PRACTICAL RF HANDBOOK
by Carl Vogel. Published 2009. $40.00*
by Ian Hickman. 4th edition 2007 $61.00*
A guide to RF design for engineers, technicians, students and enthusiasts.
Covers key topics in RF: analog design principles, transmission lines,
couplers, transformers, amplifiers, oscillators, modulation, transmitters and
receivers, propagation and antennas. 279 pages in paperback.
Alternative fuel expert Carl Vogel gives you a hands-on guide with
the latest technical information and easy-to-follow instructions
for building a two-wheeled electric vehicle – from a streamlined
scooter to a full-sized motorcycle. 384 pages in soft cover.
*NOTE: ALL PRICES ARE PLUS P&P – AUSTRALIA ONLY: $10.00 per order; NZ – $AU12.00 PER BOOK; REST OF WORLD $AU18.00 PER BOOK
To
Place
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Order:
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CIRCUIT NOTEBOOK
Interesting circuit ideas which we have checked but not built and tested. Contributions will be
paid for at standard rates. All submissions should include full name, address & phone number.
S1
LED
* L1 & L2 ARE EACH 75T OF 0.315mm ECW, 100mm DIAMETER
100k
9V
BATTERY
220 µF
K
A
3
2
4
IC1a
11
100k
5
6
IC1b
GAIN
L1*
470nF
FARADAY
SHIELDS
100k
47 µF
14
220pF
470nF
IC1: LMC660
LMC6484AIN
16
Vdd
4
VCOout
SIGin
2
9
PC1out
VCOin
13
3
COMPin PC2out
6
C1a IC2
220pF
100k
1
3.3nF
7
4 046 B
7
11
12
330k
C1b
R2
VR1 100k
INH
5
Vss
Znr
IC1c
10k
1
PIEZO
SOUNDER
10
15
12
8
IC1d
This very low frequency metal
detector can sense a large coin from
150mm or larger metal objects at a
distance of over 600mm. The detector is built around an LMC660 (or
LMC6484AIN) quad op amp and a
4046 phase lock loop (PLL). This
is connected to employ the voltage
controlled oscillator (VCO) and one
phase comparator.
The search head comprises two
overlapping coils, L1 & L2. L1 is the
transmitter and is driven by an oscillator formed by op amp IC1a. Its 9kHz
operating frequency is determined
by the inductance of coil L1 and the
470nF capacitor at its pins 1 & 2.
L2 picks up the signal generated by
L1 and feeds it to op amp IC1b which
has a gain of 430.The outputs of IC1a
& IC1b are connected via 220pF capacitors to phase comparator 1 inside
the 4046. When the two input signals
have the same frequency, the output
of the comparator is low.
14
10k
1k
Simple 2-coil
VLF metal detector
8
9
100nF
A
100k
1 µF
L2*
10
13
LED1
100k
1k
330nF
70 Silicon Chip
PCPout
SFout
R1
100k
POWER
Any change in the frequency of
one of the input signals will cause
the output to generate a voltage. This
is filtered and fed to the VCO input
at pin 9 of IC2. Its frequency is set to
3.2kHz by the components at pins
6, 7 & 11.
The VCO output at pin 4 is fed to
op amp IC1c to drive a piezo sounder.
The voltage at pin 9 is also available
at the pin 10 output of the source follower of the chip. This is connected
to 12 of op amp IC1d which has a
gain of 11 and drives LED1.
Sensing coils L1 and L2 are identical and wound using 75 turns of
0.315mm (30 SWG) enamelled
copper wire on a 100mm diameter
former. Each coil is wrapped with
insulating tape. A Faraday shield
for the coils is then made by wrapping narrow strips of aluminium
foil around it. Make sure that each
shield has a 10mm gap at one point.
A short length of wire should then be
connected to the shield which should
then be covered with insulating tape.
The two coils are mounted on a
λ
K
1k
250mm diameter circle of 3mm plywood, with a 50mm overlap. This
becomes the search head.
To use it, set gain control VR1 midway and place the search head well
away from any metal object. With
50mm overlap the sounder should
be silent and LED1 should be off. Reduce the overlap of the top coil until
you hear a sound from the sounder.
This will happen when the coils
overlap by about 30mm. Adjust for
a low tone for maximum sensitivity.
Now bring a metal object close
to the search-head; the piezo pitch
should increase and LED1 should
light. The most sensitive part of
the search-head is the overlapping
portion.
The frequency of the sound will
depend on the type and size of the
object. Large objects, for instance,
will cause the VCO to generate
a high frequency audio sound of
nearly 3.2kHz. Use the gain control
if required.
Mahmood Alimohammadi,
Tehran, Iran. ($45)
siliconchip.com.au
+5V
+5V
K
10k
100nF
100Ω
A
24
2
ICSP
CON
AVcc
1
11
3
9
4
10
5
13
1nF
6
8
12
18
19
100nF
OPTIONAL
LEVEL
SHIFTER
3.3V TTL SERIAL
DATA INPUT
2
3
1,
16
8
20
21
22
31
4
IC2
40109B
32
33
36
37
5V TTL SERIAL
DATA INPUT
USB keyboard
emulation for a
microprocessor
This circuit converts serial data
received from a microprocessor to
emulate a USB keyboard ‘typing’
on a host PC. Serial data is sent into
this circuit at 5V TTL signal levels
from another processor (the author’s
project was based on a Raspberry Pi
and a barcode reader, but any other
processor with TTL serial capabilities will work too, including even
the simplest BASIC based variants).
Note that if the ‘sending’ processor operates with Vcc below 5V (eg,
3.3V), then the optional level-shifting input buffer using one inverter
of a 40109 (IC2) is required. If your
project produces an RS232 signal,
then you would instead need to use
a MAX232 to convert the input to
TTL serial at 5V first.
The remainder of the circuit is
based solely around microcontroller
IC1, an ATMega32U4 processor
available in a 44-pin QFN or TQFP
package. However, most of the components (and a few extras) can in
fact be purchased in various forms
of pre-built ‘breakout’ boards from
existing retailers.
This is because the circuit is based
on the open Arduino platform.
siliconchip.com.au
100nF
D1
1N4148
38
39
44
AVcc
14
Vcc
34
Vcc
UVcc
VBUS
MISO
SCLK
D–
MOSI
D+
SS/PCINT0
INT6/AN0
0C0A
Aref
IC1
ATMega3 2 U4
ATMega32U4
SDA
RXD1
CON1
7
22Ω
3
UGND
ADC13
ADC12
TXD1
ADC11
XCK1
ADC10
P6/OC3A
ADC9
P7/CLK0
ADC8
/HWB
ADC1
TD1
ADC0
TD0
XTAL2
TMS
TCK
GND
GND
GND
15
23
35
XTALI
2
4
3
22Ω
6
Ucap
1
RESET
SCL
2
42
1 µF
5
K
1
4
USB TYPE B
K
ZD2
5.1V
ZD1
5.1V
A
A
30
29
28
27
26
25
41
40
SOURCE CODE
void setup() { Serial1.begin(9600); Keyboard.begin(); }
void loop () { if(Serial1.available()) {
while (Serial1.available()>0) {
Keyboard.print(char(Serial1.read()));
}}}
16
17
X1 16MHz
1N4148
GND
43
22pF
22pF
A
ZD1, ZD2
A
The author made his own custom
board to fit directly over the Raspberry Pi’s GPIO headers. However,
there’s no reason you couldn’t use
an Arduino Micro or Arduino Leonardo, or perhaps use the Freetronics
LeoStick available from Jaycar (Cat.
XC4266).
Microcontroller IC1 is powered
from the USB +5V supply and zener
diodes ZD1 & ZD2 clamp the USB
bus to 5.1V thereby providing protection to IC1 together with the 22Ω
series resistors. IC1’s clock speed is
set by crystal X1 to 16MHz.
The ICSP header is provided for
programming the chip with a suitable Arduino bootloader (if you
do roll your own hardware), after
which future programming can be
undertaken directly from within the
Arduino IDE (integrated development environment) without further
need for the ISP.
Those who choose to purchase a
pre-made Arduino (or clone) won’t
need the ICSP at all, as their microcontrollers will come preflashed
with the bootloader (note exception
below).
The entire source code is in the
K
K
accompanying panel (above). After
passing this code into the Arduino’s
compiler software and building,
the resulting hex file can then be
uploaded into IC1.
Once programmed, the circuit
will operate so that any serial data
received on IC1’s UART RX input
(pin 20, RXD1) will be ‘typed’ into
the computer that the USB B port
is connected to (a USB cable is
required).
The USB host will see our circuit
as a ‘Human Interface Device’ classdriver compliant keyboard (ie, just
a normal keyboard). Therefore, it
works on any operating system that
supports generic USB keyboards.
Note that if you decide to use the
Freetronics Leostick from Jaycar,
then you may need to to update the
bootloader to version 2 first. Jaycar
still seems to carry the old version 1
bootloader which does not include
the necessary components for USB
HID compliance.
Simple instructions for applying
the upgrade are on the Freetronics
website.
Pete Mundy,
Nelson, NZ. ($60)
December 2013 71
Circuit Notebook – Continued
Revised firmware for the USB MIDI-Mate project
The USB MIDI-Mate project presented in the October 2011 issue of
SILICON CHIP worked reasonably well
transferring simple 3-byte channel
voice messages (like ‘Note On’ and
‘Note Off’) in both directions – that
is, from the PC’s USB port out to an
external MIDI synthesiser and also
from a MIDI keyboard back to the
PC’s USB port. But a number of constructors reported that it had serious
limitations regarding ‘special’ data
transfers in both the MIDI-to-USB
and USB-to-MIDI directions.
In the MIDI-to-USB direction,
it couldn’t handle indeterminatelength ‘SysEx’ messages (which can
be up to hundreds of bytes long, sent
as a virtually contiguous stream) and
nor could it handle 2-byte ‘running
status’ channel voice messages. The
latter is where a MIDI device sends a
series of say ‘Note On’ messages with
only the first in the series having
its initial MIDI status ‘header’ byte,
while the following messages have
only the two data bytes. The receiving device is expected to ‘remember’
the status byte of the first 3-byte
message and apply it automatically
to the following 2-byte messages.
This ‘running status’ byte only
changes when a new 3-byte message signals the arrival of a different
type of message. The idea is to allow
faster transfer of similar messages
over a MIDI link.
Both of these types of ‘special’
MIDI message require somewhat
more complex processing compared
with the usual 3-byte channel voice
messages like Note On, Note Off,
Control Change and Pitch Wheel
Change. This is especially true when
it comes to transfers in the MIDIto-USB direction, where all MIDI
messages have to be processed to
fit into 4-byte USB ‘event packets’,
with a special USB packet identifier
byte (containing a cable number and
a code index number) prefixed to the
3-byte MIDI message.
So to handle all of these kinds
of ‘special’ MIDI-to-USB message
correctly, the project’s firmware program had to be extensively revised.
72 Silicon Chip
The MIDI-Mate provides a 2-way serial communications “bridge” between a
USB port on a PC and external MIDI devices, so that the PC can send a MIDI
music file out to a synthesiser and/or other electronic musical instruments.
The PC can also receive MIDI messages from a keyboard or other MIDI controller, via the interface’s MIDI IN jack.
Further testing also showed that
the original firmware had problems
when long ‘SysEx dump’ strings
were to be transferred in the USB-toMIDI direction. This turned out to be
due to a ‘bottleneck’ caused by the
speed differential between the USB
bus and the much slower MIDI bus.
It turned out that the code to ‘take
delivery’ of the stream of USB event
packets arriving from the PC was
being held up by the code sending
them out to the MIDI out port, which
could only send them out at the
standard MIDI bit rate of 31.25kHz
and one-byte-at-a-time. So some of
the USB event packets ended up
being lost.
After considerable time spent
testing, revising and adding to the
firmware for the PIC microcontroller (a PIC18F14K50) used in
the project, we came up with a version which did handle both long
indeterminate-length SysEx messages and truncated running status
channel voice messages correctly, in
the MIDI-to-USB direction. That left
the USB-to-MIDI speed bottleneck
problem, which involved almost as
much work again.
The solution turned out to be
splitting the code handling USB-toMIDI transfers into two parts – one
part to ‘take delivery’ of the USB
event packets arriving from the PC
and the other part to send the MIDI
data in those packets out to the MIDI
output port. The two parts had to be
separated by the software equivalent
of a ‘2-port RAM buffer’, where the
data in the incoming USB packets
is stored by the USB receiving code,
while the MIDI output code is able
to ‘read them out’ again at its own
(slower) rate.
The finite amount of data RAM in
the PIC18F14K50 device meant that
we could only provide 150 bytes for
this ‘speed change buffer’ but this
should be enough to cope with quite
long SysEx ‘dump’ streams – because it behaves as a ‘circular’ buffer
where data is being written in and
read out at virtually the same time.
As a result, there’s only a problem
when the ‘reading out’ function ends
up lagging behind the ‘writing in’
function by a full 150 bytes. This
should only happen with very long
SysEx dumps.
Finally, we have produced a
revised-revised version of the project’s firmware, to handle pretty well
all of the MIDI-to-USB and USB-toMIDI transfers correctly. The new
2311011C.hex file which can be used
to reprogram the PIC18F1450 device
in an existing USB MIDIMate will be
available for downloading from the
SILICON CHIP website, along with a
zip file containing the source code
files for the revised firmware.
Finally, note that the PCB and
PIC18F1450 microcontrollers programmed with the revised firmware
are available from the SILICON CHIP
Online Shop.
Jim Rowe,
SILICON CHIP.
siliconchip.com.au
A new home for an Apple MacBook power adaptor
Apple MacBook power adaptors
can have a problem whereby the
low-voltage lead frays at the strain
relief outlet. This can cause a complete breakage of one or both wires
or overheating of the wires due to the
few remaining wire strands taking all
the current.
The power adaptor case must
be opened up in order to cut and
reconnect the faulty wire(s). As can
be imagined, there are plenty of
websites outlining the problem and
showing how to open the case. A
couple of examples are:
• http://warrantyvoidifremoved.
blogspot.ie/2013/04/repairingcharredburnedbroken-cable-on.
html
• http://www.instructables.com/
id/MacBook-Mag-Safe-ChargerBudget-Repair-Disas/
Unfortunately, the case doesn’t
always open cleanly and even if it
does, there’s always the problem of
how to reseal the case once the wire
is repaired. Super glue is the method
usually suggested but at least one
website shows the case wrapped in
insulation tape as a finished repair!
Unfortunately, neither of these methods can be fully relied on to keep the
case closed and if it does come apart,
the user may be exposed to dangerous mains voltages.
A much better way is to fit the
power adaptor inside a Jaycar HB
5067 diecast box measuring 119 x 94
x 34mm. It’s a neat fit, while leaving sufficient room for an IEC male
chassis connector (Jaycar PP4005)
for the mains connection and a cable
gland at the opposite end for the lowvoltage outlet. A strain relief cable
gland (such as the Altronics H4404)
can be used to reduce the chances
of the lead fraying again.
The case requires a cut-out for
the IEC connector and a hole for the
cable gland. A separate mains earth
screw is also required to secure an
eyelet for earthing the case to the
mains earth at the earth pin of the
IEC connector. It’s necessary to use
shakeproof washers under the nuts
for the earthing screw and the screws
used to secure the IEC connector.
It’s also a good idea to fit a second
locking nut to the earthing screw so
that it cannot possibly come loose.
The mains wire cable from the
power adaptor is cut and the wires
stripped for soldering to the Active,
Neutral and Earth pins on the IEC
connector. Make sure that the brown
mains wire is connected to the
Active pin of the IEC connector and
the blue wire to the Neutral pin. The
green/yellow wire is for the Earth
connection.
Slip heatshrink sleeving over the
Active and Neutral wires before
soldering them to the IEC connector.
Then, when they are attached, slide
the heatshrink up over the terminals
and shrink it down to insulate the
connections.
Finally, note that MacBook power
adaptors do not produce any significant output until they are actually
connected to the computer. Once
that’s done, communication between
the computer and adaptor will
then allow the adaptor to provide
power for charging. The pinout for
the MacBook MagSafe connector is
available at http://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/MagSafe
John Clarke,
SILICON CHIP.
Issues Getting Dog-Eared?
Are your SILICON CHIP copies getting damaged or dog-eared just
lying around in a cupboard or on a shelf? Can you quickly find
a particular issue that you need to refer to?
REAL
VALUE
AT
$14.95
PLUS P
&
P
Keep your copies of SILICON CHIP safe, secure and
always available with these handy binders
Order now from www.siliconchip.com.au/Shop/4 or call (02)
9939 3295 and quote your credit card number or mail the handy
order form in this issue. *See website for overseas prices.
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 73
Circuit Notebook – Continued
X-Y test pattern generator for analog scopes
Most good-quality CRT based oscilloscopes, such as those made by
Tektronix, have adjustments for the
geometry of the CRT display. This
adjustment usually interacts with
the trace rotation control.
It is easy to align the horizontal
trace to be parallel with the CRT’s
graticule but the vertical or Y axis
is harder to adjust while seeing its
interaction with the overall scan
geometry everywhere on the screen
display in all four quadrants. Ideally
a “box shaped” scan is required for
the best adjustment possible.
This XY scan generator is based on
a PIC12F509 microcontroller which
was programmed using Microchip’s
MPLAB IDE v8.83. The program
uses the bit clear and bit set instructions to set the outputs of the GPIO
port high and low in a sequence,
with appropriate delays called in
from a simple delay subroutine
with a parameter passed in the ‘W’
register. The nop instruction was
placed between adjacent bcf and bsf
instructions to prevent any possible
read-modify-write problems.
Each of the digital outputs, GP0,
GP1, GP2 & GP4 of the GPIO register, were assigned to a quadrant
to deflect the CRT beam into. The
outputs are all positive logic levels.
Negative deflection is required for
the -x and -y deflections of the CRT
beam. Therefore, the outputs are
passed via two unity gain differen-
tial amplifiers (an OP295) running
on a split power source to create the
negative and positive-going signals
required to deflect the CRT beam
into its four quadrants.
The switching signals march the
beam around the screen in a clockwise direction. The time to complete
a full scan is close to 2ms (500Hz
rate) so there is no visible scan
flicker.
At the time in the scan where the
Y deflection is zero (or X zero), GP5
is used as a gain control signal which
acts on the four BS270 Mosfets to
elevate the signal output and produce the over-scan. This generates
the appearance of the two lines on
the X and Y axis crossing each other
in the centre of the square.
The signals generated by the PIC
12F509 have very fast leading and
trailing edges. This means that they
do not produce an easily visible
line on a CRT face (in XY mode)
and could only generate dots which
would be seen in the pauses where
the CRT beam was deflected into
each quadrant during the time that
the digital output was in a stable
state.
Fortunately, feeding the signals to
the abovementioned OP295 drives
the op amps into slew rate limited
mode with a very low slew rate of
only 0.03V/us, making them into
linear ramp generators. This makes
the CRT beam visible. The OP295’s
The X and Y signals displayed on
a scope. The slew rate shapes the
resulting waveforms into a pseudo
analog format.
outputs are not suitable for driving
cables and current sinking/sourcing
from its outputs affects the slew rate,
so the outputs are buffered with a
TLC272 dual op amp.
The scope screen photo shows
the X and Y signals displayed on a
scope. It can be seen how the slew
rate shapes the resulting waveform
into a pseudo analog format. The
measured scan period is 2.105ms or
a scan rate of 475Hz.
The unit’s total current consumption is 8.7mA and about 12.7mA
when terminated into a 50Ω load.
Around 4.6mA of that is due to
LED1. The output waveform produces a normal XY scan until the
battery voltage drops to about 6.9V.
The software is 12509TMPO.asm
and can be downloaded from the
SILICON CHIP website.
Hugo Holden,
Maroochydore, Qld.
co n tr ib u ti on
MAY THE BEST MAN WIN!
As you can see, we pay $$$ for contributions to Circuit Notebook.
Each month the BEST contribution (at the sole discretion of the editor)
receives a $150 gift voucher from Hare&Forbes Machineryhouse.
That’s yours to spend at Hare&Forbes Machineryhouse as you see fit
- buy some tools you’ve always wanted, or put it towards that big
purchase you’ve never been able to afford!
100% Australian owned Established 1930
“Setting the standard in quality & value”
www.machineryhouse.com.au
74 Silicon Chip
150
$
GIFT VOUCHER
Contribute NOW and WIN!
Email your contribution now to:
editor<at>siliconchip.com.au
or post to PO Box 139, Collaroy NSW
siliconchip.com.au
siliconchip.com.au
9V
BATTERY
S1
ON/OFF
A
K
D1 1N5819
OUT
GND
100nF
REG1 79L05
IN
TANT
10 µF
–4V
0V
100nF
470 µF
+5V
1
8
Vss
GP1
GP2
GP4
GP0
GP5
GP3/MC
IC1
PIC 12F5
12F509
09
Vdd
2
4
6
5
3
7
LED1
POWER
1.5k
1.5k
8.2k
8.2k
8.2k
8.2k
K
λ
A
G
S
D
1.5k
A
K
1N5819
Y+
Y–
X+
X–
Q1
2.2k
100k
100k
100k
100k
G
100k
S
D
A
K
Q2
2.2k
LED
100k
100k
1.5k
2
3
6
5
100k
IC2b
8
S
D
Q3
2.2k
S
G
D
BS270
4
IC2a
IC2: OP295
G
Q1–Q4:
BS270
1
7
100nF
G
OUT
+5V
1.5k
Q4
2
3
GND
LM79L0 5
IN
IC3b
8
1.5k
4
IC3a
IC3: TLC272
6
5
100nF
S
D
2.2k
Y+
Y–
X+
X–
1
7
0V
100Ω
100Ω
Y OUTPUT
3Vp-p
X OUTPUT
3Vp-p
Hugo Hold
is this mon en
th’s winner
of a $150 g
ift voucher
from
Hare & Forb
es
December 2013 75
Build It Yourself Electronics Centre
Issue:
Dec. 2013
34
In-built
battery for 2hr
record time!
.95
$
NEW!
135
X 3072
$
NEW!
20
$
Compact
& easy to
carry.
Gadget Gift Guide
*iPad for illustration purposes.
Great Value Xmas Deals
SAVE 19%
H 8250
X 0400
99
$
SAVE $20
Personal Alcohol
Breathalyser
Brand name versions
sell for over $70!
Utilises the same fuel cell
technology as law enforcement
devices. Far more accurate than
most semi-conductor based units.
Provides readings for personal
use. Requires 3xAAA batteries.
Nifty Tablet Desk Stand
Every iPad® owner needs one!
Adjustable, universal aluminium
benchtop stand for tablets &
e-Readers. Non-slip rubber feet.
X 0684
Bluetooth® Keyboard
For Tablets
1080p HD Sports Action Camera Pack
High definition recording for extreme sports. Waterproof to 20m!
Amazingly small, just 24 grams in weight and 52mm high. Includes
waterproof case, brackets & straps for helmets, bikes etc. Records to
Micro-SD (max 32gb, D 0329 $43). Check out the YouTube video online.
D 2030
74.95
$
Angry Birds® RC Helicopter
Chase down green piggies with this great
little RC chopper for the kids (or big kids!).
Requires 6xAA batteries. Helicopter size:
20x20x12.5cm.
NEW!
Amazing sound
from such a
small unit - just
125mm tall.
A keyboard for when you
need it - can be used
without taking your tablet
out of its case. Tough
aluminium backed
keyboard. Folds flat to just
14mm thick! ≈1 month use
from a charge. iPad for
59
$
SAVE 20%
D 2135
A must have
for any avid
tablet user.
illustration purposes.
It’s a phone charger!
It’s a Bluetooth® speaker! It’s an FM radio!
50
$
It’s all of the above! A 2200mAH battery bank housed in a blue
aluminium case designed to keep your smartphone powered up. It can
also playback audio from a micro SD card or FM tuner.
Portable &
digital ready!
A 2750
SAVE $19
Wake Up To Digital Radio!
An ideal bedside companion! Wake up to
your favourite digital or FM station. Large
display with scrolling info. 10 presets.
Two alarms.
USB 3.0 Dual Hard
Drive Dock
The easy way to move data
from one drive to another.
Suits 2.5” or 3.5” SATA hard
drives. Enables fast ‘hot
swapping’ of drives. A must for
IT technicians. Includes power
supply, USB 3.0 lead & PC
backup software.
Wireless Weather
Monitor
A 2752
69
$
A 1102
40
$
SAVE $20
Listen To Digital Radio On The Go!
Great for listening to cricket commentary at the game. Or access the huge
variety of new digital stations on offer. Jog wheel tuning with 10 presets &
headphone socket. Requires 4xAA batteries (pick some up in-store!).
165
$
SAVE $54
S 8861
Digital tuner with
USB PVR functions
High Definition TV for the Car, Caravan or Boat.
This new 7” wide format LCD features in-built HD tuner to receive all the
latest digital Freeview channels. USB port is provided for PVR recording of
shows. MP3 & video USB/SD playback. Powered by an rechargeable
battery or car accessory socket. Easy to install.
Listen to tunes
anywhere you go!
SAVE 20%
Hooks up to virtually any amplifier, stereo
or portable speakers to stream audio wirelessly from your smartphone or tablet. Inbuilt rechargeable battery offers up to
10hrs use.
Measures indoor
temperature; outdoor
temperature and humidity.
Great for greenhouses. 40°C to +65°C. Sensor
range 100m. Requires 2 x
AA & 2 x AAA batteries.
D 5508
49
$
SAVE 15%
22
$
SAVE 20%
X 7020
Find your way
during a blackout!
This handy night light and
rechargeable torch plugs
into any mains outlet &
lights up automatically in
a power failure. Works as
a normal night light when
power is present. No batteries required.
19.95
$
NEW!
X 0250
209
$
SAVE $50
S 9433
Dashboard Portable HD Camcorder
Always
charged up
Our Build It Yourself Electronics Centres...
»76 S
Springvaleilicon
VIC: 891
Princes Hwy » Auburn NSW: 15 Short St » Perth WA: 174 Roe St
Chip
» Balcatta WA: 7/58 Erindale Rd » Cannington WA: 6/1326 Albany Hwy
Designed both as a dashboard camcorder and a Full HD portable handicam for documenting your adventures! Fully adjustable 2.5” flip screen
and rotating lens. Includes car power adaptor & windscreen bracket.
Great for fleet vehicles & vehicle accident analysis. Also shoots 12mp still
photos! 32GB SD card to suit - DA0323 $53.00.
Phone Order Now On...
1300 797 007
siliconchip.com.au
or shop online 24/7 at www.altronics.com.au
Power for at home or on the road!
Handy Lights & Lamps
High Luminance
LED Magnifying
Lamps
SAVE
20%
Modified
sine wave
Mains Power From Your Car Battery!
Suitable for use with laptops, TVs, battery chargers, stereos &
power tools. • Modified sine wave • Host of protection features
• Soft start • High/low voltage shutdown
Great for
camping,
farmers, mobile
trades people,
service vans etc.
Rating
Part
Normally
Now...
12V 150W
M 8072
$49.95
$39
12V 300W
M 8076A
$69.95
$55
12V 600W
M 8084
$149
$119
12V 1000W
M 8090
$249
$199
99
Folds up to
about the size
of an A4 book.
$
SAVE $30
N 0710
Stay Charged Up On Your Travels!
This folding solar panel charger is an ideal way to keep your
phone or tablet charged when camping, hiking etc. 10W panel
with 1.5A 5V DC USB output. Charges a typical smartphone in
2-4 hours (depending on conditions). Multiple units can be
daisychained for faster charging.
4 x USB Multi
Travel Adaptor
Still our most popular models
after 15 years in the range!
47
$
.95
NO MORE
EYE STRAIN!
X 4205 5 Dioptre
52.95
$
TOP VALUE
Enough ports for all your
portable devices! 2.1A max
current shared between 4 USB
ports. Includes adaptors for
Australian, US, UK and
European outlets. 100-240V ac.
180
$
Fully adjustable with LCD meters for precision
adjustments. Great for R&D and workshops. •
Linear toroidal design • Voltage & current knobs
• Fixed 12V & 5V output rails • Fully regulated
• Short circuit & overload protection.
X 4204 3 Dioptre
TOP VALUE
NEW!
X 0202
19.95
$
28.50
$
Precision Lab Power Supplies
Ultra-bright long life LED
for fantastic clarity (plus
no need to change a globe
- EVER!). Let “gadget” be
your eyes. Identify those
impossible to read miniature
components. Great for stamp
& coin collectors; model
makers, jewellers etc. Fully
adjustable ball joint head.
Use it at
home too!
A 0309A
Weatherproof design with 4 high brightness white
LEDs and adjustable headband. Great for working
under cars or camping/hiking. Two brightness settings & flash mode. Requires 2xAAA batteries.
SAVE $40
M 8200A 0-30V 3A
199
$
SAVE $50
M 8205 0-30V 5A
NEW!
Waterproof Head Torch
A 0276
39
$
Use at home or
in the car!
10
$
X 0207
SAVE 29%
SAVE 28%
Charge Up To 12 Batteries At Once
10 x AA/AAA and 2 x 9V rechargeable overnight battery charger.
Keeps plenty of batteries charged for the kids toys! Includes
plugpack & car socket adaptor.
75
50
$
$
SAVE 15%
2 In 1 Torch & Lamp Combo
Handy LED high brightness torch with a slide
out case which houses a work lamp. Top of
case houses magnets & hanging hook.
Requires 3xAAA batteries. 66W x 104Lmm.
About the size of a phone!
Ideal for the seldom used
car, caravan or boat
Great for camping!
SAVE 16%
D 0506 6000mAh
M 8531
6 Stage 12V Weatherproof Battery Charger
Utilises a microprocessor to ensure your battery is in tip-top condition
whenever you need it. Diagnoses state of charge and delivers an
appropriate current. • Helps to extend the lifetime of the battery
• Suits permanent connection • Suits SLA, wet cells, gel cell & AGM
batteries 3Ah to 200Ah.• 14.4V <at> 6A max • Size: 200 x 90 x 45mm.
With 2 USB outputs!
20
$
X 0215
D 0504 2500mAh
Cheap insurance for your valuable home theatre
appliances - with surge protection up to 52,000A.
Dual USB sockets for charging your devices, plus
telephone & TV aerial protection.
Follow <at>AltronicsAU
siliconchip.com.au
54.95
$
www.facebook.com/Altronics
NEW!
P 8268
SAVE 15%
No mains power? No worries!
5W LED Aluminium Adjustable Torch
These mobile battery banks keep your phone or tablet charged
up even when you are miles from a 240V outlet. 6000mAh (5V
2A output) or 2500mAh (5V 1A). 5-7hr recharge time. Includes
range of adaptors, including Apple 30 pin & Samsung plugs.
Super tough aluminium case! 300 Lumens output.
Flashing mode and adjustable beam width. Requires
3xD batteries (S 4926 2pk $7.15). 335mm long.
Stock up for Xmas!
Long Life Lithium
Batteries
10 Way AV Power Protection Board
42
$
SAVE 19%
rechargeable.
Express Order
Hotlines:
28
$
Big brand name performance for a much lower
price! These top quality
lithium batteries offer excellent performance in high
power devices. Note: not
X 0209A
2 For
$
12
SAVE 24%
S 4904 2xAAA
2 For
$
14
SAVE 22%
S 4906 2xAA
Phone: 1300 797 007
Fax: 1300 789 777
www.altronics.com.au
15% OFF
Robust Aluminium 3W LED Torch
With adjustable beam! • Virtually indestructible
aluminium case • 100 lumens light output • Long
life 80,000hr LED • Includes pouch • Requires
3xAAA batteries. • ≈120mm long.
December 2013 77
BUILD IT YOURSELF ELECTRONICS CENTRE
Top Value AV & PA Equipment
Latest In LED Lighting
C 0993
299
319
$
$
NEW!
SAVE $80
NEW!
C 5201
RATTLE THE
FLOORBOARDS!
Ask about our
handy work
stands to suit!
New MP3 USB
model for easy
music playback
Super Bright Outdoor LED Floodlights
Opus One® 180W Subwoofer Sensation!
Address Large Crowds With Ease
Ideal for...
Huge 10” 180W PA driver with USB MP3
playback. An all in one portable PA unit that sets
up in just seconds with no expertise required. Just
plug into 240V power, switch it on and connect a
mic! Versatile, lightweight & built to last.
Features: • Bi-amplifier design • 6.35mm/XLR
Mic input • RCA line in • Bass & treble
• “Daisy chain” multiple units together
Bingo nights.
Add cinema like realism to your home theatre sound system.
Massive 180W 10” driver with built in amp. A stunning frequency
response of 35Hz-1KHz. Level, phase & crossover control built in.
Rotary & RSL clubs.
“Best value subwoofer we’ve used. Even compared to big brand
names costing twice as much” - Ashley, Retail Music Systems
Sports events.
Fetes & carnivals.
Sales demonstrations.
Stunning Quality
Hi-Fi Headphones
Deep bass with crisp treble and
full midtones. Supplied with
6.35mm and 3.5mm adaptor.
Very comfortable! Detachable lead
with durable woven braid sheath.
Folds up for storage.
229
$
NEW!
A 2651
99
Featuring USB/SD card playback with easy to use controls. All channels
feature balanced XLR, unbalanced 6.35mm, insert inputs, high/mid/low
adjustment, pan & gain effects level. Channels 5 & 6 are combined on
the one fader/controls. Includes power supply.
Lightweight, Compact
2 Channel DJ Mixer
NEW!
Stunning
sound!
C 0855 6.5” 100W
209
C 0857 8” 120W
279
$
Price per pair.
SAVE $120
Opus One® Platinum Ceiling Speakers
Featuring woven carbon fibre woofer & titanium dome tweeter for the
ultimate in home theatre response! • Bass & treble control switches
• Vented magnets • Easy flip-lock installation • Aluminium grilles
10W 240V AC (115x135x84mm)
X 2312
$42.50
20W 240V AC (182x158x105mm)
X 2314
$78.95
20W 12V DC (182x158x105mm)
X 2316
$59.95
50W 240V AC (288x238x150mm)
X 2318
$179
99
NEW!
139
$
X 2320
10W
NEW!
X 2321
20W
Super Bright Portable Work Lights
LED floodlamps coupled with a rechargeable battery
offering up to 12 hours use (≈6 hrs for X 2320) away
from mains power. Includes work stand, car charger
& plugpack. Great for work sites & service vans.
C 9019
5.8GHz Wireless
AV Sender
$
Great for wireless CCTV!
• Transmit stereo audio &
composite video without
cables from room to room
• 30m range • IR sender
built in • Includes transmitter,
receiver & plugpacks.
SAVE $20
79
109
$
X 2336
S 9359
44
$
SAVE 19%
SAVE $40
Stainless Steel Deck Lighting Kit
Includes 6 marine grade stainless white LEDs,
junction box, 6m of cabling and weatherproof
transformer. 28mmØ hole (33Ø x 19Dmm).
$
SAVE $90
$34.95
$
Listen to music & take phone calls
at the tap of a button! Inbuilt mic and
phone controls for hands-free talking.
Range up to 10m. In-built batteries
recharge via USB( ≈10 hrs operation).
NEW!
A 2544
ea
X 2310
C 9014B
Bluetooth® Headset.
No tangled cords!
69.95
129
Type
NEW!
$
Great for beginners and mobile
DJs requiring a robust lightweight
mixer. Two pairs of switchable
phono and line inputs, plus stereo
record and amp outputs. Bass,
treble and gain adjustments. Cue
crossfader makes it easy to
cue upcoming tracks.
$
Includes power supply.
NEW!
Part
10W 12V DC (115x135x84mm)
$
Ideal size for
bands,
theatre &
small venues.
Top Value 6 Channel Mixer With USB Playback
Great for DJs &
audio production
This new range make great work lamps for
renovators, or simply adding a light to the back of
your ute or service van for when you need it! All
metal construction, full sealed and weatherproof.
A 3087
Run out of inputs?
Simply add more!
Remote Control 3xHDMI Switcher
Mini three input HDMI switcher which can be discretely mounted
behind your TV and controlled by remote (external IR receiver
included). Easy hook up, no power required!
High Brightness
LED Globes
Far exceeds the life of
CFL bulbs. Fits standard screw fittings ideal for table lamps.
Warm white,
7 Watts (equivalent to
normal 40W bulb).
BULK BUY!
X 2271
Edison
Screw
4 For
$
60
SAVE 44%
Our Build It Yourself Electronics Centres...
78 Silicon Chip
BUILD IT YOURSELF ELECTRONICS CENTRE
» Balcatta WA: 7/58 Erindale Rd » Cannington WA: 6/1326 Albany Hwy siliconchip.com.au
» Perth WA: 174 Roe St » Auburn NSW: 15 Short St » Springvale VIC: 891 Princes Hwy
Resellers:
Spark an interest in electronics this Xmas.
NOW AVAILABLE: Altronics new range of spring terminal electronic project labs for ages 10+
These simple kits are a great introduction to the world of electronics. Basic principles are covered and assembly is completely solderless using
a series of spring loaded terminals to create a circuit. Detailed instructions show the wiring and explain the principle used in each project.
Believe it or not, these kits are how many of todays engineers got started in the 80’s!
300 fun projects in the one unit!
24.95
$
NEW!
179
$
K 2222
NEW!
300 in 1 Electronics Lab
2395
$
K 2200
NEW!
10 in 1 Electronics Lab
10 exciting projects including a morse
code generator, burglar alarm and a
radio. Requires 9V battery.
The ‘Rolls-Royce’ model with all the bells and whistles.
Teaches you about electronics from A to Z. You will learn
about electronic parts, how to read schematics, and wiring
diagrams. All this, while building up to 300 different
projects. Requires 6 x AA batteries.
K 2216
‘Crystal Set’ Radio Kit
Build your own AM radio - no soldering
required. A crystal set was one of the
first educational kits available in the
60’s and is still going strong today!
A great intro to electronics with a bit of
nostalgia too. No power required!
39.95
$
NEW!
99.95
K 2208
130 in 1 Electronics Lab
Contains everything you need to build a
range of electronic projects to
encourage learning about essential
principles. Requires 2 x AA batteries.
A comprehensive learning lab with many hours of building
an experimenting. Build a radio, AM broadcast station,
electronic organ, kitchen timer, logic circuits and many
more. Requires 6 x AA batteries.
50 experiments to
build yourself!
NEW!
K 2212
AM/FM Radio Kit
A make-it-yourself AM/FM band radio
which requires no soldering or special
tools. Requires 9V battery.
29
$
K 1122
23.95
$
30 in 1 Electronics Lab
$
NEW!
K 2204
Hundreds sold
to schools!
SAVE 17%
K 1105
20
$
SAVE 19%
Salt Water
Powered Buggy Kit
59.95
$
NEW!
K 2220
Digital Recording Laboratory
Assemble up to 50 educational and fun experiments using
advanced Integrated Circuit Technology. You’ll learn all
about digital sound, voice recording and modulation.
Requires 3 x AA batteries.
Line Tracking Mouse Kit
A V8 powered buggy that runs on salt
water! No batteries required. This kit
features a detailed engine with moving
cylinders and crank shaft. Ages 8+.
K 1116
K 1115
29
$
15
SAVE 18%
$
SAVE 12%
K 1104
6 In 1 Solar Power Fun Kit
A great way to learn about electronics and solar power. Each
kit can be assembled into one of 6 devices - windmill, hover
craft, airboat, revolving plane, car and puppy (main picture).
Much like the robot (left), this mouse
is designed to track along black lines
on a table top or floor. Full assembly
≈1hr. Ages 6+. Requires 2xAA
batteries
‘Follow Me’ Robot Kit
Uses four inbuilt microphones to
detect sound (such as a hand clap)
and moves toward it. Ages 8+. No
soldering required. Requires
4 x AAA batteries (not included).
15.95
$
BARGAIN!
Creepy Spider
Powered By Salt Water!
This creepy crawly spider uses a salt
water fuel cell to power its legs. Just
add some salt water to the cell plate
& the spider will creep around. No
batteries required! Ages 8+.
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Esperance
Esperance Comms.
Geraldton
ML Communications
VICTORIA
Bairnsdale
Bairnsdale Electrics
Beaconsfield Electronic Connections
Castlemaine
Top End Technology
Clayton
Rockby Electronics
Cranbourne
Bourne Electronics
Croydon Truscott's Electronic World
Geelong
Music Workshop
Healesville Amazon DVDs Healesville
Hoppers Crossing
Leading Edge
Leongatha
Gardner Electronics
Nunawading
Semtronics
Preston
Preston Electronics
Rosebud
AV2PC
San Remo Shorelec Elec. Wholesale
Somerville
AV2PC
Wodonga Exact Comp. & Home Ent.
TASMANIA
Hobart
Active Electronics
Launceston
Active Electronics
QUEENSLAND
Bowen Hills
Prime Electronics
Caloundra
LESC
Cloncurry
Access Electronics
Coorparoo
Delsound
Fortitude Valley
Design Data
Gold Coast
Prime Electronics
Hervey Bay
Ultra Music
Innisfail
Leading Edge Electronics
Longreach
Access Electronics
Rockhampton
Access Electronics
Toowoomba
Michael's Electronics
Townsville
SOLEX
NEW SOUTH WALES
Brookvale Brookvale Electrical Dist.
Cessnock Leading Edge Electronics
Cobar
Cobar Electronics
Deniliquin
Wired Entertainment
Gloucester
Autolec Gloucester
Grafton
Downes Electronics
Griffith
Griffith Systems Plus
Gunnedah
Protronics
Lithgow
Leading Edge Electronics
Nth Richmond Candle Power Tech.
Oak Flats
Oak Flats Electronics
Orange
Fordray Electronics
Penrith
Penrith Light and Sound
Port Macquarie
Fettel Comms.
Smithfield
Chantronics
Tamworth Bourke Street Electronics
Taree
Noeledge Systems Pty Ltd
Wagga Wagga
Wagga Car Radio
Waterloo Herkes Electrical Supplies
Wetherill Park Techtron Electronics
Windang
Mad Electronics
Wollongong Lightsounds Wollongong
Wyong
Coastal Caravan And RV
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Adelaide
Aztronics
Brighton
Force Electronics
Enfield
Aztronics
Findon
Force Electronics
Kadina
Idyll Hours Hobbies
NORTHERN TERRITORY
Darwin Combined Comm. Solutions
NEW ZEALAND
Christchurch - Riccarton Global PC
Christchurch - Shirley
Global PC
(08) 9071 3344
(08) 9965 7555
(03) 5152 3201
(03) 9768 9420
(03) 5472 1700
(03) 9562 8559
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(03) 9723 3860
(03) 5221 5844
(03) 5962 2763
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(03) 9873 3555
(03) 9484 0191
(03) 5986 6711
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(03) 5978 0007
(02) 6056 5746
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(03) 6334 7333
(07) 3252 7466
1300 716 840
(07) 4742 2590
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(03) 5881 3555
(02) 6558 1600
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(08) 8212 6212
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(08) 8821 2662
(08) 8942 0644
+64 3 3434475
+64 3 3543333
B 0092
Sale Ends December 31st 2013
Altronics Phone 1300 797 007 Fax 1300 789 777
siliconchip.com.au
Mail Orders: C/- P.O. Box 8350 Perth Business Centre, W.A. 6849
© Altronics 2013. E&OE. Prices stated herein are only valid for the current month or until stocks run out. All prices include GST and exclude freight and
insurance. See latest catalogue for freight rates. All major credit cards accepted.
Please Note:
Resellers have to2013 79
pay the cost of freight and
December
insurance and therefore the range of stocked products & prices
charged by individual resellers may vary from our catalogue.
Building the
“Tiny Tim”
Stereo Amplifier
Part 2 – By
Leo Simpson &
Nicholas Vinen
Having introduced this compact stereo hifi amplifier in our October
issue, let’s start building it. Here we describe how to assemble the
amplifier board and power supply and also how to prepare the case.
A
s explained earlier, this amplifier is a beef-up version of
the Hifi Stereo Headphone
Amplifier and is suitable for driving
a wide range of speakers – especially
the “Tiny Tim” speakers featured in
our October issue.
Note that to complete the amplifier,
some additional parts will be required
beyond those specified in Part 1 – see
the parts list in this article.
Start by assembling the main amplifier/preamplifer PCB. It’s coded
01309111 and measures 198 x 98mm.
First, though, there is a little surgery
required on the PCB tracks which will
allow it to operate with higher power.
On the PCB overlay there are eight
links shown. However, the PCBs purchased from the SILICON CHIP online
shop – www.siliconchip.com.au/shop
80 Silicon Chip
– (and, presumably, any supplied in
kits) will be double-sided so these
links will already be in place, courtesy
of PCB tracks.
However, these boards may also
have top-side tracks connecting the
points labelled “A” to “D” (near the
heatsinks at lower left). If so, you will
need to cut these (use a sharp knife to
cut sections out of the tracks and then
check, with a multimeter, that there
is no continuity between the points).
If you have made your own board
or yours is supplied as a single-sided
type, you will obviously need to install
the links. Use 0.7mm diameter tinned
copper wire.
And regardless of whether yours is
a single or double-sided board, you
will need to cut the two tracks on the
underside shown of the board, marked
with red “x”s on the PCB overlay
diagram. As before, use a sharp knife
then check that there is no continuity between A&B and C&D with your
multimeter.
Now you can start fitting the components, starting with resistors, noting that two (both 680Ω) have ferrite
beads slipped over their leads before
they are soldered in place. Check each
resistor against the colour-code table
and also with a DMM set to Ohms to
ensure you have the right value. Note
that you may want to leave the resistor
pads labelled A and B unsoldered at
this point, with the resistor leads left
long; this will make it easier to join
wires to them later.
With the resistors in place, follow
with the 14 1N4004 diodes, taking
care to ensure they are all correctly
siliconchip.com.au
The main PCB for the
Tiny Tim amplifier, containing
both preamplifier and power amplifier.
The board is the same as that used in the HiFi
Headphone Amplifier project from September/
October 2011 but requires slight modification and
of course an upgrade of components. With the mods
described here it will achieve 10W music power
into 4 or 8Ω speakers and 8W RMS into 4Ω.
orientated. In each case, the stripe
faces to the left or the bottom of the
board. The four BAT42/BAT85 smallsignal Schottky diodes (D15-D18) near
IC1 (upper-left) can then go in. Their
orientations vary so take care.
If you are using sockets for IC1-IC3,
solder them in now with the notches to
the right as shown. Alternatively, you
can solder the ICs direct to the board
with the same orientation.
The MKT and ceramic capacitors
are next on the list, followed by the
16 small-signal transistors. There are
three different types so be sure to install the correct type at each location.
Use a small pair of needle-nose pliers
to crank the transistors leads so that
they mate with the board holes and
check that each transistor is correctly
orientated.
The two 500Ω trimpots can now
go in. That done, fit PCB pins at test
points TP1-TP4 plus another two to
support the tinplate shield between
inductors L3 & L4. Then, mount the
electrolytic capacitors but leave the
two 4700µF filter capacitors out for
the time being. Note that four of the
capacitors are labelled as 50V types
(a higher rating such as 63V is fine).
As with the resistors, the capacitor
leads labelled C and D are best left
unsoldered until later.
The four BD139/140 transistors
which are not mounted on heatsinks
siliconchip.com.au
can go in next. You will need to bend
their leads to fit the triangular pad
pattern originally intended for a TO92 transistor, as shown on the overlay
diagram and photos. The metal mounting faces of each pair face towards
each other.
Note that some BD139/140 transistors may lack a metal face; in this case
you will need to look at which side
has the transistor type number printed
on it (which is opposite the mounting
face) and ensure that these sides face
away from either other.
Winding the inductors
The two air-core inductors (L3 & L4)
are wound on small plastic bobbins.
It is much easier to wind them if you
make a winding jig, as shown in the
panel on P84.
To wind the first coil, first secure
the bobbin to the jig with one of its
slots aligned with the hole in the end
cheek. That done, feed about 20mm
of a 1m-length of 0.8mm-diameter
enamelled copper wire through the
hole, then carefully wind on 20.5 turns
before bending the end down so that
it passes through the opposite slot in
the bobbin. Trim the “finish” end of
the wire to 20mm (to match the start
end), then secure the winding with a
layer of insulation tape and remove the
bobbin from the winding jig.
A 10mm-length of 25mm-diameter
heatshrink tubing is used to finally
secure the winding. Slip it over the
outside and gently heat it to shrink
it down (ie, be careful to not melt the
bobbin).
The second coil is wound in exactly
the same manner. Once it’s finished,
scrape the enamel off the leads on both
inductors and tin them before fitting
them to the PCB.
Further modifications
The tracks cut earlier allow us to
reconfigure the power supply so that
the output stages run off the unregulated ±20V rails but to do that, we also
need to run four insulated wires on
the underside. It is simply a matter
of connecting the pads labelled A-A,
B-B, C-C and D-D.
To join A-A and B-B you can use
light duty wire as these only need
to be able to carry enough current to
power the preamplifier; even Kynar
(wire wrapping wire) or bell wire is
suitable. The two shorter runs, C-C
and D-D, can carry in excess of 1A so
medium- or heavy-duty hook-up wire
is more suitable.
Completing the PCB assembly
The tinplate shield between the two
inductors can now be installed. This
shield measures 35 x 15mm and can
December 2013 81
Fig.6: complete
overlay and wiring
diagram for the main
PCB. Note the two
tracks to be cut and
the insulated wire
links to be installed
to make it suitable
for higher power
operation.
be cut from the lid of a large tin (or
similar) using tin snips. File the edges
smooth after cutting, then temporarily
position it between the two PC pins
and mark their locations.
That done, hold the shield in an
alligator clip stand and melt some
82 Silicon Chip
solder onto either side at the marked
locations. It may take 10 seconds or
more to heat it enough for the solder
to adhere.
Finally, flow some solder onto the
tops of the two PC pins before fitting
the shield in position and remelting
the solder to secure it.
Mounting the heatsinks
The two regulators and six power
transistors are mounted on six large
flag heatsinks. These have two posts
which pass down through the PCB for
siliconchip.com.au
MAINS
CORD
TO MAINS
POWER
SWITCH
Blue
N
© 2013
A
T1
SW
Blk
15V+15V
20 OR 30VA
F1
1A Slow Blow
DANGER
Here’s the underside of the power
supply board, completely covered
with a sheet of fibre insulation.
Live
230VAC
10k
10k
+
4700F
25V
Orange
BR1
Yellow
Black
Red
~
~
~
W04M
+20V
CON3
Fig.7: same-size PCB component overlay with
matching photo below. This PCB can also be used as a
general-purpose supply with appropriate transformer.
+
4700F
25V
+
"Tiny Tim"
Power
Supply
18110131
–
~
+
-
-20V
TO
AMPLIFIER
PCB
–20V
0V
+20V
leads can then be soldered. Repeat
this procedure for the 7912 regulator.
The two TIP32 power transistors
(Q12 & Q24) are mounted in identical fashion to the regulators. By contrast, the heatsinks for the two TIP31
power transistors (Q11 & Q23) have
the BD139 VBE multiplier transistors
mounted on the other side. Be sure to
insulate all the transistors from the
heatsinks using silicone washers and
insulating bushes as necessary.
The power connector, power switch
and LED, input and output sockets
and volume control potentiometer
are not fitted to the board; instead,
most of them are chassis-mounted and
connected with flying leads We’ll get
to that later. First, let’s assemble the
power supply.
Power supply
support. Two of the heatsinks have two
transistors mounted on them, one each
side (see overlay and photos).
Start by loosely fitting the 7812 and
7912 regulators to their heatsinks. Note
that, in each case, the regulator’s metal
tab must be isolated from its heatsink
using an insulating bush and silicone
washer.
That done, fit the 7812 regulator
assembly through the lower set of
holes just above CON3 and D3. If the
heatsink has “solderable” pins, flip
the board over and solder one, then
siliconchip.com.au
double-check that it is sitting perfectly
flush with the board before soldering
the other. Since you have to heat up
quite a bit of metal, it could take 15
seconds or more before the solder
adheres to the post.
Alternatively, if the heatsink doesn’t
have “solderable” pins, use pliers to
bend the tabs outwards far enough so
that it is secured to the board.
Having secured the heatsink, check
that the insulating washer is properly
aligned with the regulator and tighten
the mounting screw. The regulator’s
Before fitting any components, use
the power supply PCB as a template
to cut a sheet of fibre insulation (often
sold as Presspahn or elephantide) to
100 x 75mm and drill through the four
mounting holes to make corresponding holes in the Presspahn sheet. Also
make a hole corresponding with the
transformer mounting hole and enlarge this to 5.5mm diameter.
Now begin assembly, follow the
overlay diagram of Fig.7. Fit the two
resistors, then the bridge rectifier –
make sure its + symbol lines up with
that shown on the PCB overlay. Follow
with the terminal block (wire entry
holes towards board edge) and then
the fuse holder.
We need to install the two pin headers next but there’s a bit of a trick here.
In the October issue, we showed the
power switch connected between the
Neutral pin of the mains power plug
and the transformer primary/fuse.
While this will work, it means that
the transformer and fuse are live even
when the power switch is off.
December 2013 83
SWITCH
OUTPUT +
OUTPUT –
A K
INPUT +
INPUT –
LED
Fig.8: finally, the only
other PCB which requires
assembly, the “MiniReg”
universal power supply
(used here to power the DAC)
which we published in the
December 2011 issue.
4004
R2
D1
REG1
LM317
110
4004
D3
2.2k
10F
CON1 CON2 CON3 CON4
VR1
1000F
100F
1111ERCJ
Of course, when opening up the unit
for any reason (eg, to replace the fuse)
it is always a good idea to ensure that
it is unplugged but in case somebody
fails to do this, it is safer to have the
switch between the mains plug Active
pin and the rest of the circuit. Note
that it’s possible for mains Active and
Neutral to be swapped in house wiring
so this doesn’t guarantee safety (hence
the advice to always unplug a device
before servicing it) but this is a safer
arrangement most of the time, ie, when
the house wiring is correct.
Now since we’re recycling the mains
cord from a set-top box (or whatever
other device you decide to rat), we
don’t know how it’s wired. We checked
two set-top boxes – both from the
same manufacturer – and found that
the mains cords were wired opposite
to each other. So you will need to set
your DMM on continuity mode and
work out which pin of the header plug
is wired to Active (normally indicated
with an “A” or “L” moulded into the
plastic mains plug housing).
Once you’ve determined that, you
can install the two pins headers with
an orientation such that the Active
wire will go to the terminal marked
“A” on the board (ie, the one directly
adjacent to the switch header). This is
easier than trying to swap the pins to
the polarised plug.
With the two headers in place,
connect the mains cord to the lefthand header (leave the other end
unplugged!) then double-check that
the Active pin on the plug is electrically connected to the left-hand pin
of the switch header. If not, you will
have to remove the left-most header
and re-install it the other way around.
Once you have verified that, fit the two
electrolytic capacitors.
Now before mounting the transformer, feed a cable tie through one
of the two large holes at upper-right
and then back up through the other,
so that it passes under the board in the
space between them. Make sure it’s the
D2
4004
right way around to do the tie up later,
then place the sheet of Presspahn you
prepared earlier under the board and
feed the transformer mounting bolt up
through this and the hole on the PCB.
Check that the corner screw-holes
more or less line up and then slide
the transformer’s rubber pad over the
bolt, place the transformer on top (with
wires exiting on the top side) and use
the rest of the mounting hardware supplied with the transformer to loosely
hold it in place. Typically this consists
of another rubber pad, a metal dish, a
spring washer, a flat washer and a nut.
Rotate the transformer so that the
wires line up with the wire pads on the
right-hand side and then tighten the
nut (but not too tight!). How you proceed depends on which transformer
you are using.
Jaycar MT2086:
The primary and secondary leads
will need to cross over to reach the
appropriate pads. Luckily, the primary
leads are double-sheathed and so pro-
A Winding Jig For The Inductors
The winding jig consists of an M5 x 70mm bolt, two M5 nuts,
an M5 flat washer, a piece of scrap PC board material (40 x 50mm
approx.) and a scrap piece of timber (140 x 45 x 20mm approx.)
for the handle.
The flat washer goes against the head of the bolt, after which a
collar is fitted over the bolt to take the bobbin.
This collar should have a width that’s slightly less than the width
of the bobbin and can be wound on using insulation tape. Wind
on sufficient tape so that the bobbin fits snugly over this collar.
84 Silicon Chip
Next, drill a 5mm hole through the centre of the scrap PC board
material, followed by a 1.5mm exit hole about 8mm away that will
align with one of the slots in the bobbin.
The bobbin is then slipped over the collar, after which the PC
board “end cheek” is slipped over the bolt. Align the bobbin so
that one of its slots lines up with the exit hole in the end cheek,
then install the first nut.
The handle is then fitted by drilling a 5mm hole through one
end, then slipping it over the bolt and installing the second nut.
siliconchip.com.au
The power supply PCB
is in the left rear corner,
with a protective shield
alongside. The DAC is
in the opposite corner
with its “MiniReg”
power supply in front.
Pretty much the whole
of the rest of the case is
taken up by the main
PCB.
vide sufficient insulation to remain
safe in this configuration.
Trim both the primary and secondary leads to length so that they reach
their respective pads, leaving a little
bit of slack and allowing for the fact
that we are going to tie the primary
leads down to the PCB before soldering
them to the two pads. You can check
this by pushing them down onto the
PCB with a finger, between the two tie
holes, then arching them over to reach
the solder pads.
The secondary wires are colour-coded and go to the appropriate labelled
pads at the lower-right of the PCB. You
will probably need to trim these to
slightly different lengths so they will
all reach their respective pads.
Altronics M4915A:
This has the opposite wiring arrangement to the Jaycar transformer
so the primary and secondary leads
to not need to cross over. Note that
the colour coding is different though;
the white lead goes to the pad labelled
“yellow” while the others match up
with their respective colours. As with
the Jaycar transformer, you will need
to allow a bit of extra length for the
primary (blue and brown) leads to be
siliconchip.com.au
tied to the board before being soldered
to the pads labelled “Blue” and “Bl.” (it
doesn’t matter which goes to which).
Finishing the power supply
With the transformer leads trimmed
and stripped, run the two primary
leads through the cable tie you inserted
earlier and do it up tight, then trim off
the excess length. Solder all six leads
to the appropriate pads, as explained
above. Use two or three more cable ties
to lace the secondary leads together
well so that should one break loose,
it won’t go floating around (and also
to contain the magnetic field as much
as possible).
You can now fit the four tapped
spacers with the PCB and fibre insulation panel sandwiched inbetween. Use
a Nylon M3 screw in the upper-right
corner, near the mains tracks, to ensure
that a metal screw in the other end of
the Nylon spacer can’t possibly make
a connection through to the top of the
board, where a stray wire could make
the chassis live.
Insert a 1A slow-blow fuse into the
holder and clip the top cover on. We’ll
test the power supply board later once
it’s in the case.
DAC power supply
We’re using the MiniReg, described
in the December 2011 issue of SILICON
CHIP, to power the DAC, which runs off
6V DC at about 50mA. The MiniReg is
fed from the 12V rail from the amplifier
via the 2-pin plug soldered earlier. Follow the instructions in the December
2011 issue (or instructions accompanying the MiniReg kit) to assemble it.
Don’t worry about adjusting the output
voltage, we can do that later.
You will need to make up a short
(~50mm) 2-wire cable with a polarised
header plug on one end and a 2.5mm
inner diameter DC jack plug at the
other end, to suit the DAC. This should
be wired so that the inner conductor
of the DC plug is positive. Refer to the
MiniReg instructions to see which pin
is the positive output and which is the
negative. You will also need to short
out the switch terminal (eg, with a
jumper shunt).
The amplifier power indicator LED
can also be run from the MiniReg and
again this will require a 2-core cable
with a polarised header plug at one
December 2013 85
end. Make this one a bit longer – say
100mm. Cut the LED leads short and
solder the other end of the wires to
these, with the cathode (flat side of
LED lens) going to the terminal marked
“K” on the MiniReg PCB. Put these
cable assemblies aside, for now.
Wiring
Cables for power, signal input and
output leads must be soldered to the
amplifier board along with shielded
cable to connect to the volume pot.
While you could solder these wires
directly to the board, doing so with
everything already in the case is awkward. Hence, we fitted PC pins to most
of these pads and soldered the wires
to these later.
There are a total of 17 required – two
for each input, three for the outputs,
six for the potentiometer connections,
three for the power supply wires and
one for the speaker ground returns.
However, upon reflection, we recommend soldering the power supply
wires directly to the underside of the
board, leaving 13 PC pins to fit.
Solder the pins in now, to the pads
shown on the overlay diagram. Note
that most of these holes are much larger than required for PC pins and some
will let the whole pin pass through. So
you will need some sort of a clamp (eg,
self-closing tweezers) to hold the pins
in while you solder them.
For the power supply, solder 100mm
lengths of heavy-duty wire to the
4700µF capacitor terminals. We have
left fitting these capacitors until now
so that you can wind the wire around
the leads before soldering. Colour code
the wires as shown.
Two more black heavy-duty wires
then need to be soldered to the large
ground plane area above these capacitors, for the speaker outputs. If
you have a commercially-made board,
you will need to scrape away some of
the solder mask to allow this. If you
like, you can drill a hole through the
board and feed the wires in from the
top and you can even fit a PC pin or
two so the wires can be later soldered
to the top of the board, if you want to.
You will also need to connect wires
to run the DAC from the regulated
+12V rail on the amplifier board. Take
light duty figure-8 cable about 50mm
long (or two strands from a ribbon
cable) and crimp/solder them into
a 2-way polarised header plug. The
other ends go to the pads shown in
86 Silicon Chip
Parts List
(in addition to parts listed in Part 1)
17 PCB pins
2 chassis-mount RCA sockets, one red & one white (or black)
1 panel-mount DPDT miniature slide switch (Jaycar SS0821, Altronics S2010)
1 sheet fibre insulation (eg Presspahn or elephantide), at least 100 x 115mm
1 100mm length 8mm diameter black heatshrink tubing
1 200mm length 5mm diameter black heatshrink tubing
4 M3 Nylon tapped spacers & various M3 Nylon nuts (to suit DAC installation)
6 M3 x 10mm Nylon machine screws
2 M3 x 6mm Nylon machine screws
4 M3 x 5mm machine screws
3 M3 Nylon nuts
2 M2 x 10mm machine screws and nuts
1 jumper shunt
3 2-pin polarised header plugs with crimp pins
20 small cable ties
3 small adhesive wire saddles/clamps
1 100mm length 8mm diameter red heatshrink tubing
1 panel, 2mm plastic or 1mm aluminium, large enough to cover rear panel of case
1 5mm LED bezel clip (optional)
Fig.7, with 12V to pin 1 of the plug. A
pin 1 indicator is normally moulded
into the plastic plug housing.
Chassis preparation
A number of holes must now be
drilled in the front, rear and base of
the case, to attach the various connectors and mount all the modules.
Start with the rear panel which needs
holes or cut-outs for the four speaker
terminals, analog RCA input sockets,
analog/digital selector switch and
DAC inputs.
If you are using a case which originally housed a commercial piece of
equipment (in our case, a set-top box),
there will be many holes in the rear
panel, most of which are not in the
right location to re-use. The simplest
way to solve this is to attach a new
rear panel on top of the existing one,
covering these up, which you can then
drill and cut new holes in.
This panel can be metal or plastic,
providing it is strong enough. We used
a 2mm thick plastic front panel from
an instrument case that we had spare.
Don’t use thinner plastic as it isn’t
strong enough. A sheet of aluminium
or tinplate is also suitable.
Cut the panel to the same size as
the rear panel of your case, or at least
large enough to cover up all the holes
except that for the mains cable. Place
this over the rear of the case and drill
at least two 3mm holes through both.
We put one at the end near the mains
cable and another in the middle.
Feed through short machine screws
and tighten these onto nuts to hold the
panel in place. If one of the holes is
near where the mains power supply
will go, use a Nylon screw and nut
there.
You can now mark out the positions for the four binding posts which
should go near the middle of the rear
panel, but not too close to the power
supply mounting location – leave at
least 10mm separation. We spaced
them apart by about 20mm with 5mm
extra between the two pairs; if you put
them much closer together than this,
this makes connecting wires awkward.
Now mark positions for the TOSLINK and RCA socket inputs of the
DAC board in the right-hand rear corner, as well as a rectangular cut-out for
its selector switch to fit through. Since
this switch body sticks out further
than the TOSLINK connector, a slot
will need to be cut to fit the whole
thing through.
We elected to place the stereo RCA
analog input sockets and analog/digital selector slide switch underneath
the DAC inputs as there wasn’t enough
room in our case to place them side-byside. You may want to do the same. In
this case, make sure the holes for the
DAC inputs and switch are towards
the top of the case.
With the positions for all these
connectors marked out, start by drilling pilot holes right through both the
original rear panel and the new panel
on top. Enlarge the holes for the binding posts and RCA sockets until the
connectors fit through. Ideally, the
siliconchip.com.au
binding posts and RCA connectors
should be a snug fit.
The TOSLINK input, DAC selector
switch and analog/digital selector
switch require rectangular cut-outs
and these are too small to easily nibble so you will probably have to drill
a row of holes in each case and then
slowly file it into a rectangle using
needle files. You may find it easier to
temporarily remove the new rear panel
and file holes in the two panels separately before re-fitting it. Note that it’s
more important that the holes are neat
in the outer panel than the inner one.
Test-fit the DAC board and make
sure that it can be butted right up
against the rear panel. For the analog/
digital selector slide switch you will
need to file a slot for its actuator as
well as two small mounting holes for
screws. Once you have it in place and
do the screws up, check that the slot
is large enough for it to smoothly slide
to the end stops in both directions.
Make sure to de-burr all the holes
on both sides before fitting the connectors.
Front panel
You will also need to drill some
holes in the front panel, or if possible,
enlarge existing holes. Make sure you
don’t compromise the insulation for
the existing mains switch when doing
so as you will want to re-use it.
As you can see from the photos,
we drilled a hole at the left end for
a 6.35mm headphone socket and enlarged existing holes at right, near the
power switch, for the 16mm volume
control pot and 5mm power LED. You
may also have to cut away some of the
internal structure of the front panel
in order to get these to fit. We used a
plastic bezel to make the power LED
a snug fit in the hole, then glued it in
place using hot melt glue; you could
also use silicone sealant.
If there are any remaining holes in
the front panel near the mains switch,
file a piece of plastic to the shape of
each hole and glue it in place. We
used black plastic, to match the existing front panel, and glued them with
cyanoacrylate (“super glue”). As you
can see, the resulting seams are quite
subtle.
First place the amplifier board near the
front-left corner and mark out its four
corner hole positions in the base. Then
drop the power supply PCB in at left
rear, close to but not right up against
the rear panel, and mark out its four
mounting hole positions.
Mark out two more holes, just to the
right of the power supply board, one
roughly in line with the rear mounting
holes and the other about 50mm closer
to the front of the case. These will be
used to hold a small Presspahn shield
in place, for extra safety.
With the DAC in position, mark
the locations directly below its four
mounting holes (eg, using a sharp drill
bit) although note that you may not be
able to fit pillars to suit all four if you
are putting the RCA sockets and switch
underneath it; also consider where the
wiring for these will go. Two or three
mounting holes are sufficient.
Finally, choose a location for the
MiniReg near the amplifier and DAC
boards and mark out positions for its
mounting holes too.
You can then remove all the modules from the case, drill all the holes to
3mm and de-burr them. There should
be about 17 mounting holes in total.
Testing the power supply
You can now temporarily install the
power supply PCB in the case, with
the mains connectors towards the rear
and plug in the mains cord and switch.
Make sure that the mains cord goes
into the right socket, ie, that closest to
the transformer. Ensure the fuse is in
place and the cover clipped on.
It’s a good idea to connect a DMM (or
two) to the low voltage outputs with
short lengths of wire (that can’t short
together!) and clip leads so that you
can check the output without having
to hold probes in place. But you can
use regular probes as long as you are
careful not to go anywhere near the
mains side of thing while the unit is
plugged in.
Check that there is no continuity
between either mains plug pin and
the case and that there are no loose
conductors near the power supply
board and switch the unit’s mains
switch to on. Then stand back, plug
in the mains cord and switch on the
power point. Check the voltages at the
output screw terminal of the power
supply. You should get pretty close to
20V between the middle terminal and
those on either side, with the positive
output being to the left. Ours measured
around +21.5V and -21.5V.
If that tests OK, switch off and
unplug the unit. If you didn’t get anything, there could be an open circuit
connection somewhere on the board
while if the fuse blows, that suggests
there is a short circuit somewhere. In
either case, you will have to remove
the power supply board and inspect
it carefully.
Wiring it up
With the modules built and all the
holes in the case drilled or cut and
de-burred, all that’s left is to fit the
modules and wire them up. We’ll go
through these remaining steps in Part
3 next month and also present some
performance data for the complete
amplifier.
SC
Module mounting holes
The next step is to drill a series of
3mm holes in the bottom of the case
for mounting the various modules.
siliconchip.com.au
Here’s a view from the back to the front, showing how we made the bits fit into
what was originally a set-top-box case. Once the lid goes on you’d never know!
December 2013 87
DAB+ &
Internet Tuner
Altronics
A2696
Adding digital radio to your hifi set-up is a logical move, as it
gives you better sound and more stations to listen to. But why be
limited to broadcasters in your city? This digital tuner will access
the Internet and bring you many thousands of radio stations from
across the world, catering for all preferences.
I
F YOU WOULD like to add digital
radio to your hifi system, you will
find the task surprisingly difficult. You
might think that you could replace
your amplifier with one that has an
in-built digital tuner but nearly all
amplifier/tuner combinations on the
market only support analog (AM/FM)
broadcasts. Even individual component tuners are hard to find these days
and if you do find one, the chances are
that it would be analog only.
This is where Altronics comes to
the rescue with the Opus One A2696
which is a component DAB+ and FM
tuner styled to fit within a component
hifi set-up. It’s not your normal radio
receiver though – it takes the concept
of a digital radio to a whole new level.
That’s because in addition to receiv88 Silicon Chip
ing DAB+ and FM stations, this tuner
can also connect to the internet and
find radio stations there. This means
that you can listen to a radio station
in another country as if it was a local
broadcaster. You are spoiled for choice
here as the internet has thousands of
stations with a mind-boggling range
of programs and content.
But that’s not all the Opus One
A2696 can do – it can also locate and
play podcasts hosted on the internet.
For example, if you have missed this
morning’s ABC AM program, you
can later look it up and listen to it
using this tuner, just as if it was being
broadcast live.
Other sources of audio that this remarkable appliance can play include
music on a computer that is connected
to your home network or audio files
saved on a USB memory stick.
DAB+ and FM
The DAB+ receiver works as expected. It covers the Australian DAB+
broadcast range (174.982-239.2MHz)
and we found that it was easy to set
up and find the local DAB+ stations.
The antenna input is a standard 75Ω
PAL socket and in most cases, you can
get away with connecting this to your
TV antenna via a splitter. However,
digital radio is vertically polarised in
Australia so you will get a better signal
with a dedicated antenna, especially
in marginal signal areas.
During our tests using a TV antenna,
we occasionally experienced DAB+
signal drop-outs, even though the
siliconchip.com.au
Review by
GEOFF GRAHAM
panel) and a wired 10/100 Ethernet
socket. WiFi support includes both
802.11b & 802.11g, along with a comprehensive range of security protocols
(WEP, TKIP, WPA, WPA2 & WPS).
Set-up is reasonably easy and we
had it linked to our router in just a few
minutes. Once you are online, you will
find that tuning into an internet radio
station is ridiculously easy. No special
knowledge is required and even the
most technically challenged would
be able to quickly find something to
listen to.
Fig.1: this is the standard station readout shown on the LCD when you are
listening to DAB+ radio.
Finding a station
The A2696 has
pushbutton
controls for
tuning, station
information
and mode and
menu selection.
It’s supplied
complete with
an infrared
remote control.
digital TV signal from the antenna was
reasonably strong.
The FM section of the tuner uses
the same antenna. The FM receiver
is nothing special but it does support
RDS which is a protocol for embedding small amounts of digital information in the FM signal. Examples
include time, station identification
and program information. If the FM
broadcaster is using RDS, the data
transmitted will be displayed on the
tuner’s LCD screen.
Internet radio
In order to access the internetrelated functions, you obviously need
to connect the unit to the internet. The
A2696 provides for this by including
both WiFi (via an antenna on the rear
siliconchip.com.au
The tuner has access to an estimated
20,000 radio stations (we did not try to
count them), so the range is truly huge
compared to the dozen or so that you
might receive via DAB+. Such a large
selection needs some way of narrowing the choice so that you can zero in
on what you like and the A2696 does
an excellent job in this regard.
First of all, you can narrow the
search by selecting the genre that you
are interested in and/or the country
where the station is located. Other
options include selecting from new
stations, most popular stations or your
favourite stations.
If, for example, you choose the genre
option, the tuner will then present
you with a suitable list (Blues, Celtic,
Classic Rock etc). After choosing from
this list, you then have a sub-choice of
country, most popular, etc. Finally, you
will reach a list of stations displayed
by name. From there, it’s just a matter
of pressing the button to select one and
if you like it, you can add it to your
favourites.
Of course, you also have other ways
of finding a station. You can start by
region (Africa, Asia, Europe etc), then
select by country, then genre. Another
option is to search by name (or a fragment of a name) or you can search stations that you recently listened to etc.
Navigating through all of these options and menus is easily done using
a large front-panel jog-wheel which is
pushed in to select an entry.
Two other front panel controls, the
MENU and BACK buttons, complete
the menu navigation facilities. Despite
a few peculiarities that can sometimes
trip you up, the menu system is generally logical and intuitive.
Bandwidth requirements
In order to stream audio over the
Fig.2: when you want to find an
Internet radio station you can search
by location, by genre, or by name.
Alternatively you can look up lists of
popular or new stations.
Fig.3: if you decide to search the
Internet by genre this is the sort of list
that you will be presented with. The
list is compiled by Frontier Silicon
who send it to your tuner.
Fig.4: if you search for an Internet
radio station by country you first have
to select the region and this is the
typical selection.
internet, you need to have a download
bandwidth of at least 256kb/s and preferably 512bb/s. For readers who have
an unlimited download plan, listening
to internet radio will be essentially
free. However, if you are on a limited
plan, you need to consider how much
December 2013 89
then be played just as if it was being
broadcast live.
Network streaming
Inside the A2696 – the Venice 6.2 module is the shiny metal box on the left
and is mounted on a PCB along with some support circuitry. The large PCB
on the right is the power supply while another PCB at the front holds the
front panel display and controls. The Venice module does all the work and
everything else is just there to support the module.
of your download allocation will be
consumed in this way.
Typically, internet stations stream
music in the MP3 format at 32-192kb/s.
Most high-quality stations use 128kb/s
and at that data rate, you will end up
downloading about one megabyte a
minute.
You can use this rule of thumb to
Fig.5: a typical display while listening
to a station in sunny Port Douglas –
and we are on the opposite side of the
country.
Fig.6: we searched for podcasts broad
cast by the ABC and this was the result.
90 Silicon Chip
work out your own usage but as an
example, if you listened to internet radio for four hours per day, every day of
the week, you would download about
seven gigabytes (7GB) per month.
In our tests, the tuner coped well
with internet congestion and interruptions. If it did lose the connection, it
would quietly retry until it reconnected
and then resume playing the program.
It was only when we saturated our
internet link with a huge high-speed
file download that any real problems
began, with the tuner struggling with
numerous and lengthy drop-outs.
Generally, the quality of the audio
streamed over the internet is excellent
and after a while you tend to forget
where your music is coming from. We
took a liking to 106.3 in Port Douglas
(thousands of kilometres away) and
it was strange hearing them refer to
“sunny Port Douglas” while it was wet
and windy in our location.
As previously stated, you can also
listen to podcasts hosted on the internet. Once again, the choice is huge,
with almost 10,000 podcasts available.
The procedure for selecting a
podcast is similar to selecting radio
stations (ie, by genre, country etc).
Once you have found the desired
podcast, you then go on to select the
episode. The selected program will
If you have music stored on a
computer in your network, you can
play that using the A2696 and DLNA.
DLNA is a set of standards created by
the Digital Living Network Alliance
to enable the sharing of digital media
between multimedia devices such as
servers, players, TVs etc. Windows
7/8 supports DLNA out of the box
but Macintosh users need to run some
extra software to get going.
When you connect to a DLNA server,
you will be presented with a set of
choices such genre, artist, rating etc.
These options depend on the DLNA
server and the tags in your music files
and help you when sorting through a
large media collection.
The decoders in the tuner can play
a wide range of formats including
FLAC, WAV, AAC, MP3, WMA and
RealAudio – so you have plenty of
choice. The A2696 will even find and
play playlists stored on your server.
As if that’s not enough, you can also
plug a USB memory stick into a socket
on the front panel of the tuner and
play your music from there. The USB
playback facility supports the same
range of audio formats as network
streaming and navigation through the
files is done using the folder structure
on the USB stick.
Using the A2696
We were unable to perform any
technical tests but the sound produced
was clean and noise-free. There was an
over-emphasis in the bass which may
have been added by the broadcaster
but this can be corrected using an
equaliser built into the tuner. Disappointingly, this only works on the
analog output, not the digital TOSLINK output.
When not navigating the menu
system, the large jogwheel becomes
the volume control – but again it is
only effective on the analog output.
It’s a puzzle as to why a tuner needs a
volume control in the first place and
this control would be much better
employed as a station selector.
For such a complex device, the
A2696 is remarkably easy to drive.
About the only complaint is that the
small 2.5-inch LCD display is only
legible when viewed straight on which
can be a problem if your hifi gear is on
siliconchip.com.au
Thee rear panel carries a TOSLINK connector for digital audio, two RCA connectors for analog audio out, a wired Ethernet
(LAN) socket and a WiFi (WLAN) antenna socket. There’s also a 75Ω PAL socket for a DAB+/FM antenna. Note the 2-way
labelling – very handy if you’re looking down from above!
a low shelf. In that case, you will have
to kneel down to follow the menus.
To get around this problem, you can
use an application called “Libretto”
which runs on your smartphone. This
provides a comprehensive remote control and display for the tuner, complete
with the menus.
The manual describes the application running on an iPhone or iPod
touch but in our case, we tried the
Android version as suggested on the
Altronics website. Unfortunately, this
version didn’t work with the A2696.
The tuner lets you save favourite
stations for each mode and by using
this facility, you can quickly return
to them. A remote control is supplied
and one of its features is that it allows
you to jump to a favourite station with
a single button press.
Build quality
The A2696 has a solid feel with its
black metal case and textured front
panel. The LCD and power indicator
are both blue, in keeping with modern
styling (green is just so yesterday!).
On the back panel there is a wired
Ethernet socket and the WiFi antenna.
Also on the rear are two RCA connectors for analog audio out and an optical
TOSLINK connector for digital audio.
The collection is rounded out by a 75Ω
PAL socket for the DAB+/FM antenna.
Like many electronic goods these
days, this tuner is a generic product
built in China. It’s also available
in other guises such as the Sansui
WLD+201L in the UK, which is identical except for the remote control.
Inside the tuner
We couldn’t resist opening the
case and were surprised by what we
found. Mostly it was open space but
what was interesting was that all the
hard work – the DAB+ tuner, Ethernet,
WiFi, internet access, DLNA, USB
siliconchip.com.au
etc – was performed by a small 40 x
110mm metal-clad module just a few
millimetres thick.
This is the Venice 6.2 module manufactured by Frontier Silicon. As you
can see from the photograph, it has a
DAB+/FM antenna input at one end,
a WiFi antenna input at the other end
and a 60-pin connector for control
and audio output along one edge. The
remainder of the circuitry in the tuner
is basically just the power supply and
supporting circuitry for this module.
Frontier Silicon, by the way, is a
privately-owned UK company that has
built a large stake in the digital radio
market. Their modules are used in
most digital radios and SILICON CHIP
used the Venice 7 module in the HighQuality DAB+/FM Tuner described in
October-December 2010. The Venice
6.2 module, however, takes things to
a much higher level with its internet
access, including WiFi, the TCP/IP
protocol stack and much more.
Frontier Silicon also provide a reference design for a complete DAB+/
internet tuner based on the Venice 6.2
module and this tuner is essentially
an implementation of that design.
Purchasing this technology is probably expensive but it does mean that
the manufacturer of the A2696 did not
have to spend time designing complex
digital circuitry and therefore could
quickly enter the market.
Station catalog
Another area where Frontier Silicon
has had a hand in the A2696 is the
catalog of internet radio stations –
necessary in order for users to make
selections. We discovered the importance of a catalog when we attempted
an internet radio project of our own
some time ago. Eventually, we had
to give up on the project because we
couldn’t find an easy way of locating
and connecting to a station.
Most internet stations broadcast for
free but the only way you can listen to
them is by finding their website and
clicking on a button to start streaming
to your PC or smartphone, etc. Even
then, the details of the protocol (port
number, etc) are usually hidden.
There are companies (eg shoutcast.
com) that index internet radio stations
but they require a hefty fee for access.
To address this issue, Frontier Silicon
set up a separate organisation (www.
wifiradio-frontier.com) whose job it
is to build an internet station catalog.
The Venice 6.2 module contains the
security codes to access this catalog via
an internet connection. For example,
when you select by genre, the list
to be displayed will be sent to your
tuner by Frontier Silicon. Similarly,
when you select a station, the access
details (IP address, port number etc)
will also come from Frontier Silicon.
This catalog is not stored in your tuner
and is not available publicly – only
authorised products can access it.
This raises an interesting question:
what happens if Frontier Silicon stops
funding their indexing service (not
that we’re suggesting that this is going
to happen)? The answer is that you
would completely lose the internet
function in your tuner. There is no
provision to manually enter a station’s
(or a podcast’s) details into the tuner,
nor is there the ability to use an alternative indexing service.
So if that ever happened, you would
be limited to just DAB+ or FM stations.
Wrap up
The Opus One A2696 is well designed and deserves full marks for its
comprehensive features and ease of
use. It would be an excellent addition
to most hifi set-ups. The list price of
the tuner is normally $399 but Altronics currently has it on special until the
SC
end of December for $319.
December 2013 91
Vintage Radio
By Ian Batty
the first such application of this material in a portable radio worldwide.
Of course, size was another important ingredient in the design of the
41-47. It’s easily carried in one hand
and can be operated using the thumb.
The 41-47: first look
The Kriesler 41-47 can be easily carried in one hand, with both the tuning and
volume controls operated by the thumb. Power comes from three 1.5V cells.
Too Cool for School: Kriesler
41-47 “Mini” transistor radio
Manufactured in Australia during the
mid-1960s, the Kriesler 41-47 is a pocketsize 6-transistor radio with some rather
interesting features. It not only looks “cool”
but was also a good performer, despite its
relatively simple circuit design.
I
MAGINE THIS: a kid in the mid1960s takes his new “trannie” to
school and is showing it off during
class. One of the teachers confiscates
it, handing it back at the end of the
day with instructions to never bring
it in again.
I can well imagine the kid not really
understanding the reasons for this but
concluding that this marvellous piece
of technology was just “too cool” for
his fuddy-duddy teacher to “get”.
If looks are important, then the
Kriesler 41-47 “Mini” pretty much
beats the competition hands down
(as did another Mini of the decade).
Its sleek looks are just, well, “cool”.
92 Silicon Chip
It features a black case with two large
silver speaker grilles, a large side dial,
thumbwheel controls and a carry strap.
The case is a single moulding with a
plastic hinge joining the two “clamshells” and even rival engineers of the
day reckoned that it was an outstanding piece of design.
And so they should have – the
Kriesler Mini was designed by Harry
Widmer, the design director at the
Kriesler Radio Company of Sydney
(the company was then owned by
Philips). In 1966, he won the prestigious F. H. Edwards Laurel award for
designing the set’s polypropylene plastic case, the judges noting that this was
The Kriesler 41-47’s circuit is similar to the Bush TR82C described in
the September issue, although the
presentation and method of assembly
is quite different. For example, unlike
the TR82C, the 41-47 uses a printed
circuit board (PCB) to accommodate
most of the parts (the TR82C used
point-to-point wiring and a metal
chassis).
Despite its obvious advantages,
PCB construction can restrict access
to the circuit for servicing. That’s
because most sets mount the board
“component side” up, leaving the
copper tracks on the “inside” of the
case. In addition, the transistors are
often mounted close down on the PCB
on short lead lengths, making it difficult to connect a test probe to make
measurements or for signal injection.
Some early transistor set manufacturers mounted the resistors flat
against the board, making it easy to
measure voltages at each end. Others,
to save space, stood them upright, with
one end right down against the board.
This meant that access could only be
gained at one end without lifting or
removing the PCB.
As a result, AC and RF measurements, and especially signal injection,
can be more difficult. Regency’s TR1, for example, used neutralisation
components in its IF section and these
could be tapped onto fairly easily for
signal injection. By contrast, sets such
as the Kriesler 41-47 do not offer such
connections, so any detailed analysis
must be done with the PCB either
completely removed or swung out
from the case.
Circuit description
Like the TR82C, the 41-47 uses a
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the circuit is a fairly standard superhet design with a selfoscillating mixer, two IF stages and a 3-transistor audio amplifier.
fairly standard circuit and as mentioned, the two are similar. Fig.1 shows
the details. It employs a self-oscillating
mixer, two IF stages, a diode detector
(OA90) and an audio driver feeding a
push-pull transformer-coupled output
stage.
In all, the 41-47 uses a total of six
transistors (the TR82C has seven)
These are all Philips/Mullard series
germanium PNP types – alloy-diffused in the RF/IF section (AF116N
& AF117N) and alloy-junction in the
audio stages (AC126 & AC132).
Like most “broadcast-band-only”
transistor sets, the 41-47 uses a “cut”
tuning gang, with dissimilar aerial and
oscillator sections, This removes the
need for a padder and allows better
aerial-oscillator tracking.
The mixer stage is based on an
AF116N and uses collector-emitter
feedback, thereby reducing the amount
of local oscillator radiation back into
the antenna rod. As in the TR82C, this
mixer lacks the damping diode included in the original Mullard circuit
design to give extended AGC action.
Diode D1 (OA91) in the feedback circuit is presumably there to stabilise the
oscillator’s operation as the receiver is
tuned across the broadcast band.
IF stages
The mixer’s output feeds the untapped tuned primary of the first IF
transformer (IF1). This has a lowimpedance untapped secondary to
match into the low base impedance of
the first IF amplifier stage. The tuning
capacitor, by the way, is labelled as
“3600” and I suspect that this value
(some 20 times higher than normal)
is a misprint.
The two following IF transformers
(IF2 & IF3) both use tapped, tuned primaries and untapped low-impedance
secondaries, with the two AF117N
transistors operating as IF amplifier stages. The first stage is biased
to operate with a collector current of
about 0.5mA. On strong signals, the
AGC circuit acts to reduce this bias to
reduce the gain.
The second IF operates, as usual,
with fixed bias. Note that both stages
are biased using a voltage divider and
an emitter resistor, to give a predictable operating point and to ensure
stability against temperature changes.
The emitter resistors are bypassed at
the intermediate frequency to prevent
degenerative feedback and loss of gain.
This is the view inside the Kriesler 41-47, with the major circuit sections labelled. A large ferrite rod antenna ensures
good signal pick-up, while power is supplied by three 1.5V AA cells.
siliconchip.com.au
December 2013 93
The dial and the thumbwheel-operated tuning and volume controls are all laid out on a panel along one side of the
case. This panel also carries a small jack socket for an earphone.
As previously stated, the RF & IF
transistors are AF116/117 diffusedjunction types. Their feedback capacitance is so low that no neutralisation
is needed at 455kHz.
The demodulator is a conventional
diode (OA90) at the output of IF3 and
the detected audio is fed to the volume
control via a 470Ω resistor. In addition,
it is filtered using a 4.7kΩ resistor and
6.4µF capacitor to provide the AGC
voltage for the first IF stage. The diode’s
output is positive-going, so it “bucks”
the negative bias applied to the first IF
base, thereby reducing the transistor’s
collector current and its gain.
As with all AGC systems, the higher
the signal voltage, the greater the gain
reduction. The net effect is to keep the
audio volume constant so that it is
independent of the RF signal strength
from different stations.
The audio driver stage (AC126) is
biased in much the same way as the
IF amplifier stages. However, it uses a
much larger emitter bypass capacitor
which is effective at audio frequencies.
Output stage
The AC126 drives the primary of
a transformer which acts as a phase
splitter. Its centre-tapped secondary in
turn drives a class-B push-pull output
stage based on two AC132 transistors.
These then drive the centre-tapped
primary winding of the speaker transformer, with the secondary then driving an 8-ohm loudspeaker.
A headphone socket is also wired
in parallel with the speaker and automatically switches the speaker out of
circuit when a set of headphones is
plugged in. Note the 4.7nF capacitors
between the collectors and bases of the
output transistors. These provide negative feedback at high frequencies, to
reduce distortion in the output stage.
A voltage divider consisting of a
3.9kΩ resistor and a 130Ω NTC thermistor normally provides about 160mV
of base bias for the output stage. However, as its temperature increases, the
thermistor’s resistance falls and the
bias automatically reduces.
The combined effect of the thermistor and transistor characteristics
ensures a fairly constant quiescent
collector current in the output stage,
regardless of temperature changes.
This ensures that the output transistors have enough bias to minimise
crossover distortion at all operating
temperatures while eliminating the
possibility of damage due to thermal
runaway.
A small common emitter resistor
(4.7Ω) provides some local feedback
and helps balance the differing gains
in the two output transistors.
In the Bush TR82C, the bias was set
via a trimpot to give the lowest possible crossover distortion, a feature that
the 41-47 lacks. On the other hand,
the TR82C has no form of temperature
compensation in its bias network and
This solder-side view of the PCB shows the dial-drive arrangement used in the 41-47. The PCB is easily removed from the
case and the set is straightforward to service.
94 Silicon Chip
siliconchip.com.au
may have been more prone to failure
when operated in the extreme temperature conditions often encountered
in Australia.
Dead on arrival
When I first acquired my Kriesler
41-47, it was completely dead. One
common problem I’ve found with such
sets is corroded/tarnished contacts on
headphone jacks and power switches.
The 41-47’s headphone jack was one
such offender but some 800 grade wetand-dry soon had it clean again. That
done, the moving contact in the headphone switch was re-tensioned and
the output stage then began working.
This revealed that the volume pot
was also noisy but that was easily fixed
with a spray of contact cleaner. The
set then appeared to be “quiet” – too
quiet in fact. Most six (or more) transistor sets have enough gain for mixer
noise to be quite obvious at full audio
volume but not this one.
Further investigation revealed that
the IF stages were badly misaligned.
The IF transformers have slotted plastic adjustments and these had obviously been fiddled with by someone
who didn’t know what they were doing
at some stage in the set’s past. Careful
adjustment with a plastic screwdriver
gradually brought the IF stages back
to life, the ‘noise’ increasing as it was
brought back into alignment.
Next, I turned my attention to the
front-end which was intermittent. The
100Ω resistor between the antenna and
the mixer circuit was “touchy” and
resoldering it eliminated a dry joint
at one end. The tuning was also a bit
erratic, due to the tuning-gang shifting
about. This was fixed by removing the
dial drum and tightening its mounting
screws which had become quite loose,
after which the front-end alignment
was adjusted.
How good is it?
With the radio now operating correctly, I set about checking its performance. This showed that the audio
response from the volume control
to the speaker terminals is rather
ordinary, covering from 210Hz to just
3kHz. The 4.7nF feedback capacitors
are among the culprits. They were left
in-circuit though, as the three highly
selective IF transformers reduce the
high-frequency -3dB point to just
1.8kHz.
The audio performance was adsiliconchip.com.au
equate, with a total harmonic distortion (THD) of around 5.5% at 1kHz
for a 10mW output. This THD figure is
higher than expected and is partly due
to the fact that the output stage bias
lacks adjustment. Another common
cause is output transistor mismatch
although, in this case, the gains of
the two AC132s tested within 10% of
each other.
At 50mW, the distortion was around
6%, rising to around 7% as the set just
begins to clip at 100mW output.
The selectivity is ±23kHz at -60dB or
better, which is reasonable. The same
goes for the sensitivity, although it’s
less sensitive than the TR82C which
has an extra audio stage. Its best sensitivity figures were obtained at the
extremes of the band (ie, 200µV/m at
540kHz and 120µV/m at 1600kHz) but
at a relatively poor 15dB S/N ratio.
Again, it’s not as good as the Bush
TR82C but it is comparable to the
7-transistor Raytheon T-2500.
Unfortunately, the AGC is not particularly good, a 3dB increase in audio
output requiring only about an 11dB
signal increase (from 1mV to 3.5mV).
As a result, it’s necessary to ride the
volume control when tuning across
the band.
The set does, however, withstand
RF/IF overload much better than the
Bush TR82C. It will accept an RF level
of nearly 100mV/m before showing
significant distortion due to RF/IF
overload.
Summary
While this set is less complicated
than the TR82C, it performs quite
well for a relatively simple design. It’s
easily carried in one hand, the tuning
and volume controls can be thumboperated, and the slide-rule dial gives
clear and accurate tuning indications.
Basically, it’s one of those sets that
just begs to be picked up and used. In
a word, it’s “cool”.
Further Reading
If you’ve not already done so, take a
look at Kevin Chant’s excellent website
at www.kevinchant.com (“Kev’s free
resource for [mainly] Aussie vintage
wireless information, circuits, pictures, parts etc”). There you’ll find lots
of vintage radio circuits and a great
deal of other useful information.
In addition, take a look at Ernst Erb’s
excellent radio museum site at www.
SC
radiomuseum.org
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December 2013 95
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Log on to our secure website: siliconchip.com.au, click on “SHOP” and follow the links
4 Via EMAIL (24 hours, 7 days)
email silicon<at>siliconchip.com.au – Clearly tell us what you want and include your contact and credit card details
4 Via FAX (24 hours, 7 days)
(02) 9939 2648 (INT: 612 9939 2648). Clearly tell us what you want and include your contact and credit card details
4 Via MAIL (24 hours, 7 days)
PO Box 139, Collaroy NSW 2097. Clearly tell us what you want and include your contact and credit card details
4 Via PHONE (9am-5pm, Mon-Fri)
Call (02) 9939 3295 (INT 612 9939 3295) – have your order ready, including contact and credit card details!
YES! You can also order or renew your
SILICON CHIP subscription via any of these methods as well!
PRE-PROGRAMMED MICROS
Price for any of these micros is just $15.00 each + $10 p&p per order#
As a service to readers, SILICON CHIP ONLINESHOP stocks microcontrollers and microprocessors used in new projects (from 2012 on) and some
selected older projects – pre-programmed and ready to fly!
Some micros from copyrighted and/or contributed projects may not be available.
PIC12F675-I/P
PIC16F1507-I/P
PIC16F88-E/P
PIC16F88-I/P
PIC16LF88-I/P
PIC16LF88-I/SO
PIC16F877A-I/P
PIC18F2550-I/SP
PIC18F45K80
PIC18F4550-I/P
UHF Remote Switch (Jan09), Ultrasonic Cleaner (Aug10),
Ultrasonic Anti-fouling (Sep10), Cricket/Frog (Jun12) Do Not Disturb (May13)
IR-to-UHF Converter (Jul13), UHF-to-IR Converter (Jul13)
PC Birdies *2 chips – $15 pair* (Aug13)
Wideband Oxygen Sensor (Jun-Jul12)
Hi Energy Ignition (Nov/Dec12), Speedo Corrector (Sept13),
Auto Headlight Controller (Oct13)
Projector Speed (Apr11), Vox (Jun11), Ultrasonic Water Tank Level (Sep11),
Quizzical (Oct11) Ultra LD Preamp (Nov11), 10-Channel Remote Control
Receiver (Jun13), Revised 10-Channel Remote Control Receiver (Jul13)
Garbage Reminder (Jan13), Bellbird (Dec13)
LED Ladybird (Apr13)
6-Digit GPS Clock (May-Jun09), Lab Digital Pot (Jul10)
Semtest (Feb-May12)
Batt Capacity Meter (Jun09), Intelligent Fan Controller (Jul10)
USB Power Monitor (Dec12)
GPS Car Computer (Jan10), GPS Boat Computer (Oct10)
USB MIDIMate (Oct11)
USB Data Logger (Dec10-Feb11)
Digital Spirit Level (Aug11), G-Force Meter (Nov11)
Intelligent Dimmer (Apr09)
Maximite (Mar11), miniMaximite (Nov11), Colour Maximite (Sept/Oct12)
GPS Tracker (Nov13)
Stereo Audio Delay/DSP (Nov13)
Digital Audio Signal Generator (Mar-May10), Digital Lighting Controller
(Oct-Dec10), SportSync (May11), Digital Audio Delay (Dec11) Level (Sep11)
Quizzical (Oct11), Ultra-LD Preamp (Nov11), LED Musicolor (Nov12)
dsPIC33FJ64MC802-E/P
Induction Motor Speed Controller (revised) (Aug13)
dsPIC33FJ128GP306-I/PT CLASSiC DAC (Feb-May 13)
ATTiny861
VVA Thermometer/Thermostat (Mar10), Rudder Position Indicator (Jul11)
ATTiny2313
Remote-Controlled Timer (Aug10)
ATMega48
Stereo DAC (Sep-Nov09)
PIC18F14K50
PIC18F27J53-I/SP
PIC18LF14K22
PIC18F1320-I/SO
PIC32MX795F512H-80I/PT
PIC32MX250F128B-I/SP
PIC32MX470F512H-I/PT
dsPIC33FJ128GP802-I/SP
When ordering, be sure to nominate BOTH the micro required AND the project for which it must be programmed.
SPECIALISED COMPONENTS, SHORT-FORM KITS, ETC
RF Probe All SMD parts
G-FORCE METER/ACCELEROMETER Short form kit
(Aug13) $5.00
(Aug11/Nov11)
$44.50
$40.00
(contains PCB (04108111), programmed PIC micro, MMA8451Q accelerometer chip and 4 Mosfets)
DIGITAL SPIRIT LEVEL Short form kit
(Aug11/Nov11)
$44.50
$40.00
(contains PCB (04108111), programmed PIC micro, MMA8451Q accelerometer chip and 4 Mosfets)
CLASSiC DAC Semi kit
(Feb-May13)
$45.00
Includes three hard-to-get SMD ICs: CS8416-CZZ, CS4398-CZZ and PLL1708DBQ plus
an accurate 27MHz crystal and ten 3mm blue LEDs with diffused lenses
“LUMP IN COAX” MINI MIXER SMD parts kit:
(Jun13)
$20.00
Includes: 2 x OPA4348AID, 1 x BQ2057CSN, 2 x DMP2215L, 1 x BAT54S, 1 x 0.22Ω shunt
LF-HF UP-CONVERTER SMD parts kit:
(Jun13)
$15.00
Includes: FXO-HC536R-125 and SA602AD and all SMD passive components
ISL9V5036P3 IGBT
(Nov/Dec12)
$10.00
As used in high energy ignition and Jacob’s Ladder
(Feb13)
2.5GHz Frequency Counter 3 x 4-digit blue LED displays(Dec12/Jan13)
$15.00
ERA-2SM+ Wideband MMC and ADCH-80+ Wideband Choke
IPP230N06L3 N-Channel logic level Mosfets
$5.00
As used in a variety of SILICON CHIP Projects (Pack of 2)
P&P – $10 Per order#
ZXCT1009 Current Shunt Monitor IC
(Oct12)
$5.00
LF-HF Up-converter Omron G5V-1 5V SPDT 5V relay (June13)
SMD parts for SiDRADIO
(Oct13)
$20.00
As used in DCC Reverse Loop Controller/Block Switch (Pack of 2)
Same as LF-UF Upconverter parts but includes 5V relay and BF998 dual-gate Mosfet.
GPS Tracker
(Nov13)
MCP16301 SMD regulator IC and 15H inductor
$2.00
$5.00
STEREO AUDIO DELAY
(Nov13)
WM8731 DAC IC and SMD capacitors.
$20.00
TENDA USB/SD AUDIO PLAYBACK MODULE (TD896 or 898) (Jan12)
JST CONNECTOR LEAD 3-WAY
(Jan12)
JST CONNECTOR LEAD 2-WAY
(Jan12)
$33.00
RADIO & HOBBIES ON DVD-ROM (Needs PC & reader to play!)
$62.00
n/a
$4.50
$3.45
12/13
LOOKING FOR TECHNICAL BOOKS? YOU’LL FIND THE COMPLETE LISTING OF ALL BOOKS AVAILABLE IN THE SILICON CHIP ONLINE BOOKSTORE – ON THE “BOOKS & DVDs” PAGES OF OUR WEBSITE
*All items subect to availability. Prices valid for month of magazine issue only. All prices in Australian dollars and included GST where applicable. # P&P prices are within Australia. O’seas? Please email for a quote
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD TO SUIT PROJECT:
PUBLISHED:
NOTE: These listings are for the PCB only – not a full kit. If you want a kit, contact the kit suppliers advertising in this issue.
Prices in GREEN are new lower prices: buy now while stocks last!
PCB CODE:
Price:
AM RADIO TRANSMITTER
JAN 1993
06112921 $25.00
CHAMP: SINGLE CHIP AUDIO AMPLIFIER
FEB 1994
01102941
$5.00
PRECHAMP: 2-TRANSISTOR PREAMPLIER
JUL 1994
01107941
$5.00
HEAT CONTROLLER
JULY 1998
10307981 $10.00
MINIMITTER FM STEREO TRANSMITTER
APR 2001
06104011 $25.00
MICROMITTER FM STEREO TRANSMITTER
DEC 2002
06112021 $10.00
SMART SLAVE FLASH TRIGGER
JUL 2003
13107031 $10.00
12AX7 VALVE AUDIO PREAMPLIFIER
NOV 2003
01111031 $25.00
POOR MAN’S METAL LOCATOR
MAY 2004
04105041 $10.00
BALANCED MICROPHONE PREAMP
AUG 2004
01108041 $25.00
LITTLE JIM AM TRANSMITTER
JAN 2006
06101062 $25.00
POCKET TENS UNIT
JAN 2006
11101061 $25.00
STUDIO SERIES RC MODULE
APRIL 2006
01104061 $25.00
ULTRASONIC EAVESDROPPER
AUG 2006
01208061 $25.00
RIAA PREAMPLIFIER
AUG 2006
01108061 $25.00
GPS FREQUENCY REFERENCE (A) (IMPROVED)
MAR 2007
04103073 $30.00
GPS FREQUENCY REFERENCE DISPLAY (B)
MAR 2007
04103072 $20.00
KNOCK DETECTOR
JUNE 2007
05106071 $25.00
SPEAKER PROTECTION AND MUTING MODULE
JULY 2007
01207071 $20.00
CDI MODULE SMALL PETROL MOTORS
MAY 2008
05105081 $15.00
LED/LAMP FLASHER
SEP 2008
11009081 $10.00
12V SPEED CONTROLLER/DIMMER (Use Hot Wire Cutter PCB from Dec 2010 [18112101])
USB-SENSING MAINS POWER SWITCH
JAN 2009
10101091 $45.00
DIGITAL AUDIO MILLIVOLTMETER
MAR 2009
04103091 $35.00
INTELLIGENT REMOTE-CONTROLLED DIMMER
APR 2009
10104091 $10.00
INPUT ATTENUATOR FOR DIG. AUDIO M’VOLTMETER
MAY 2009
04205091 $10.00
6-DIGIT GPS CLOCK
MAY 2009
04105091 $30.00
6-DIGIT GPS CLOCK DRIVER
JUNE 2009
07106091 $20.00
UHF ROLLING CODE TX
AUG 2009
15008091 $10.00
UHF ROLLING CODE RECEIVER
AUG 2009
15008092 $45.00
6-DIGIT GPS CLOCK AUTODIM ADD-ON
SEPT 2009
04208091
$5.00
STEREO DAC BALANCED OUTPUT BOARD
JAN 2010
01101101 $25.00
DIGITAL INSULATION METER
JUN 2010
04106101 $25.00
ELECTROLYTIC CAPACITOR REFORMER
AUG 2010
04108101 $40.00
ULTRASONIC ANTI-FOULING FOR BOATS
SEP 2010
04109101 $25.00
HEARING LOOP RECEIVER
SEP 2010
01209101 $25.00
S/PDIF/COAX TO TOSLINK CONVERTER
OCT 2010
01210101 $10.00
TOSLINK TO S/PDIF/COAX CONVERTER
OCT 2010
01210102 $10.00
DIGITAL LIGHTING CONTROLLER SLAVE UNIT
OCT 2010
16110102 $45.00
HEARING LOOP TESTER/LEVEL METER
NOV 2010
01111101 $25.00
UNIVERSAL USB DATA LOGGER
DEC 2010
04112101 $25.00
HOT WIRE CUTTER CONTROLLER
DEC 2010
18112101 $10.00
433MHZ SNIFFER
JAN 2011
06101111 $10.00
CRANIAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION
JAN 2011
99101111 $25.00
HEARING LOOP SIGNAL CONDITIONER
JAN 2011
01101111 $25.00
LED DAZZLER
FEB 2011
16102111 $20.00
12/24V 3-STAGE MPPT SOLAR CHARGER
FEB 2011
14102111 $15.00
SIMPLE CHEAP 433MHZ LOCATOR
FEB 2011
06102111
$5.00
THE MAXIMITE
MAR 2011
06103111 $15.00
UNIVERSAL VOLTAGE REGULATOR
MAR 2011
18103111 $10.00
12V 20-120W SOLAR PANEL SIMULATOR
MAR 2011
04103111 $10.00
MICROPHONE NECK LOOP COUPLER
MAR 2011
01209101 $25.00
PORTABLE STEREO HEADPHONE AMP
APRIL 2011
01104111 $10.00
CHEAP 100V SPEAKER/LINE CHECKER
APRIL 2011
04104111 $10.00
PROJECTOR SPEED CONTROLLER
APRIL 2011
13104111 $10.00
SPORTSYNC AUDIO DELAY
MAY 2011
01105111 $30.00
100W DC-DC CONVERTER
MAY 2011
11105111 $15.00
PHONE LINE POLARITY CHECKER
MAY 2011
12105111 $10.00
20A 12/24V DC MOTOR SPEED CONTROLLER MK2
JUNE 2011
11106111 $20.00
USB STEREO RECORD/PLAYBACK
JUNE 2011
07106111 $20.00
VERSATIMER/SWITCH
JUNE 2011
19106111 $25.00
USB BREAKOUT BOX
JUNE 2011
04106111 $10.00
ULTRA-LD MK3 200W AMP MODULE
JULY 2011
01107111 $25.00
PORTABLE LIGHTNING DETECTOR
JULY 2011
04107111 $20.00
RUDDER INDICATOR FOR POWER BOATS (4 PCBs)
JULY 2011
20107111-4 $80 per set
VOX
JULY 2011
01207111 $20.00
ELECTRONIC STETHOSCOPE
AUG 2011
01108111 $10.00
DIGITAL SPIRIT LEVEL/INCLINOMETER
AUG 2011
04108111 $10.00
ULTRASONIC WATER TANK METER
SEP 2011
04109111 $20.00
ULTRA-LD MK2 AMPLIFIER UPGRADE
SEP 2011
01209111
$5.00
ULTRA-LD MK3 AMPLIFIER POWER SUPPLY
SEP 2011
01109111 $25.00
HIFI STEREO HEADPHONE AMPLIFIER
SEP 2011
01309111 $20.00
GPS FREQUENCY REFERENCE (IMPROVED)
SEP 2011
04103073 $30.00
HEARING LOOP RECEIVER/NECK COUPLER
SEP 2011
01209101 $10.00
DIGITAL LIGHTING CONTROLLER LED SLAVE
OCT 2011
16110111 $30.00
USB MIDIMATE
OCT 2011
23110111 $25.00
QUIZZICAL QUIZ GAME
OCT 2011
08110111 $25.00
ULTRA-LD MK3 PREAMP & REMOTE VOL CONTROL
NOV 2011
01111111 $30.00
ULTRA-LD MK3 INPUT SWITCHING MODULE
NOV 2011
01111112 $20.00
ULTRA-LD MK3 SWITCH MODULE
NOV 2011
01111113 $10.00
ZENER DIODE TESTER
NOV 2011
04111111 $20.00
MINIMAXIMITE
NOV 2011
07111111 $10.00
ADJUSTABLE REGULATED POWER SUPPLY
DEC 2011
18112111
$5.00
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD TO SUIT PROJECT:
PUBLISHED:
PCB CODE:
Price:
DIGITAL AUDIO DELAY
DEC 2011
01212111 $25.00
DIGITAL AUDIO DELAY Front & Rear Panels
DEC 2011
01212112/3 $20 per set
AM RADIO
JAN 2012
06101121 $10.00
STEREO AUDIO COMPRESSOR
JAN 2012
01201121 $30.00
STEREO AUDIO COMPRESSOR FRONT & REAR PANELS
JAN 2012
0120112P1/2 $20.00
3-INPUT AUDIO SELECTOR (SET OF 2 BOARDS)
JAN 2012
01101121/2 $30 per set
CRYSTAL DAC
FEB 2012
01102121 $20.00
SWITCHING REGULATOR
FEB 2012
18102121
$5.00
SEMTEST LOWER BOARD
MAR 2012
04103121 $40.00
SEMTEST UPPER BOARD
MAR 2012
04103122 $40.00
SEMTEST FRONT PANEL
MAR 2012
04103123 $75.00
INTERPLANETARY VOICE
MAR 2012
08102121 $10.00
12/24V 3-STAGE MPPT SOLAR CHARGER REV.A
MAR 2012
14102112 $20.00
SOFT START SUPPRESSOR
APR 2012
10104121 $10.00
RESISTANCE DECADE BOX
APR 2012
04104121 $20.00
RESISTANCE DECADE BOX PANEL/LID
APR 2012
04104122 $20.00
1.5kW INDUCTION MOTOR SPEED CONT. (New V2 PCB) APR (DEC) 2012 10105122 $35.00
HIGH TEMPERATURE THERMOMETER MAIN PCB
MAY 2012
21105121 $30.00
HIGH TEMPERATURE THERMOMETER Front & Rear Panels MAY 2012
21105122/3 $20 per set
MIX-IT! 4 CHANNEL MIXER
JUNE 2012
01106121 $20.00
PIC/AVR PROGRAMMING ADAPTOR BOARD
JUNE 2012
24105121 $30.00
CRAZY CRICKET/FREAKY FROG
JUNE 2012
08109121 $10.00
CAPACITANCE DECADE BOX
JULY 2012
04106121 $20.00
CAPACITANCE DECADE BOX PANEL/LID
JULY 2012
04106122 $20.00
WIDEBAND OXYGEN CONTROLLER MK2
JULY 2012
05106121 $20.00
WIDEBAND OXYGEN CONTROLLER MK2 DISPLAY BOARD JULY 2012
05106122 $10.00
SOFT STARTER FOR POWER TOOLS
JULY 2012
10107121 $10.00
DRIVEWAY SENTRY MK2
AUG 2012
03107121 $20.00
MAINS TIMER
AUG 2012
10108121 $10.00
CURRENT ADAPTOR FOR SCOPES AND DMMS
AUG 2012
04108121 $20.00
USB VIRTUAL INSTRUMENT INTERFACE
SEPT 2012
24109121 $30.00
USB VIRTUAL INSTRUMENT INT. FRONT PANEL
SEPT 2012
24109122 $30.00
BARKING DOG BLASTER
SEPT 2012
25108121 $20.00
COLOUR MAXIMITE
SEPT 2012
07109121 $20.00
SOUND EFFECTS GENERATOR
SEPT 2012
09109121 $10.00
NICK-OFF PROXIMITY ALARM
OCT 2012
03110121
$5.00
DCC REVERSE LOOP CONTROLLER
OCT 2012
09110121 $10.00
LED MUSICOLOUR
NOV 2012
16110121 $25.00
LED MUSICOLOUR Front & Rear Panels
NOV 2012
16110121 $20 per set
CLASSIC-D CLASS D AMPLIFIER MODULE
NOV 2012
01108121 $30.00
CLASSIC-D 2 CHANNEL SPEAKER PROTECTOR
NOV 2012
01108122 $10.00
HIGH ENERGY ELECTRONIC IGNITION SYSTEM
DEC 2012
05110121 $10.00
USB POWER MONITOR
DEC 2012
04109121 $10.00
1.5kW INDUCTION MOTOR SPEED CONTROLLER (NEW V2 PCB)DEC 2012 10105122 $35.00
THE CHAMPION PREAMP and 7W AUDIO AMP (one PCB) JAN 2013
01109121/2 $10.00
GARBAGE/RECYCLING BIN REMINDER
JAN 2013
19111121 $10.00
2.5GHz DIGITAL FREQUENCY METER – MAIN BOARD
JAN 2013
04111121 $35.00
2.5GHz DIGITAL FREQUENCY METER – DISPLAY BOARD
JAN 2013
04111122 $15.00
2.5GHz DIGITAL FREQUENCY METER – FRONT PANEL
JAN 2013
04111123 $45.00
SEISMOGRAPH MK2
FEB 2013
21102131 $20.00
MOBILE PHONE RING EXTENDER
FEB 2013
12110121 $10.00
GPS 1PPS TIMEBASE
FEB 2013
04103131 $10.00
LED TORCH DRIVER
MAR 2013
16102131
$5.00
CLASSiC DAC MAIN PCB
APR 2013
01102131 $40.00
CLASSiC DAC FRONT & REAR PANEL PCBs
APR 2013
01102132/3 $30.00
GPS USB TIMEBASE
APR 2013
04104131 $15.00
LED LADYBIRD
APR 2013
08103131
$5.00
CLASSiC-D 12V to ±35V DC/DC CONVERTER
MAY 2013
11104131 $15.00
DO NOT DISTURB
MAY 2013
12104131 $10.00
LF/HF UP-CONVERTER
JUN 2013
07106131 $10.00
10-CHANNEL REMOTE CONTROL RECEIVER
JUN 2013
15106131 $15.00
IR-TO-455MHZ UHF TRANSCEIVER
JUN 2013
15106132
$7.50
“LUMP IN COAX” PORTABLE MIXER
JUN 2013
01106131 $15.00
L’IL PULSER MKII TRAIN CONTROLLER
JULY 2013
09107131 $15.00
L’IL PULSER MKII FRONT & REAR PANELS
JULY 2013
09107132/3 $20.00/set
REVISED 10 CHANNEL REMOTE CONTROL RECEIVER
JULY 2013
15106133 $15.00
INFRARED TO UHF CONVERTER
JULY 2013
15107131
$5.00
UHF TO INFRARED CONVERTER
JULY 2013
15107132 $10.00
IPOD CHARGER
AUG 2013
14108131
$5.00
PC BIRDIES
AUG 2013
08104131 $10.00
RF DETECTOR PROBE FOR DMMs
AUG 2013
04107131 $10.00
BATTERY LIFESAVER
SEPT 2013
11108131
$5.00
SPEEDO CORRECTOR
SEPT 2013
05109131 $10.00
SiDRADIO (INTEGRATED SDR) Main PCB
OCT 2013
06109131 $35.00
SiDRADIO (INTEGRATED SDR) Front & Rear Panels
OCT 2013
06109132/3 $25.00/pr
TINY TIM AMPLIFIER (same PCB as Headphone Amp [Sept11])
OCT 2013
01309111 $20.00
AUTO CAR HEADLIGHT CONTROLLER
OCT 2013
03111131 $10.00
GPS TRACKER
NOV 2013
05112131 $15.00
STEREO AUDIO DELAY/DSP
NOV 2013
01110131 $15.00
BELLBIRD
DEC 2013
08112131 $10.00
PORTAPAL-D MAIN BOARDS
DEC 2013
01111131-3 $35.00/set
(for CLASSiC-D Amp board and CLASSiC-D DC/DC Converter board refer above [Nov 2012/May 2013])
ASK SILICON CHIP
Got a technical problem? Can’t understand a piece of jargon or some technical principle? Drop us a line
and we’ll answer your question. Send your email to silicon<at>siliconchip.com.au
Head-up display for
pre-OBD cars
I read your article on the aftermarket HUDs (SILICON CHIP, September
2013) with interest. Given that GPS
versions have what we could term
‘drop outs’ as well as slow start-up,
the OBD version looks superior. Question now is, what if you’d like to fit a
wired version to a pre-OBDII vehicle
(pre-1996 in most cases)? Could your
next project be a converter?
I’m aware that there was less standardisation amongst car manufacturers
providing OBDI in their vehicles but
there was a loose standard which
was common and then manufacturers
added their own additional readouts.
Plugs also varied and are most often
under the bonnet but the wires still
came from the ECU units which are
usually inside the cabin. For instance,
my vehicle is a 1993 BMW 525i with
the round 20-pin plug.
I’ve been able to find software to
run on my laptop that reads BMWs
and a wide number of other vehicles
for fault-finding and they also give
a screen dashboard with all the info
these HUDs are offering – speed, coolant temperature, fuel consumption etc.
I’m lucky enough to have an on-board
computer giving me a huge amount of
information but it’s in the middle of the
centre console and worse than looking
down to the speedo. So my point is
that the wiring is accessible for OBD
signals as they come from the ECU.
So what about continuing your article into an adaptor? (S. S., via email).
• That’s a big ask, since the essential
signals for monitoring in cars without
the OBDII socket is not in a standard
format, notwithstanding that there is
software around to monitor signals in
Solar Power Is Not The Right Solution
Any chance on articles for the
following projects please?
(1) a solar-powered roof exhaust
fan (to exhaust hot air from the roof
cavity) with a thermostat. The commercial ones in Australia are over
$1000 which is way too expensive
for a cowl, fan, thermostat and a
few cells;
(2) Solar-powered cooling to cool the
carport area while I am working; and
(3) Solar power supply for my laptop computer which I have to use
in the carport because it overheats
in the confines of the house? (J. Q.,
via email).
• We doubt whether there is much
point in producing a solar powered
roof exhaust fan since the commercial passive extractor fans are
so effective and relatively cheap to
install. In Sydney you can have one
of these fans installed for $239. Have
look at http://www.twista.com.au/
Incidentally, if you think about it,
these fans are solar powered.
98 Silicon Chip
As for trying to cool an open
carport, that would be a huge task
for any system, solar-powered or
otherwise. Short of planting shrubbery to provide plenty of shade for
the carport roof, we cannot suggest
any effective approach.
Depending on the power requirements of your laptop computer, a
12V 80W solar panel may do the
job. It would need to be shunted by
a 4700µF 25V capacitor to reduce its
output impedance. Its output will
typically be around 17V in full sun;
suitable for many laptops.
You would need to carefully check
its maximum output voltage under
ideal conditions to make sure that
it won’t go much above the laptop’s
charge input voltage.
Still, since an 80W panel may cost
around $200 or more, a cheaper and
more effective approach may be to
get a replacement laptop supply
which does not overheat. Or simply
aim a small fan at it while charging.
some pre-OBD cars. In any case, even if
we were to produce a HUD, it is likely
that it would be far more expensive
than those presently available from
on-line retailers.
Substituting the battery
pack in an 18V drill
I have just read your article on “Fire
Up Your Cordless Drill” in the October
2013 issue, with interest. I too have a
very good old cordless drill but don’t
wish to spend lots of money on a new
battery for it, so I would like to replace
it with a Li-Po battery as mentioned.
My question is this: in your article
you have used a 22.2V Li-Po battery to
replace the original 24V battery. Now
my old cordless drill is 18V so is it
still OK for me to use a 22.2V Li-Po?
Would this higher voltage damage my
drill? (K. S., via email).
• In practice, when an 18V Nicad or
NiMH battery is fully charged, it is
likely to be 24V or more. That answers
the question as to whether your drill
motor would be damaged by applying
24V to it.
So using a 22.2V Li-Po or Li-Ion
battery pack (six cells; 25.2V fully
charged) should work well. Five-cell
Li-Po packs are also available, with a
nominal voltage of around 18.5V and
a full-charge voltage of 21V.
Tone control circuits
for a future amplifier
Have you come across “sharpened”
slope tone control circuits? I read
about them in an AES (Audio Engineering Society) paper. I think the
compensated 3-pole version would be
great for the next SILICON CHIP high-end
hifi preamplifier. (O. Z., via email).
• “Variable slope” or “variable turnover” tone controls have been around
for a very long time. We think variable
slope controls are preferable because
they give a much more apparent effect
for a given knob rotation.
However, we doubt whether we
would ever incorporate tone controls
siliconchip.com.au
CLASSiC-D Over-Voltage Protection Should Not Be Changed
I recently finished making a stereo
amplifier using two of the SILICON
CHIP Classic-D amplifier boards and
what a magnificent amplifier that has
turned out to be; quiet as a mouse
but roars like a lion!
However, my initial efforts were
not productive as the mains voltage in my area was consistently
too high (too many solar-powered
systems in the vicinity, perhaps,
including my own!). When I powered up the first board I assembled,
the voltage coming out of the power
supply was ±62V DC, not ±57V as
it was supposed to be. The toroidal
transformer was a 40-0-40V type, as
recommended in the SILICON CHIP
articles, but the mains voltage was
251VAC.
Nothing was coming out of the
speaker – that is until I turned the
mains switch off! As the DC voltage
coming out of the big capacitor bank
subsided, the protection relay suddenly switched on and the music
flowed for all of about one second.
in a hifi preamp as we don’t think
they’re really necessary.
Wrong inductor in
frequency counter
I built the 2.5GHz 12-Digit Frequency Counter (December 2012-January
2013) using PCBs and parts from the
SILICON CHIP shop. It seems I have been
supplied with an ADCH-80 inductor
instead of ADCH-80A as specified in
the parts list. This has a different pin
configuration; the coil is connected
to the middle two pins on each side
rather than pins in opposite corners.
Otherwise it seems to be identical.
Can I use the ADCH-80 in place of
the ADCH-80A by bridging pins 2 &
3 and 5 & 6 to connect the coil to the
appropriate pads on the PCB? I assume this will increase the parasitic
capacitance (ie, unwanted capacitance
in parallel with the coil). Will that
negatively affect performance?
Just what is the role of inductor
RFC3 anyway and why did you use a
hard-to-get part like this rather than
a standard surface-mount “chip” inductor? (G.L., Hobart, Tas).
• Our apologies for supplying you
siliconchip.com.au
The 60V upper voltage protection
limit was kicking in when the amplifier was switched on but dropping
below this limit when switched off
and eventually (in about 3s) below
the lower voltage protection limit of
40V. Clearly, the toroidal transformer
was overdoing it.
In fear and trepidation, I unwound
the clear plastic insulation from
the transformer and proceeded to
remove about 10 turns from both
secondary windings. This turned out
to be quite straightforward and the
insulation was easily replaced. The
toroid was not as pretty as before but
at least the amplifier now worked,
and the DC power supply was at a
respectable ±55V.
It occurred to me that the existing over-voltage protection could
easily have been increased above
60V by using a different resistor but
my knowledge of electronic circuits
was insufficient. However, the current power supply capacitors have
a limit of 63V. Can I increase the
with the wrong part but we think it
should work fine if you solder it across
the pins as you suggest. The ADCH-80
and ADCH-80A both specify parasitic
capacitance as being about 0.1pF (in
fact their specifications are identical
except for the pin connections). Our
calculations show that this capacitance will reduce the gain of the amplifier (IC1) by approximately 0.06dB
at 2.5GHz compared to a theoretical
ideal inductor that had no capacitance.
You are right that bridging the pins
will probably increase this capacitance
slightly as it means that the two pads
under the coil are effectively larger.
Having said that, the connected pads
of the ADCH-80 are significantly closer
together than those of the ADCH-80A
and yet the specified capacitance is the
same so this must not be very strong
effect. Let’s say doing this increases the
capacitance by about 30%, to 0.13pF.
Re-running those calculations, the
reduced load impedance at 2.5GHz
only reduces the gain by a further
0.04dB, to 0.1dB. This is quite insignificant and so unlikely to impact the
performance to any noticeable extent.
Even if the capacitance is doubled, to
0.2pF, that only reduces the gain over
over-voltage limit threshold? (R. R.,
Canberra, ACT).
• We do not recommend increasing
the over-voltage protection limit.
Your solution to remove turns from
the secondary is a wise idea, to reduce the supply voltage to the amplifier when the mains peak voltage is
consistently high.
The peak of the mains waveform
is the determining factor of the
rectified and filtered supply. Mains
waveforms that are “flat-topped”
will provide a lower rectified and
filtered transformer supply voltage
for a given measured RMS mains
voltage compared to a mains supply
that has a normal sinewave shape.
Many, if not most, supply areas exhibit a flat-topped mains waveform
and so the 40-0-40V transformer
should be suitable for those regions.
For the higher peak voltage regions,
your suggestion to remove turns
from the transformer secondary to
reduce the overall DC supply to
±57V is the best approach.
the typical case by less than 0.2dB.
Inductor RFC3 forms part of the
load and power supply for microwave
amplifier IC1. The ERA-2SM+ data
sheet says that using a radio-frequency
choke here is optional, ie, you could
short RFC3 out and the circuit should
still work. But including RFC3 has a
number of important benefits, the most
important of which is significantly better gain in the amplifier stage.
This is because with RFC3 in circuit,
IC1 drives a higher load impedance,
ie, its output is more lightly loaded.
Its output load impedance is the impedance of what it is driving (in this
case, pin 1 of IC2) in parallel with the
impedance of the network at its output
that gives it a DC supply current – in
this case, RFC3 in series with the 47Ω
resistor.
With just a resistor, this impedance
is fixed and typically the load impedance is too. But the impedance of an
inductor rises with frequency, so RFC3
has a low impedance at DC in order to
supply IC1 with its operating current
but a high impedance at RF to ensure
that it doesn’t load down IC1’s output
transistor. RFC3 also provides high frequency isolation between IC1’s output
December 2013 99
Power Factor Is Ignored In Electricity Bills
What are the implications of a
poor power factor in a switchmode
power supply?
I have a 12V 5A power adapter
(from eBay) powering an ultra-lowpower PC. I thought my Watts Clever
power meter must have been wrong
when it said the computer was only
using 20W at idle. So I bought a CCI
Power-Mate Lite. To my surprise it
said the computer was only using
15W. But it said that with a power
factor of 0.5, it was using 30VA.
So am I being billed by my electricity company for .015 kWh/hour,
or .030 kWh/hour? And would that
power adapter be at the maximum
power it could deliver if the load on
it was quadrupled, or only doubled?
I can see that when the PC goes to
sleep and is only drawing a couple
of watts, the power factor gets even
worse. Does it get better as the load
approaches the switchmode power
supply’s maximum load?
I understand it’s a moot point with
a power adapter and PC that small.
But I’m powering bigger things with
switchmode power supplies, as we
and the 5V supply rail, reducing the
chance of feedback through the power
supply or noise coupling.
As for why the ADCH-80A in particular was used, it can operate at
much higher frequencies than typical
inductors. Its insertion loss at 10GHz
is a staggeringly low 0.42dB while
a standard ferrite or powdered-iron
core inductor will rapidly become
lossy above 1MHz, primarily due to
core losses but also excess parasitic
all are, and the same principles
would apply, just with bigger numbers. (G. D., Burton, SA).
• The first point is that your power
company charges you for watt-hours
used and ignores power factor. In
other words, you are not charged
for VA. So the rest of this answer is
of academic interest only.
It’s unlikely that the supply you
bought has active power factor correction (PFC) so the power factor
will be poor when only a small
proportion of its rating is being used.
As a corollary of that, its power
factor will be best at full load but it
will still be lousy when compared to
the unity power factor of a resistive
load.
Switchmode supplies with active PFC are much better and may
have a power factor approaching
unity across a wide range of loads,
although it still usually drops somewhat for light loads. This type of supply tends to cost more but most modern PC supplies have active PFC.
By contrast, generally low-power
switchmode power supplies directly
capacitance. Given that the ADCH-80A
is such a good performer and we’re
already specifying a part from MiniCircuits (the ERA-2SM+ amplifier IC),
it isn’t much of a stretch to use it in
this role.
Making a
vacuum pump
Neno Stojadinovic wrote an article
in March 2011 on converting a refrig-
rectify and filter the mains voltage
using a diode bridge and filter capacitor. The capacitor is effectively
charged to the peak of the waveform
and charge currents are quite high
and only occur around the waveform
crests. The current remains essentially in-phase with the voltage.
The power factor value provided
for this type of current and voltage
waveform is the apparent power
factor. That is the ratio of real power
to the RMS voltage times the RMS
current.
For this type of supply, the only
way to accurately measure the real
power is to calculate the sum of the
instantaneous voltage multiplied
by current over each cycle of the
waveform. Apart from measuring the
instantaneous voltage and current,
an accurate watt meter would need
to have the ability to accurately read
the high crest factor (ratio of the peak
current to the average current) of the
supply. The Energy Meter published
in the July and August 2004 issues
of SILICON CHIP accurately measures
high crest factor waveforms.
erator sealed unit to a vacuum pump.
He indicates that the oil should be
changed but does not say why. Is this
really necessary please? (G C., via
email).
• You need to change the oil because
the original refrigeration oil will froth
violently under vacuum and then it
will spray out of the exhaust hose.
It also follows that a good vacuum
depends on good oil. The best vacuum
will be obtained with brand new oil
WARNING!
SILICON CHIP magazine regularly describes projects which employ a mains power supply or produce high voltage. All such
projects should be considered dangerous or even lethal if not used safely.
Readers are warned that high voltage wiring should be carried out according to the instructions in the articles. When
working on these projects use extreme care to ensure that you do not accidentally come into contact with mains AC voltages
or high voltage DC. If you are not confident about working with projects employing mains voltages or other high voltages,
you are advised not to attempt work on them. Silicon Chip Publications Pty Ltd disclaims any liability for damages should
anyone be killed or injured while working on a project or circuit described in any issue of SILICON CHIP magazine.
Devices or circuits described in SILICON CHIP may be covered by patents. SILICON CHIP disclaims any liability for the infringement of such patents by the manufacturing or selling of any such equipment. SILICON CHIP also disclaims any liability
for projects which are used in such a way as to infringe relevant government regulations and by-laws.
Advertisers are warned that they are responsible for the content of all advertisements and that they must conform to the
Competition & Consumer Act 2010 or as subsequently amended and to any governmental regulations which are applicable.
100 Silicon Chip
siliconchip.com.au
and increasing levels of contaminants
will progressively reduce the ultimate
vacuum that the pump can achieve.
Preamp for a ceramic
phono cartridge
I have a large collection of 33 and
78 RPM discs which I want to dub to
compact disc. To do this, I propose to
use my old BSR record changer which
has a turn-over ceramic cartridge.
However, it gives virtually no bass
when I feed its signals into the line
inputs on my amplifier and it overloads the magnetic cartridge inputs as
well, so there is no way I can match it
to my amplifier.
I thought about using your universal preamplifier (SILICON CHIP, April
1994) but it does not appear to cater
for ceramic cartridges. Is this possible?
(J. P., via email).
• We have not published a preamplifier project to suit a ceramic cartridge,
partly because there has been so little
demand, although having said that,
musicians also have a need for this
type of preamplifier if they are using
a violin with a ceramic pickup.
However, we did publish two simple
Planet Jupiter Receiver Overloaded By
Transmissions From Earth
I constructed a kit for your Planet
Jupiter Receiver from the August
2008 issue. I live in Bundaberg,
in Queensland and it receives a
strong signal from Radio Australia
originating from Melbourne. I can’t
get rid of it!
I am confident the coils are wound
correctly. Tuning the trimmers (630pF) doesn’t make much difference and VC3 certainly makes no
difference at all. The receiver is well
earthed and all voltages check out.
Any ideas? (R. R., via email).
• It does seem that you are particularly unlucky in getting such
a strong interfering signal from a
Radio Australia signal originating in
Melbourne (and presumably being
preamplifier circuits in the Circuit
Notebook pages of the June 2002 issue
which should suit and either of these
would be easy to build on a piece of
Veroboard. The first was based on a
TL071 FET-input op amp while the
beamed in your direction).
Unfortunately the Planet Jupiter
Receiver doesn’t have particularly
good selectivity, so there’s not a great
deal you can do to fix things in the receiver itself. However here are a few
suggestions: (1) make sure that your
antenna is ‘side on’ to the South, so
it will have less sensitivity in the direction of Melbourne; (2) try making
up a small ‘tuned trap’ which can be
connected between the antenna and
the Planet Jupiter Receiver’s antenna
input, to specifically reject the Radio
Australia signals– see www.mydarc.
de/dk7zb/Trap/trap.htm
If you make the trap with a fairly
high Q and couple into it and out of
it quite loosely, this may do the trick.
second was based on a BC549C highgain low-noise NPN transistor. The
circuits were mono only, so if you
wanted a stereo version you would use
a TL072 dual op amp or two BC549Cs;
one for each channel.
Radio, Television & Hobbies: the COMPLETE archive on DVD
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is covered.
If you’re an old timer (or even young timer!) into vintage radio, it doesn’t get much more
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war years.
And speaking of the war years, R & H had some of the best propaganda imaginable!
Even if you’re just an electronics dabbler, there’s something here to interest you.
• Every issue individually archived, by month and year
• Complete with index for each year
• A must-have for everyone interested in electronics
Please note: this archive is in PDF format on DVD for PC.
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and Acrobat Reader 6 or above (free download) to enable you to view this
archive. This DVD is NOT playable through a standard A/V-type DVD player.
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December 2013 101
Shorted Amplifier Outputs Can Cause Damage
I made an Ultra-LD Mk.2 power
amplifier a few years ago. It worked
well until by accident I shorted
out one side. It blew the fuses and
all output transistors proved to be
faulty. I checked all the other transistors with the output transistors
removed and they were OK.
Having fitted new output transistors, with safety resistors in place
of fuses, it drew too much current
from the supply. I compared the
circuit voltages to those shown in the
circuit and they were very close; the
output transistor isolation from the
heatsink also tested OK. There was
a blob of solder across the diode in
one of the output transistors which
Both circuits have a very high input
impedance, necessary in order to provide good bass response from ceramic
cartridge which can be regarded as a
voltage source in series with a capacitance of around 500pF or thereabouts.
Fuel economy
indicator wanted
I want to fit a permanent injector
pulse width indicator to my vehicle,
a 2006 Mitsubishi Pajero 3.8-litre
petrol V6. This is intended as a fuel
economy indicator, especially for
caravan towing.
I am convinced such a unit would
have wide appeal if promoted to the
caravanning fraternity, should you
produce one. (E. J., via email).
• The best way to get an indication
of fuel economy in a modern car is to
fit an OBD HUD. This topic was covered in detail in the article on HUDs
(head-up displays) in the September
2013 issue.
We actually described a fuel injector
readout back in August 1995 and it was
a Jaycar kit but it has long since been
discontinued. We could revive it but
any new circuit would have to include
a clear indication of fuel injector cutoff. This happens in most modern cars
with no throttle input (ie, foot off the
pedal) and above a threshold speed but
may be disabled if the engine is cold.
The recent GPS Car Computer project (SILICON CHIP, January & February
2010) was able to provide an indication of fuel economy, based on the in102 Silicon Chip
I did not notice but it’s gone now.
The voltage across the diode string
is now 1.8V. Any idea what could
still be wrong? (J. V., via email).
• The damage could be more
widespread than just the output
transistors (Q12-Q15). Check the
100Ω base resistors for transistors
Q10 and Q11. Also, Q10 and Q11
may need replacing.
Check that diodes DQ12-DQ15
have voltage across them. The 1.8V
total for the diode string seems low
but that could just mean that the
diode current needs to be increased
by changing Q7’s 68Ω emitter resistor (see page 71 of the September
2008 issue).
jector duty cycle. However note that its
display is relative (a bargraph) rather
than an absolute read-out in l/100km.
A kit is available from Altronics, Cat
K1133.
SLA batteries have
limited shelf life
I built the Emergency 12V Lighting
Controller (SILICON CHIP, January 2008)
and it worked great for three years,
just as you described. Well, we just
had a blackout and I noticed that my
emergency lights were not on. I was
thinking that they had run the battery
down so it has switched off to save
damage to the battery.
However, after investigating and
re-testing and checking all components, just as I did when I first built
the unit, I noticed that the lights go off
by themselves after about 45 seconds,
so it could have been like this since I
first built it. The battery was changed
but the good new battery is doing the
same thing.
Have there been any other builders
that have mentioned this problem?
Can the switching off be adjusted by
changing the values of components? I
have measured all components to see
if there was a faulty one but all are
OK; the zener diode is the right one
and the Mosfet is OK.
It’s very strange that it’s doing this.
The lights work when I connect them
directly to the battery and stay on until
I disconnect them. (R. S., via email).
• We are not sure from your descrip-
tion just what is going on. It sounds as
though you need to do a few voltage
checks, preferably when running the
circuit from an adjustable DC supply
rather than the 12V SLA battery.
The first point to check is that the
circuit works OK when the ‘battery’
voltage is more than 11.6V. To set this
up, you need a good SLA battery (ie,
one charged up to 12V or more) or an
adjustable DC supply delivering 12V
or a little more and you also need the
charger connected, as per normal.
Now kill the power to the charger,
to simulate a blackout, and the lights
should come on and stay on. If you
have an adjustable power supply
connected instead of the SLA battery,
reduce its output voltage to below
11.6V. The lights should go out. If so,
the circuit is working as it should (the
circuit is quite simple and has proved
to be quite reliable as we have not had
any complaints about it).
On the other hand, if the circuit
works OK under this test but misbehaved with your battery (both old and
new), then the batteries are suspect.
If they are not used and kept on float
charge (as this circuit does), they do
deteriorate to the point where they
may apparently measure OK but ‘die’
as soon as you connect a significant
load.
The same comment applies to any
SLA battery that you may have purchased new. If it has been sitting on
the shelf for many months, it may not
be able to deliver its rated current for
more than a short period of time.
Electronic mobility
reminder needed
I have an idea for a future project.
The medical profession are increasingly worried about the amount of time
modern workers spend sitting, usually
in front of a PC. As someone who has
taken this message to heart, I have
come across a major problem that may
yield to a technical solution, namely,
I forget to stand up every hour or so.
It is so easy to become engrossed in
an interesting activity or find yourself
enslaved to a deadline, that remembering to stand up and move around
regularly is harder than one might
imagine. Under such distractions it’s
even hard to remember to set an alarm,
so an automated system is required
to gently remind the sitter to rise
continued on page 103
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and move about at intervals.
I feel a device that attaches to the
chair is required. Functionally, it may
perform something like:
(1) emits a gentle beep when someone
sits down to alert them that the system
siliconchip.com.au
is active and remind them that prolonged sitting is dangerous;
(2) the device integrates the total sitting time and standing time so that a
maximum value of sitting time per
hour is allowed (this varies, depending
on which medical researcher’s view
you subscribe to);
(3) As the limit time approaches, the
device emits a series of increasingly
urgent beeps. If you only stand for half
continued on page 104
December 2013 103
Advertising Index
Altium Ltd....................................... 3
Altronics.................................. 76-79
A To Z Electronix.......................... 33
Core Electronics........................... 33
Emona Instruments........................ 5
Futurlec........................................ 32
Gooligum Electronics................... 32
Harbuch Electronics..................... 14
Hare & Forbes.......................... OBC
Ask SILICON CHIP
. . . continued from page 103
the recommended period, then the
threshold will be reached again in half
the time. If you stand up frequently
for short periods (which is medically
better), then you may never trigger
the alarm;
(4) If you really must stay seated, then
a button allows you to reset the alarm,
but only for a ‘snooze’ period. Given
how much chairs move around, the
device should be battery-powered.
But considering the measured time
intervals are so long, there is no reason
for the device to be in ‘detecting bum’
mode continuously. A low battery
alarm should be included.
The implementation is of course,
up to the designers but a few ideas
suggest themselves. The majority of
chairs have non-metallic seats, so a
proximity detector placed under the
seat should easily detect a person
sitting on it. A capacitively-coupled
source and detector might do the
job. Some form of learning or initial
High Profile Communications..... 103
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calibration might be necessary to take
into account different chair materials.
I know of no such commercial device,
so can SILICON CHIP come up with a first
of kind? (M. H., via email).
• We have been aware for years about
the health dangers of sitting for long
periods without moving around. It
does not just apply to people in front
of a PC though.
It’s possible to set up a regular reminder on your computer using free
software but we don’t think that a
timer, simple or complex, would be
the answer. You simply have to change
your mindset, to move around as much
as possible, to avoid seizing up!
Anyway, we have published your
suggestion, in order to gauge reader
SC
reaction.
Issues Getting Dog-Eared?
Keep your copies safe with
these handy binders
Order now from www.siliconchip.
com.au/Shop/4 or call (02) 9939
3295 and quote your credit card
number or mail the handy order
form in this issue. *See website for
overseas prices.
Buy five and get them postage free!
104 Silicon Chip
REAL
VALUE
AT
$14.95
PLUS P
&
P
Icom Australia................................ 8
Involve Audio................................ 32
Jaycar .............................. IFC,49-56
Keith Rippon .............................. 103
KitStop............................................ 9
LD Electronics............................ 103
LED Sales.................................. 103
Low Energy Developments........ 103
Master Instruments.................... 103
Microchip Technology................... 21
Mikroelektronika............................. 7
Micro Engines.............................. 33
Ocean Controls............................ 15
PicoKit.......................................... 63
Premier Batteries......................... 32
Qualico Circuits Pty Ltd................ 59
Quest Electronics....................... 103
Radio, TV & Hobbies DVD..... 33,101
RF Modules................................ 104
Rockby Electronics..................... IBC
Sesame Electronics................... 103
Silicon Chip Binders......... 29,73,104
Silicon Chip Bookshop................. 69
Silicon Chip Online Shop........ 96-97
Silicon Chip Subscriptions........... 25
Television Replacements........... 103
Trio Test & Measurement.............. 12
Virtins Technology........................ 11
Vicom Australia............................ 13
Wiltronics........................................ 6
Worldwide Elect. Components... 104
xLogic........................................... 10
siliconchip.com.au
R ockby Electronics
R ockby Electronics
2M points memory
USB Host/Device: Support USB
Printer
and USB Flash Drive
Easyscope Software
PictBridge Function
1GSa/S Sampling Rate
$434.50
Includes 2 Probes
#41726
SIGLENT: SDS1102CML
$64.90
#41727
* Video format AVI (30 FPS)
www.rockby.com.au
$24.75
#41728
DC Volts Ranges: 200mV/2V/20V/200V/500V
AC Volts Ranges: 200V/500V
DC Current: 2000µA/20mA/200mA/10A
Resistance: 200R/2000R/20k/200k/20M
Size: 130 x 73.5 x 35mm
* Magnet Type: Button
* Body Material :Neodymium Iron Boron
*Manufacturer: Duratools
Size
8 x 3mm
12 x 3mm
18 x 3mm
* Meter Display: LED
* Test range:
6-12-24-50-120-220-400V (AC/DC)
* Load Current: 30mA
* Test Duration: 30 seconds
* Freq. Responce: 0 to 100Hz
TENMA
(Pack of 10)
(Pack of 6)
(Pack of 3)
$3.40
$4.20
$7.15
$69.50
#41738
$24.00
#41739
$92.00
#41740
Head Band ILLUMINATED Magnifier
* Illuminate Head Band Magnifier
* Acrylic Body Material
* Magnification 1.5x,3x,9x,10.5x
Linear Tools
$24.50
#41742
Lens: Clear
View Angle: 20 Deg.
Table Magnifier - X5 MAG
Part Number
KD5W4SC/Q
NSPW500D
www.rockby.com.au
Aluminium Precision Oiler
Precision placement of oil or other lubricants
Smooth actuator allows for greater control
All aluminium construction
Protective screw-on cover prevents leakage
Convenient pocket clip
Overall length: 140mm
$0.40
$0.90
#41734
#41735
#41743
Colour: Brown
* Length 33M
* Thickness .055mm
* Operating Temperature 280Deg C
Pro-Power
#41744
$5.90
Quick Crimp Connector
Pack Includes Crimper
* 271 Piece Crimping Plier Set
* Butt Connector, Female Disconnect
Ring Terminal, Cable Tie, Wire Stripper
Duratool
$19.50
Rockby Electronics Pty Ltd
Showroom & Pick-up Orders:
56 Renver Rd. Clayton Victoria 3168
Ph: (03) 9562-8559 Fax: (03) 9562-8772
$10.50
12mm High Temperature Polyimide Tape
$12.50
12V 10W Monocrystalline Solar Panel
Device:SAAME-59-625-001
* External Depth 65mm
* External Width 80mm
* Height 75mm
* Lens Width 70mm
P.O Box 1189 Huntingdale
Victoria 3166
#41645
$17.50
Order On-line
Web Address: www.rockby.com.au
Email: salesdept<at>rockby.com.au
ACN# 006 829 821 ABN# 3991 7350 807
*Stock is subject to prior sale*
R ockby Electronics
Intensity
#41732
20000mcd
#41733
27000mcd
* Imp: 0.56A
* Heavy Duty Metal Frame
* 3mm Tempered Glass
* Size: 385 x 290 x 25mm
*Manufacturer: SOLARKING
#41737
12/24V 15A MMPT Solar Controller
5mm Super Intensity White Leds
*
*
*
*
*
*
$12.50
TENMA 72-7770
* Rated Volage: 12/24V
* Max.Load Current: 15A
* Length <1 m Charge Loop Drop: -0.25V
* Supply Voltage Max: 40V
MULTICOMP
Rare Earth Magnets
#41729
#41730
#41731
*
*
*
*
*
6 To 400V AC/DC Voltage Tester
USB Mini Inspection Camera (520mm Neck)
The camera is only 10mm diameter
and has two variable intensity
LEDs for illuminating the area
under examination.
* Mirror and magnet pick-up tool included
Palm Size Digital Multimeter
* Freq.Range : x1 20 Hz to 1.5 KHz
x100 2 KHz to 150 KHz
* Both with 23 steps of select.freq.
* Accu. : 20 Hz to 100 KHz (±3% or less)
100 KHz to 150 KHz (±5 % or less)
* O/PControl : 0 dB, -20 dB and fine adj.
* O/P Imped.: 600R ±10%
TENMA 72-505
* Requires Micro SD card up to 32GB (not supplied)
2.4” Colour flip-down LCD
Quickly take snapshots/photos
Internal microphone and speaker
Date/Time stamp on video
Camera Angle 120°
$54.50
20Hz ~ 150KHz Audio Signal Generator
1080P Car HD DVR With 2.4inch TFT
*
*
*
*
*
* Temp.Range: 150 ~ 450 Deg.C
* Powerful and fast response
* Large Digital Temp. Display
* Lead free
WAVECOM WCM118
s
R ockby Electronics R ockby Electronic
www.rockby.com.au
100MHz 2 Ch. 7-inch LCD Color Widescreen 60W Temp. Adj. Soldering Station
#41736
Specifications:
Digital Oscilloscope
For on-line ordering and other products see our web site www.rockby.com.au
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