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2
Silicon Chip
Catalogue Sale 24 October - 23 November, 2017
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
To order phone 1800 022 888 or visit www.jaycar.com.au
Contents
Vol.30, No.11; November 2017
Features & Reviews
18 SILICON CHIP: 30 years old and going strong!
The first issue of SILICON CHIP came out in November 1987. That’s the “when”;
here we take a sometimes irreverent look at the how, where and why your
favourite electronics magazine was created – by Ross Tester
24 Phone calls via satellite: it nearly didn’t happen!
The Iridium satellite phone system is truly universal – you can call from
anywhere to anywhere. Essential for travellers away from cell phone coverage,
the whole system was almost scuttled before it began – by Dr David Maddison
35 Getting the most from www.siliconchip.com.au
They say that the majority of website users only get a small percentage of the
information they’re looking for, mainly because they don’t know what to look for!
Here’s a rundown of the information that’s available – by Nicholas Vinen
Constructional Projects
40 Dipole Loudspeaker System
“This is, of course, impossible” . . . but with a bit of electronic hocus-pocus and a
couple of hours, you can build this enclosure-free system and be amazed at the
sound quality – by Allan Linton-Smith
SILICON
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Happy birthday
to . . .us!
Your favourite
electronics
magazine
turns 30!
– Page 18
You can’t make a
high-performance
loudspeaker without
an enclosure, right?
Wrong! Allan
Linton-Smith has
proved you can
with his new
Dipole
Loudspeaker
System – Page 40
46 Build the Super-7 – a single-board AM radio receiver
We know you can buy a simple AM radio receiver over the counter or online for
just a few dollars. But this 7-transistor AM radio receiver will also teach you as
you build. And your friends won’t believe you made it yourself! – by John Clarke
68 Want to build a Bass Guitar? Read on . . .
Poor lefties – they’re so often forgotten! But when it comes to bass guitars, there
is an answer. We’ve found a kit which contains everything you need to build your
own bass “axe” – left or right-handed! – by Keith Walters
84 Touch-screen 6GHz+ Frequency Counter, part II
We’ve already had a lot of great feedback on our new high-spec touch screen
frequency counter. It has really hit a sweet spot! This month we look at
assembling the PCBs and putting it in its acrylic case – by Nicholas Vinen
Single-board
AM radio is easy
to build – it’s a great
beginner’s project and you can
learn while you build! – Page 46
92 A $30 build-it yourself SDR kit
How do they do it for the price? We keep asking ourselves: even with a few
minor wrinkles in putting it together, this 100kHz to 1.5GHz(+) software-defined
radio kit from Banggood is really great value – by Jim Rowe
Your Favourite Columns
61 Serviceman’s Log
Rangehood repair full of red herrings – by Dave Thompson
76 Circuit Notebook
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
PICAXE-based Chess/Games Timer
Caravan water tank level meter tracks water usage
High power H-bridge uses discrete Mosfets
Four-channel UHF wireless remote control
Want to build your
own Bass Guitar?
We’ve found a kit which has
absolutely everything you need.
And there’s even one for lefthanders – Page 68
$30 for a 100kHz-1.5GHz+
software-defined radio kit?
Surely it can’t be much
good? But it is!
– Page 92
98 Vintage Radio
Pocket radio, 1940s style: the two-valve Privat-ear – by Ian Batty
Everything Else!
4 Publisher’s Letter
6 Mailbag – Your Feedback
104 Ask SILICON CHIP
108 SILICON CHIP Online Shop
111 Market Centre
112 Advertising Index
112 Notes and Errata
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4
Silicon Chip
Publisher’s Letter
Thirty years – and still going strong
Looking back on 50 years in publishing is a daunting
exercise. I started work at Electronics Australia in May
1967 and after two stints there, ended as managing editor.
Greg Swain and I started Silicon Chip Publications in
July 1987. Our first issue appeared in November 1987.
John Clarke and Bob Flynn came with us from EA and
while Bob and Greg have since retired (in August 1999 and
November 2016 respectively), John Clarke is still with us
(albeit now “telecommuting” from northern NSW), along
with other very long-serving staff such as Ann Morris and Ross Tester.
In fact, one of the stand-out factors in the success of SILICON CHIP has been the
loyalty of our staff, our regular contributors, our readers and our advertisers. Two
of our most staunch advertisers, Altronics and Jaycar Electronics, supported us
right at the beginning and are still our strongest supporters today. We sincerely
thank them. Our subscribers and readers have also been very loyal – we still have
our very first subscriber, Deogracias Haw, who lives in Taiwan.
And while we have been successful, that is not to say the path has been smooth
and easy. In fact, for much of the time it has been quite arduous. At the time we
started, there were three other monthly electronics magazines: Electronics Australia, Electronics Today International (ETI) and Australian Electronics Monthly,
plus a number of trade magazines which were very strong for a while. We have
seen them all off, as well as virtually all of the equivalent electronics magazines
around the world. Very few survive.
Then we ran up against very difficult trading conditions in the quite severe
recession of the early 1990s when interest rates rose as high as 18 per cent (thank
goodness we had very little debt!). We managed by running a very lean operation
and we continue to do that right up to the present.
After the 1990s and the “recession we had to have”, we had pretty good economic conditions until the global financial crisis and it really started to bite in
around 2008. Arguably, Australia and the rest of the world are still feeling the
effects and will continue to do so for many years. Over those years, many of our
advertisers’ businesses failed, most large-scale electronics manufacture in Australia has long ceased and many skilled engineers and technicians have either
retired or lost their jobs.
Around ten years ago the internet really started to gain momentum and its
rise has made magazine publishing extremely difficult, as magazines and newspapers have struggled to adapt or die. A great many magazines in all categories
have ceased publication. At the same time, the internet presents us with an opportunity as we too attempt to adapt to it.
But I am confident that SILICON CHIP will continue its success into the future,
particularly with Nicholas Vinen as the Editor, as well as our loyal staff and
supporters. Nicholas has a wonderful grasp of the whole electronics scene and
can see the opportunities of the magazine in the future. I am also confident that
printed magazines will continue for many years into the future but there is no
doubt that digital publishing will continue to grow.
One aspect will not change. SILICON CHIP will continue to have a strong DIY
electronics emphasis, as well as attempting to cover as wide a range of related
subjects as possible. We will also continue to comment on the wider issues facing Australians as technology accelerates ahead and controls every aspect of our
lives, be it economic, environmental, health and communication.
Thirty years ago we could not imagine the huge changes in every facet of our
lives. And try as we might to extrapolate, we cannot begin to imagine the changes
which will come in the future. Many of the changes of the past thirty or more
years have been quite positive for humanity, but will the changes of the future
be similarly beneficial?
Let us not merely hope for the best but strive for the best.
Leo Simpson
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 5
MAILBAG – your feedback
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”, “Circuit Notebook” and “Serviceman”.
Standard PCB component libraries
not always available
I noticed in a recent editorial that
you mentioned that you use Altium
software for your designs. I can’t afford
the full Altium product, but I recently
bought their Circuit Studio software.
It is a bit of a curate’s egg. I’ve beaten most problems into submission,
but the component libraries are a real
chore.
Weirdly, even though some libraries are huge, I’ve had a struggle finding definitions for simple through-hole
components like 74HC00, 74HC74
etc.
Although the Altium support people
told me where to find suitable definitions, they are well hidden, and it is
a big chore to make them available to
Circuit Studio.
Even more weirdly, definitions of really simple components like resistors
and capacitors are so elusive that I’ve
resorted to making my own.
So far, with quite a lot of effort, I’ve
defined just three capacitors, two resistors, and one transistor. Just the sym-
A personal connection to
WRESAT and reasons for optimism
I enjoyed reading your lead article
by Dr David Maddison in the October edition of Silicon Chip regarding
Australia’s first satellite, WRESAT.
The 50th anniversary of WRESAT’s successful launch from
Woomera in South Australia occurs
on the 29th of November this year.
With WRESAT, Australia became
the third or the fourth country in
the world to launch a satellite from
its own shores (depending on one’s
definition of “own shores”).
The anniversary provides us with
an opportunity to reflect on this major milestone in Australia’s scientific
history.
I have a strong personal interest
in WRESAT as my father, Professor
John H. Carver, led the University of
6
Silicon Chip
bol and footprint, no SPICE models or
anything clever.
I think that Circuit Studio shares
most of its library technology with the
full-strength Altium product and it occurred to me that most of your designs
use components from Jaycar and/or
Altronics, so either you’ve found
where these are defined in libraries
available to Altium, or you’ve defined
them in your own custom library.
Is this an opportunity for a win-win
for you, Jaycar and Altronics and wannabe designers like me?
Oh. I also wonder if any other readers have bought Circuit Studio.
Keith Anderson,
Kingston TAS.
Response: we have commented about
this in the past and it isn’t just limited to Altium Designer/Circuit Studio.
EAGLE is arguably a bit better but the
libraries supplied with it are far from
complete and require many modifications to be usable.
Keep in mind that many of Altium’s paying customers will be doing
SMD-heavy designs so they are going
Adelaide team which, with a team
from the Weapons Research Establishment (now Defence Science and
Technology Group) designed and
built the satellite which was mounted on a Redstone rocket donated by
the USA.
Unfortunately, there was little
follow up to WRESAT, for example
to develop a space industry in this
country. My father stated such with
the following comment from an interview he did for the book Space
Australia by Kerrie Dougherty and
Matthew James, published in 1993:
“At that time there was a great capability in rocket production available in this country, but unfortunately
that has since disappeared, many of
those skills being lost as the work
stopped in the 1970s...”
“My great regret over WRESAT
Celebrating 30 Years
to provide many more libraries with
SMD components than through-hole
(representing the current state of commercial electronic design).
We have been using our own libraries for over a decade now. We do frequently copy components from manufacturers’ libraries into our own (often
with modifications) but we have made
most of them ourselves, including 3D
models.
Once you have a bit of practice it
isn’t too hard, especially since for most
ICs you just need to copy another and
change pin assignments, but it’s still a
huge amount of work overall and even
a small error can ruin a design.
Etone woofers are still available
I am currently building the Majestic
loudspeakers, described in the July and
September 2014 issues (siliconchip.
com.au/Series/275).
I have seen a couple of letters recently which state that the Etone driver
was that there was never a WRESAT-2. The Americans offered us a
significant number of Redstones at
a very modest price, but the Australian Government decided that
there was no interest in developing
a space program.
Consequently, although at that
stage we were the fourth country
to launch a satellite from its own
territory, we didn’t take up the opportunity.”
However, there have been some
positive developments of late in redressing this inaction with the very
recent announcement that Australia will establish a Space Agency, a
move that will enhance our presence and potential in the burgeoning
space industry, and in space science.
John A. Carver,
Acton, ACT.
siliconchip.com.au
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Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 7
for the Majestic project are no longer
available.
Nothing could be further from the
truth. Etone is run from a corner of a
factory in Bankstown by a man named
Wales. I ordered a pair but rather than
getting them delivered by parcel post,
I went and picked them up. Also, the
crossover components including the
2.7mH inductor are available from
WES components.
I have no connection with either
company except as a happy customer.
Terry Bilson,
Asquith, NSW.
Comment: this is good to hear since
the Etone woofers are much cheaper
than the Celestions and we think they
sound better, too.
Valve radio power supply is safe
Referring to your article in the
August issue of Silicon Chip on the
Mains Power Supply for Battery Valve
Radios (siliconchip.com.au/Article/
10751), take a close look at your wiring diagram that feeds 230VAC to
transformer T2. The diagram shows
the thermal fuse in the neutral lead.
If this is the case, when the thermal fuse goes open circuit, it leaves
the transformer live to 230VAC – not
a desirable outcome if the primary
winding happens to leak to the core.
It becomes a potential shock hazard.
Dennis Seymour,
Auckland, New Zealand.
Response: the figure-8 mains input
connector is not polarised so the Active and Neutral indications for CON3
are just an example. Changing the
wiring of T2 would not make any difference. A transformer with a primary
winding leak to the core will always
be a shock hazard, regardless of the
way it is wired and part of the design
of a modern mains transformer is to
provide sufficient insulation to make
this very unlikely.
Error in WRESAT article
No doubt other readers of the fascinating article on WRESAT, Silicon
Chip October 2017, would have noticed
the error on page 20. The first American
in space was indeed launched atop a
modified Redstone missile launch vehicle on 5th May 1961 in a Mercury
capsule, Freedom 7, but the second
person in space was Alan Shepard,
not John Glenn as stated in the article.
It was a suborbital flight. Russian
Yuri Gagarin was the first person in
space, completing an earth orbit in
Vostock 1 on 12th April 1961. John
Glenn was the first American to orbit
the earth, the third American and fifth
person in space on 20th February 1962
in Mercury capsule, Friendship 7, atop
an Atlas LV-3B launch vehicle.
Grant Carr,
Adelaide, SA.
Note: this error was introduced in
editing. Thanks for letting us know.
Gas shortages are artificial in nature
I found your editorial in the September 2017 issue to be interesting reading (“A rapid shift to electric vehicles
could be disastrous”). First of all, I do
not believe there is a shortage of gas
here in Australia!
Any shortage is due to the fact that
the corporates chose to flog it off for
maximum benefit while we here in
Australia, the so-called Lucky Country, get what is left over. Governments
have not been diligent in making sure
this cannot happen and indeed have
allowed it to happen. There should
be a guaranteed quantity quarantined
for use in Australia, for both domestic
and industrial use at reasonable cost.
First and foremost, this is Australia,
it is our gas and we should benefit from
this, our resource.
With all of these batteries that we
will soon rely on, what is the impact
environmentally, during manufacture,
and at the other end of the life cycle;
what happens after they reach the use
by date? Just take a look the problem
created by used tyres.
Bob Quinn,
Launceston, Tasmania.
Comments: we generally agree with
you but a shortage due to contractual obligations is still a shortage. The
new Australian Domestic Gas Supply
Mechanism, which came into effect on
July 1st, should prevent actual shortages but prices are still quite high.
On September 25th, Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull made the comment
that if NSW and Victoria approved
more Natural Gas exploration and
extraction projects to proceed, there
would not be a shortage and we think
he’s probably right.
The environmental impact of battery manufacture and recycling depends on a number of factors such as
the exact chemistry used, the mines
used to produce the raw materials, the
processes used to produce and recycle the batteries, etc. There is no simple answer. We suggest you do some
research on Google. A quick search
led us to this report: www.batteryrecycling.org.au/environmentalimpact-of-lithium-ion-batteries
Cape York better for
launching satellites than Woomera
Thank you for the October issue.
Once again, it is good reading. Also,
congratulations on achieving 30 years
of publication. I hope I live long enough
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Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
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Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 9
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10
Silicon Chip
to see both the 40 and 50 year editions.
I agree with most of the comments
in the October Editorial Viewpoint.
But Woomera is not a good site for
launching satellites. It is a good missile testing site but the best location
for satellite launching is Cape York
in Queensland.
It is no accident that both the Americans and the French have their launch
facilities close to the equator. That extra kick from the earth’s rotation makes
the launch cheaper.
We would be better to build launch
facilities at Cape York for hire than to
do everything ourselves and I would
not be surprised if both the Americans
and French used the facility as a backup and to increase their capabilities.
George Ramsay,
Holland Park, Qld.
selection conundrum to avoid wire destranding and fractures. Surely the best
practice would be to use a bootlaceferrule hand crimping tool. These are
dirt cheap and readily available from
numerous Asian suppliers.
I own two of these tools. One is
a 4-jaw (square-section crimp) for
flat-bottom terminal port-entries and
the other, a 6-jaw (hexagonal-section
crimp) for rounded or tunnel-port terminal entries. Problem solved – no
special terminal blocks required!
I would also like to ask whether
any reader has a pneumatic fluidiclogic tutorial kit sold by Plessey in the
1960/70s. I would like to know more
about it. If so, please drop me a note
at pyralog<at>yahoo.co.nz
Andre Rousseau,
Auckland South, New Zealand.
What will happen to vintage radios if
AM broadcasting ends?
No major obstacles for transition to
electric vehicles
I was very interested with the articles about DRM (Digital Radio Modiale) in the September 2017 edition
of Silicon Chip (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/10797). Especially where it
points out that we here in Australia
are lagging behind the rest of the world
(yet again) with the our usage of the
electromagnetic spectrum.
I wondered whether Silicon Chip
is to blame for this when I arrived at
page 100 of the same edition and saw
the Vintage Radio column! (I’m joking, of course.)
Will it be worth restoring these fine
old monsters once they no longer have
anything to receive? Will they only be
useful as decorations? If so, only the
outer cabinet needs restoring; the electronics inside can be consigned to the
bin. (Wink, wink.)
Bob Graffham,
Sanctuary Point, NSW.
Comment: Even if AM radio broadcasting stops , it won’t for a long time.
Even then, vintage enthusiasts will
still be able to operate their restored
radios by building their own lowpower transmitter. In fact, we published a suitable design in the January 2006 issue (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/2534). All the parts can still
be purchased and the PCB is available
from our on-line shop.
Crimp ferrules
solve wire strand fracture problem
Reading Mailbag, May 2017, I am
baffled by Ranald Grant’s terminal
Celebrating 30 Years
I read with interest your Editorial
(September 2017), and thought, Nostradamus you ain’t! You do not appear
to be a student of history. Being much
older than you, I have lived through
disasters such as you predict (electricity, fuel strikes, natural disasters etc),
and, whilst inconvenient at the time,
the world just keeps rolling along.
I have also seen an efficient private
enterprise cartel (including AEMO)
take the old SEC system from providing the cheapest electricity in the
world to the dearest by ripping off
the customers, whilst retaining the
same system, and this in view of flat
or falling electricity consumption
since 2007.
The scenario you propose will not
affect me at all. In 23 years time (2040),
if I am still alive, I will probably have
an electric car, as this is likely to be
the vehicle of choice.
However, as I have a solar system,
to which I have adding batteries, I am
independent of the grid. To cope with
the additional power usage for a car, I
will simply add more panels. As there
are 1,700,000 solar panel installations
in Australia, I predict many of them
will do likewise.
On the subject of battery production,
people like Elon Musk (Tesla) and his
competitors will take care of supply.
The large battery supplied in only 3
months in South Australia is an example. My prophesy is that shares in
lithium or battery enterprises will do
well in the next few years.
siliconchip.com.au
silicon-chip--order-with-confidence-relax.pdf
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2:36 PM
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siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 11
I am surprised that you, as a supposed technical literate person believes the propaganda put out about
the need for backup. The fallacy of
this is shown in England, where a
nuclear power station has reached the
end of its working life (Battersea?) and
is being replaced by a giant wind farm
(Jodrell Bank?), without any backup.
I lived for years off grid without
needing backup, so know that the
wind does not generate 30% of the
time, as dictated by our economic
system but rather 90 to 100% of the
time. Solar systems should have batteries as an integral part of the system for time shifting, rather than an
optional extra.
I suggest you put aside the Aussie
characteristic of knocking and look at
the future in a positive and constructive way. I am.
David Tuck,
Yallourn North.
DCC booster
requires quality optocouplers
I am writing to you regarding the
10A DCC Booster project published in
the July 2012 issue (siliconchip.com.
au/Article/614) which was sold as a
kit by Oatley Electronics. This booster
is bullet (and short-circuit) proof,
but, as Jeff Monegal has said to me,
has one Achilles heel. The 6N138
optocoupler.
This is not Jeff’s fault; the varying
and sometimes pathetic production
quality from some manufacturers
means most of them don’t work as this
project requires (and as spec sheets say
they should).
The only reliable unit I have found
is Toshiba’s 6N138 in white packaging,
which I acquired from element14. To
allow for variable quality, I bought 10
of them, and I was pleasantly surprised
when all 10 worked perfectly. This is
the only swapout that was required
in the end.
I hopes this helps others having issues with this great kit.
Peter Bassett,
Barellan, NSW.
Comment: Thanks for this information. We hope to upgrade this project
sometime next year so we will keep
this in mind.
Take care earthing
Currawong mains transformer
I have been looking at the mains wir-
ing diagram for the Currawong stereo
valve amplifier on page 91 of the December 2014 issue (siliconchip.com.
au/Article/8122). Having been around
the block (with grey hair to prove it),
I noticed that when connecting an
earth wire to a toriodal transforrmer,
constructors use the supporting screw
as a convenient location to secure the
mains earth wire to the chassis.
This is not good as this will form a
shorted turn between equipment and
cause primary fuses to blow. I hope
this makes sense to you. Otherwise
it’s a great, detailed project that I enjoyed reading.
Barry Sandeman,
Cape Town, South Africa.
Response: we published a panel regarding this issue on page 65 of the January 2015 issue, in the third instalment.
It’s titled “Transformer Bolt Earthing — Warning!” and points out that
the mounting bolts for the transformers must not be earthed if they are installed in a metal (conductive) case,
for the reason you stated.
However, in a timber case, the
mounting bolt should definitely be
earthed, especially if it protrudes
from the bottom of the case or else
1
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Silicon Chip
EL_Australia_Conformal_120x181mm_092017_prepress
21 September 2017 16:12:21
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
it becomes a shock hazard should a wire come loose and
contact it.
Much more advanced data logger wanted
I have bought the parts to build your Arduino Data Logger, from the August & September 2017 issues (siliconchip.
com.au/Series/316) and am in the middle of assembling it.
I like the design for what it is, ie, an easy-to-use logger
for limited tasks.
I am setting up a solar PV system. I would love to monitor
the voltage on each of my panels, as well as other parameters. What I would like is some kind of logger that would:
1. Allow for positive and negative voltages.
2. Make it easy to adjust the input voltage ranges.
3. Handle (say) up to 64 inputs.
I have no need for any great speed of reading the voltages.
Many years ago, Australian Electronics Monthly published a design for a Serial Data Logger, two of which I built
and used. The project was based on an ADC chip that had
an eight-way multiplexer. One sent a byte of 0-7, the chip
converted the voltage on the corresponding input and sent
the eight bit value back in one byte.
Of greater relevance to the current project is that the AEM
design had op amp buffers for each input. These op amps
could shift voltage levels (to handle negative voltages) and
the gain of the op amp was set by selecting resistors. One
could configure each input as either amplifier or attenuator.
I may be able to find the original article, but, it would
take me a long time. You probably have access to resources
that I do not have. Might I suggest that you consider a new
version of your current Arduino Data Logger project.
It might have:
1. Eight inputs with the op amp buffers with level
shifting and adjustable gain or attenuation. Optional input
series capacitor for measuring alternating current. Optional
parallel capacitor for smoothing noisy inputs. It would only
need one connectionto the Arduino ADC port.
2. Screw terminals for ease of installation in the field.
3. Ground screw connections next to each input connection, to simplify wiring.
4. Some method of selecting which Arduino ADC your
board connects to. This would provide a multiplexing function in software.
5. The ability to stack multiple Data Logger boards for
more inputs.
6. Some method of setting the board address. This might
involve stealing the digital inputs to provide address selection to the boards or it might involve some kind of buffer
or analog switch that enables the voltage inputs with only
the board which is currently selected. With four Arduino
ADC ports and four bit addressing of your new boards, one
could have up to 64 inputs, just what I want.
7. In the August issue of Silicon Chip, there was a suggestion that you might do a Micromite version. I have been
using Micromites with the ILI9341 screen and I find that
environment fairly comfortable. You might consider using
the new Arduino Data Logger as an ADC Engine and using
a Micromite as a controller and display.
By the way, why did you not base your Data Logger on
an Arduino Mega? If you could squeeze 16 inputs with
screw connections and the op amp buffers onto a shield to
fit a Mega, one could then have two hundred and fifty six
inputs – enough for many people.
siliconchip.com.au
Congratulations
Silicon Chip!
30 years supporting the local
Aussie electronics industry is a
huge achievement. Thanks for
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We wish you all the best
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Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 13
I am having great difficulty seeing
well enough to solder the modern surface mount parts. I would be happy to
pay you for kit boards with the surface
mount chips already installed.
This applies also to the later 64 and
100-pin Micromites with the surface
mount chips, which I would love to
use.
Likewise, it would make me very
happy if Silicon Chip could sell me
some bigger LCDs that would fit the
Micromites. My eyes would like the
seven or eight inch touch screens. I
do not want to use eBay.
I am much happier writing software
than designing hardware. I hope that
you can do that for me.
Patrick Berry,
Turramurra, NSW.
Response: what you are asking for is
quite specialised and we doubt that
many readers would need such a complicated data logger. Have you seen
Bera Somnath’s CANBUS-based solar
monitoring system design which we
published in Circuit Notebook, May
2017 (siliconchip.com.au/Article/
10656)?
His system monitors the current
from each panel, rather than volt-
14
Silicon Chip
age; this is easier since isolated current monitor modules are cheap and
readily available. It uses a separate
Arduino board for each panel or set of
panels, making the bus wiring easier.
This may be more feasible than what
you are suggesting.
Given the high voltages common in
solar arrays, for accurate logging, you
would need a high-voltage multiplexer
(likely made from dozens of discrete
components) and a difference amplifier feeding an ADC. That would make
for a significantly larger and more
complex project than the Data Logger
that we just published.
Cautious but optimistic
about electric vehicles
I agree we should be cautious about
rushing into the electrification of
transport.
Like you, I do wonder how far it is
practical to go without destabilising
provision of services. This particularly
applies to emergency vehicles used
in natural disasters. Recent weather
events in NSW and Florida should
caution us about putting all our eggs
in one basket.
However, as an electric vehicle (EV)
Celebrating 30 Years
owner, I am pleased to see governments finally taking EVs seriously.
Banning ICE (internal combustion engine) powered vehicles will galvanise
car makers, and about time.
Most of them have been asleep at the
wheel. Time is wasting and the need
to limit global warming is real.
The rate of EV market penetration
is currently limited by battery production. For the next four years, that
means you will be mainly dealing with
Nissan, Tesla and soon, the Chinese.
Our EV market is embryonic at best,
mainly due to a total lack of government interest. The USA, Europe, China
and Japan are seeing a steep rise in EV
demand, on the other hand.
Norway’s high uptake status is
anomalous, being driven by generous
government incentives.
Tony Seba from Stanford University
gained credibility by predicting the
dominance of smartphones. He forecasts that an EV price point inflection
will occur by about 2021. EVs will
then become cheaper than petrol cars.
Guess what happens then?
Elon Musk, of Tesla Motors, estimates that full transport electrification would roughly double the
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Silicon Chip
electricity budget of a country like Australia. On the face of
it, we are unprepared for that sort of demand.
However, it’s not all bad. In the short term, lack of availability/affordability will buy us some time. Home charging
using off-peak power (or domestic solar and Powerwall battery) can take care of commuter needs with existing power
networks.
A large fully electric car can comfortably charge overnight, using a 240VAC 32A circuit. This is about the same
power allocated to a domestic stove.
Also, Musk has committed Tesla to power all public supercharger stations with roof-mounted solar panels, thus
helping distance travel. He claims that supercharger stations
will eventually be net contributors to the grid.
This is already impacting on the USA’s energy balance.
In June 2013, just one year after Tesla’s release of the Model
S sedan, their (then) fledgeling supercharger network was
only partly solarised.
Despite that, it collected solar electricity equal to 25%
of the Hoover Dam output for that period! The number of
Tesla superchargers has gone up about tenfold since then.
Solar powering the network is understandably trailing
this development but is steadily proceeding. The new
Tesla solar roof panels resemble grey slate but are actually
all solar cells!
Elon Musk claims to be making a “compelling case” for
going solar on domestic roofs. An understatement, I think.
Compared with tiles, Tesla’s roof materials not only generate power but are stronger and cheaper.
If you have not been following Musk’s various businesses,
then you risk being under-informed, because everyone else
seems to be floundering in his wake. No doubt you have
magazine space earmarked to cover the new 100MWh South
Australian grid storage battery.
The future for alternative liquid fuels is also brighter. It is
worth mentioning some recent Japanese research, reported
on NHK. Researchers made synthetic crude oil by growing
certain algae in a setup similar to a sewerage treatment plant.
No sewage was involved; only water, algae and sunlight
in a mechanically stirred open pond. The input materials
were sunlight, air and water. The output material was filtered and purified algae.
It looked and smelled like crude oil and could be processed into fuel by existing oil refineries! Even better, it is
burned back into carbon dioxide and water.
I am sure in the future, common sense will prevail and
the reality will be a hybrid energy mix somewhere in the
middle. Water will find its own level, so to speak.
The feature articles in Silicon Chip are always informative and relevant. Keep up the good work.
Derek Mitchell
Battery Point, Tas.
Comments: 2021 seems very early to expect EVs to become
cheaper than comparable traditional vehicles. It’s almost
2018 and Lithium-ion batteries are still too expensive for
that to happen (NiMH is not a good solution for various
reasons). Short-range EVs may become affordable soon but
there’s no guarantee they will be widely adopted.
For example, the new Nissan Leaf has around half the
range of a traditional hatchback at around twice the price.
The previous generation Leaf sold just over 100,000 in the
USA and around 250,000 globally (2010-2016). There were
360,483 Toyota Corollas sold in the USA last year alone. SC
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
30 YEARS OF
It could be said that the SILICON CHIP story commences with the first
issue, which hit the streets in November, 1987 – 30 years ago. But in fact,
the story really starts quite a long time before that!
I
n the period between about 1960 and 1980, there were tronics magazines had been started – Electronics Today
two publications in publisher John Fairfax & Sons’ (in April 1971) and Australian Electronics Monthly – both
stable that were outstanding contributors to the com- considered “upstarts” but, by the same token, competing
pany’s fortunes: the Saturday edition of The Sydney Morn- for the same, vital, advertising dollars as EA.
As it happened, Electronics Today (or more correctly
ing Herald with its fabled “rivers of gold” (also known as
the classified adverts) and a strange (at least to the board’s Electronics Today International – ETI – there were seveyes) magazine called “Radio, TV and Hobbies” (later to eral overseas editions) had also been swallowed up by the
become Electronics Australia – and universally referred to Federal juggernaut.
There was a joke at the time that every time the Federal
by readers, advertisers and staff as “EA”).
They were each highly successful for similar reasons: Publishing boss went out to buy a sandwich for lunch,
they had no real opposition. If you wanted to place a classi- he’d come back owning another magazine (and/or a press
fied ad, you chose the Herald. If you wanted an electronics to print it!).
Despite the best intentions to maintain ETI as a going
magazine (and huge numbers did!), for a long time there
concern, in time management decided that it was all too
was nothing else but EA.
In those days, EA circulation was huge – 50,000 a month hard and ETI would effectively be combined with “EA”,
– and they were regularly bringing out issues with up to producing one magazine instead of two.
AEM had a chequered career but advertisers became disil200 pages – much of it lovely $$$ advertising!
Probably because they didn’t really understand it, the lusioned with their “maybe” publishing dates, making sales
powers that be at Fairfax sold Electronics Australia, to the campaigns meaningless (more than one issue was missed;
Federal Publishing Company in 1984. Not only were the others were combined into a two-dateline title). Advertising
staff uprooted but a whole new structure came into being. support dried up and AEM ceased publication altogether.
By early 1987, EA staff had decided their only option was
From the staid, arguably cloistered environment they
to be the masters of their own destiny – and offered Federal
were used to, they viewed the many other magazines owned
Publishing a management buy-out to the tune of $250,000.
by Federal as “chaotic”.
This offer was rejected out of hand, with the then Federal
Many did not even have a printed production schedule
or deadline and came out, well, sometime close to their Publishing General Manager apparently quoted as saying
“Over my dead body”, or words to that effect.
dateline!
And the same day, Leo Simpson was fired.
The EA staff under then editor Leo Simpson gradually
With such a resounding “no”, the remaining EA staff
became more and more disenchanted with the operation
at Federal, even though EA was still an excellent finan- decided that their only path possible was to launch their
cial contributor. In fact, at the time Federal management own magazine and resigned, en masse, from Federal Pubregarded the two monthly magazines Electronics Australia lishing. Leo Simpson, Greg Swain, John Clarke and Bob
Flynn prepared, over the ensuing months,
and Truckin’ Life as their “jewels in the crown”.
In the meantime, two other monthly elecBy Ross Tester to launch “SILICON CHIP”
18
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Again, when the GM heard about this and, presumably,
their plans, he promised to see them “dead and buried”.
SILICON CHIP launches
But SILICON CHIP persevered and month after month,
made enough money to pay staff, to pay the printers and
distributors . . . with a little (very little!) left over to continue.
When SILICON CHIP published its first issue in November
1987, it maintained the same strong, authoritative editorial
philosophy and content that readers had come to expect
from EA. However, even with SILICON CHIP ’s acknowledged
better content (that came from advertisers in the main) it
was extraordinarily difficult to prise readers away from
the magazine many had grown up with; the one that had
taken them from valves, through transistors and now into
the digital age.
So where did the name come from?
You might not recognise this hirsute character these days...
but then again, this was almost 30 years ago! He’s a tad
older today; slightly less hair . . . (clue: see the inset!)
On SILICON CHIP’s 5th Birthday, we went all out and gave away
a CAR to a reader!!!! Here’s Jaycar’s owner Gary Johnston
drawing the winner!
siliconchip.com.au
When researching the setting up of a new electronics
magazine, Leo Simpson found the market was unbelievably
crowded with names involving “Australia”, “Electronics”,
etc. Not all of these involved publications but Leo figured
anything using those words or combinations of those words
stood a very good chance of disappearing in the market.
Besides, he wanted a name that would be memorable and
different. The digital age was starting to become a force in
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 19
its own right – but even the word “Digital” was hackneyed.
So after much brainstorming and further research, the
name SILICON CHIP was decided on and registered as a
publication.
eat dies a death
With SILICON CHIP now a legitimate competitor in its own
right, (and EA struggling on with several key staff changes)
in 2000 Federal Publishing made a monumentally bad call:
(arguably again) because they didn’t understand why a
magazine would need an expensive laboratory, expensive
reference books and higher-paid “technical” staff than those
that wrote the Dorothy Dixers in their womens magazines
– “and what do you need a technical draftsman for when
we have artists on staff?”. Federal decided they wanted ea
(now it officially had a name change as well, lower case and
all) to go more “consumer” oriented, to develop a market
on top of the hobbyist and technical readership.
To this end, they imported a couple of hot-shot marketing
whizzes from the Old Dart, who completely re-shaped ea to
become “eat”. That “hobbyist stuff” was relegated to a few
pages “down the back” while most of the now highly glossy
magazine breathlessly told all their readers about the latest
whizz-bang consumer products coming onto the market.
The problem with this approach was three-fold:
(1) they missed a couple of months, leading to the rumours that it had ceased publication (which, of course, as
EA it effectively had!).
(2) the old readership deserted in droves, many cancelling their subscriptions and switching over to SILICON CHIP.
(3) They weren’t replacing the old readership because the
consumer area of the market was quite crowded anyway.
So eat circulation dropped like a stone – and less than a
year later it was announced that eat was no more!
As an aside, not long after eat’s demise Leo Simpson
heard on the grapevine that the magazine’s assets were for
sale: the titles eat/ea, EA, ETI, Radio TV and Hobbies, Radio and Hobbies and even back to their ancestor, Wireless
Weekly; copyright on all the articles, all the back issues,
the laboratory (with all its test equipment), reference books
. . . everything that was not nailed down.
So Leo Simpson offered Federal’s accountants the princely sum of $10,000 – and they accepted! When asked why
he bought the remains of the once proud magazine and
what he was going to do with the titles, he said “Absolutely
Once upon a time, Greg Swain had the reputation for the
messiest desk in the company. Then Ross Tester came
along and blew that record right outa the water!
20
Silicon Chip
nothing! But it made me feel so good to buy everything for
ten grand when I had offered them a quarter of a million!”
As owner of all the EA/ETI/RTV&H/R&H copyright, SILICON CHIP continues to make occasional sales for readers
wanting reprints of old articles, PCB patterns (where published) and so on. Naturally, with these magazines going
back into history (way before computers!), electronic files
are virtually non-existent.
Changes in SILICON CHIP production
That brings us to another rather dramatic change which
technology has brought about. When SILICON CHIP started,
desktop publishing was largely some time off. It was a
rather monumental step-up to even type “copy” onto a
word processor, as distinct from a typewriter.
But in the early days, the word processor files were sent
(via a 300 baud acoustic-coupled modem!) to a company
which specialised in “typesetting”. There was no such thing
as computerised page layout – the files were returned to
SILICON CHIP as “galley proofs” – a continuous strip of paper on which the article was printed, to the required column width and in the appropriate “fonts” or type styles.
Galley proofs for large articles could easily be metres long!
The galley then went into “paste up” where it was cut
up and glued in position on layout sheets printed to the
same size as the final magazine size. Allowance was made
for any photos, diagrams, etc in the paste-up.
Speaking of diagrams, in the early days they were all
painstakingly prepared by the draftsman, Bob Flynn, using pen and ink. Large circuit diagrams and printed circuit
board overlays could take, sometimes, days to draw.
Photographs, which had been taken off-site by professional photographers, predominantly in black and white,
were scaled to fit the required spaces and these, along with
the diagrams, were then despatched to a photo-engraver to
not only re-shoot at the right size but in the case of photos, “screened” to produce the dot pattern capable of being printed (the normal magazine or newspaper printing
process to this day cannot print continuous-tone photos).
All of the material, page layouts, diagrams, photos, etc,
was then despatched to a specialised production house
which assembled the pages ready for printing – usually,
after quite a lot of back-and-forwarding for corrections,
changes, etc.
Finally, the magazine was sent by air to the printer –
Two more SILICON CHIP originals: Bob Flynn, our draftsman
(since retired), and John Clarke (who hasn’t!). John moved to
northern NSW many years ago but is still full time with SC.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
originally on Syquest 100MB drives; later, as technology
improved, on (wow!) 250MB Iomega Zip disks (usually, it
took between six and ten disks to send an entire magazine).
That was then . . . and this is now!
SILICON CHIP is now produced virtually entirely “in
house” until the very last stage of the process, printing
(which is done on high speed, heatset web-offset presses
the size of a semi-trailer!).
Pages are designed and set up “on screen” with an Adobe
product called “InDesign”. Computer files containing the
article text (called copy), digital photos, circuit diagrams
and PCB artwork/overlays, along with anything else to go
in the article, are all given the InDesign treatment to produce the pages you are so familiar with.
Circuit diagrams and other graphics are “drawn” on
screen using “CorelDRAW”, using our own component
library, built up over many years. Many have asked over
the years why we don’t use a dedicated CAD program but
we have found that, despite its sometimes poor behaviour,
Corel gives us enormous flexibility.
One thing that hasn’t changed much over the years is
the “look and feel” of the magazine. SILICON CHIP believes
it is important to make articles as legible as possible so
you won’t see too much of the “arty-farty” look so many
modern magazine creative directors are so enamoured by.
In fact, the typeface used in SILICON CHIP in 2017 articles
is exactly the same as that used in SILICON CHIP in 1987.
Sure, we now make extensive used of colour (something
that was prohibitively expensive back then). But the philosophy is to make articles highly readable, as distinct from
pretty (and hard to read!).
We’ve ignored the “modern” trend to use sans-serif typefaces, simply because research has proved again and again
that a serif face – in our case Melior – is very significantly
more legible and comprehension is vastly improved. But
try telling that to a pony-tailed art director!
For the same reason, we try not to use too many typographic “tricks” such as printing over a photo or coloured
background – unless, of course, the photo demands it!
And speaking of photos, our in-house photography has
become one of our strengths – with a minimum of equipment (studio flash and a Nikon DSLR camera) we produce
some pretty amazing shots. We’re sure that many people
who take press and magazine photos have never even heard
For quite some time SILICON CHIP couldn’t afford a secretary
but then it got too much for Leo and he hired Ann Morris –
the same Ann Morris who still answers the phone today!
siliconchip.com.au
of depth-of-field! We have . . .
Of course, the skill of our people in photography manipulation has just a little to do with that (yes, we use
Adobe Photoshop!). And we are constantly congratulated
by contributors in the way we are able to turn their “sow’s
ears” into “silk purses”.
Which is all just as well, as one of the hallmarks of the
magazine has always been clarity and consistency. We know
that our readers are looking for both detail and information; our constant aim is to give it to them!
Another aside: when SILICON CHIP decided to start using
desktop publishing in the 1990s, virtually the whole industry used Apple (later Macintosh) computers. Even retailers
which sold MS-DOS machines had the ubiquitous Macs in
their advertising studios!
Unfortunately, Apples at the time sold for two and three
times (or more!) IBM PCs (or their clones) so SILICON CHIP
decided to go the IBM/MS-DOS route, in line with the
company’s “lean and mean” mantra.
When Greg Swain started dealing with the typesetters,
the owner (a German who must remain nameless!), said
“Nein! It vill not vork. IBM is no goot. You must use Apple.” A couple of successful issues later, he expressed his
amazement that it did, indeed, “vork”!
Lean and mean
As Leo Simpson commented in the publisher’s letter this
month (page 4) one of the main reasons that SILICON CHIP
survived (where so many magazines and publishers failed
along the way) was keeping costs to a minimum.
When the magazine started, it was produced in the basement of Leo’s home in Sydney’s northern beaches. That
was fine with the original “gang of four” (they didn’t even
have an advertising manager or even a secretary!) but as
the operation grew, extra staff became necessary.
So over the ensuing thirty years, SILICON CHIP had to move
five times – with barely a day of production lost each time.
The last move (gad, was it really 11 years ago?) was to
the company’s current building in Brookvale, right in the
heart of the Northern Beaches.
We’ve also changed printers three times – but two of
those were to different divisions of the same company as
they rationalised their own operations. Originally, SILICON CHIP was printed by Masterprint, in Dubbo (country
NSW). When Hannanprint Sydney purchased Masterprint
SILICON CHIP has moved five times in thirty years – two of
those not really by choice! Here’s the third office in Bassett St,
Mona Vale – still fondly regarded by those who can remember!
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 21
and moved its presses to their plant in Alexandria, SILICON CHIP went with them. Even though they were several
hundred kilometres closer, production processes remained
much the same.
Further rationalisation by Hannanprint saw SILICON CHIP
printing moved to their Noble Park plant in Melbourne,
Victoria. But in early 2017, the decision was made by SILICON CHIP (for various reasons, not the least being “lean and
mean!”) to bring printing back to Sydney – this time to
Bluestar, in Silverwater.
Oh, those rumours!
Over the years (and particularly since the days of computer bulletin boards and later forums) we’ve lost count of
the number of times that it has been stated categorically
(eg, my mate works for xxxx and he told me that . . .) that
SILICON CHIP was owned by Jaycar Electronics or Altronics.
And even once, we’ve seen that SILICON CHIP owns Jaycar!
(Oh, how we wish . . .).
To set the record straight once and for all, none of this
is true. While both Jaycar Electronics and Altronics have
supported SILICON CHIP with advertising since the first issue – without which the magazine definitely would have
folded – all three companies are completely independent
of each other. Capiche?
The Internet
The exponential rise of the Internet since SILICON CHIPstarted has had two major impacts on the magazine.
The first, and most obvious, was/is our website, www.
siliconchip.com.au This has itself gone through several iterations – initially it was set up “in house” as a simple source
of information for SILICON CHIP readers – including such
things as PCB pattern and front panel artwork downloads.
Later, an outside company was contracted to significantly
expand the site and also offer limited component and kit
sales, among other lines.
The final change (so far!) came when we took the site back
“in house” and made the on-screen presentation look identical to that of the printed version, with extensive search
facilities. Subscriptions are available in either printed or
online editions, or both, as readers require.
The other significant advance to the website was brought
about by reader demands: they told us that they couldn’t
Another of the early SILICON CHIP staff was the late Rick
Walters. He brought a “hands-on” knowledge of industry
and commercial practice to the company.
22
Silicon Chip
build certain projects because PCBs were getting difficult
or impossible to buy, and/or as components became more
specialised or esoteric, the usual sources did not stock them.
Without wanting to go into competition with our major
advertisers (in fact, we discussed it with them first) we made
the decision to produce and sell all PCBS and many front
panels etc, used for magazine projects (since about 2000),
along with hard-to-get components which retailers could
not justify putting into stock.
Where the retailers decide not to “kit up” for a SILICON
CHIP project (and again, that’s usually because they cannot justify the cost of doing so), we sometimes make kits
available ourselves, either in “short form” or occasionally
full versions.
Most recently, with the purchase of a CAD Laser Cutter,
we also have many acrylic cases, front panels etc, available
via the SILICON CHIP Online Shop.
The other impact of the internet for SILICON CHIP is completely unseen by readers: it has enabled a quite dramatic
streamlining of production processes and tightening of
deadlines, because electronic file despatch and receipt is
virtually instantaneous.
Where deadlines for advertisers “in the olden days!” used
to be around six weeks or so from publication date, it’s now
around a month – with publication on the last Thursday of
each month, deadlines are now the first of that same month.
Internally, that’s also meant we can work very much closer
to the “on press” date because all pages sent to the printer
totally complete. Corrections and amendments are also electronic, and with the printers using the latest publishing and
imposition software, revised pages simply slot into place.
SILICON CHIP, like most publications these days, is produced “Computer to Plate” – gone are the days when four
huge sheets of film (one for each colour, cyan, magenta,
yellow and black) had to be shot and then used to expose
light-sensitive plates for the press. Now, the finished pages
are sent via computer to produce the printing plates direct.
The future?
Well, that is really up to you, our readers and advertisers.
With your continued support, we plan on being around for
another thirty years – and then some . . . though we doubt
that too many of the current staff will be here to celebrate
SC
that particular birthday!
Staff photographer, graphic designer and writer Ross Tester
wasn’t one of the originals: he came along when Leo asked
him to work a day or so a month – nearly twenty years ago!
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 23
Making
Phone
Calls via
Satellite
By Dr David Maddison
Being able to instantly communicate with anyone on Earth at
any time has long been a dream of mankind. It first became at
least partly realisable with the development of radio and the
conventional telephone system. However, radio and mobile
cellular telephone systems still have their limitations.
Here’s how you can now make a phone call from anywhere
to anywhere, via satellites orbiting high above you in space. . .
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Silicon Chip
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T
HE ULTIMATE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM is one
in which each person has their own small, wireless,
handheld personal communications device which
will work anywhere on Earth at an affordable cost – and
preferably offering high speed data transfer with Internet
connectivity.
Conventional mobile phones come close to this ideal
but can only work within the limited range of a cellular tower. With 4G cellular service, this might be several
tens of kilometres under ideal conditions but much less
in common scenarios.
In a large country like Australia or in undeveloped
countries it is simply not economically feasible to install
base stations in enough locations to offer universal coverage. Nor is it possible to have base stations at sea, nor
base stations continuously accessible by aircraft, so other
solutions are necessary.
As early as 1945 Arthur C. Clarke recognised the problems of the limited range of central radio transmitters
and proposed a system of orbiting “rocket stations”
(or satellites as we now know them) to provide
global coverage of radio broadcasts.
You can read his original article titled
“World Extra-Terrestrial Relays – Can
Rocket Stations Give Word-wide Radio
Coverage?” from the October 1945 Wireless World at siliconchip.com.au/l/aaeo
Geostationary vs LEO orbits
Satellites can be placed into two
possible orbital configurations:
geostationary, where the satellite will appear to remain at the
same point above the Earth; or
low Earth orbit (LEO), where
the satellites move rapidly and
can only maintain contact with
a particular point on the Earth
for a limited time, usually just
a few minutes.
To provide global or closeto-global coverage, at least three
or more geostationary satellites
are required – or a much larger
number of LEO satellites.
In the case of LEO satellites they
must be able to hand over any existing radio link to the next satellite that
will become visible to a linked Earth
station (eg, a phone).
Some satellite phone systems don’t aim
for global coverage but only regional coverage
so fewer satellites are needed.
Geostationary satellites orbit at an altitude of
35,786km above the Earth’s equator and their orbital
period is the same as the Earth; thus they appear to be
stationary to a ground observer. Any fixed satellite dish
you see will be pointing at such a satellite.
There are several disadvantages of these satellites for
telephony. One is that there is a noticeable delay in speech
due to the great distance the radio signal has to travel (each
siliconchip.com.au
Diagram from Arthur C. Clarke’s 1945 article showing
how three orbiting geosynchronous satellites could provide global radio coverage. The satellites would also be
able to communicate with each other. The first maritime
telecommunication satellite system, Marisat used this
scheme when its three satellites were launched in 1976.
leg of the trip takes around 0.12 seconds or 0.24 seconds
round trip).
Also, compared with LEO
satellites, a larger amount
of transmitter power is
required in both directions due to the
greater distance.
The line-of-sight
between the
Earth station
and the satellite can be
interfered
with by objects such
a s b u i l dings, trees
or geographical features.
The Earth
station is
also limited
to below 7080° north or
south of the
equator.
LEO satellites typically
orbit at an altitude of between
640 and 1120km,
giving an orbital
period of 1hr 37m
to 1hr 47m and a velocity of 7.5 to 7.3km
per second respectively.
For an altitude of 760km,
which gives a 1hr 40min orbital period, a coverage cell on
the ground of around 2800km raOn these pages: an artist’s impression of Inmarsat’s
Alphasat, one of four satellite phone providers
available in Australia. This image does not convey the
huge size of this satellite with the solar array spanning
45m and the antenna some 9m in diameter.
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November
ovember 2017 25
2017 25
with each other so a link can be seamlessly handed over
to the next satellite that comes into view and the views
must overlap to prevent the call being lost or interrupted.
Satellite phones
Another diagram from Clarke’s article showing “extraterrestrial relay services”. The direction of the arrows
represent uplinks or downlinks.
dius can be provided. A typical link with a ground station
(phone) will last from about 4-15 minutes depending on
the relative position of a satellite and ground station.
Consider the cell of 2800km radius mentioned above, that
would be traversed in about 12.5 minutes at 7.47km per
second, the orbital velocity of a satellite at 760km altitude.
The round-trip delay for that LEO satellite is very much
shorter than geostationery– just 0.005 seconds (compared
to the 0.24 seconds mentioned earlier).
However, since LEO satellites do not remain in the same
place, they must be in placed in orbit in communication
There are several satellite phone systems currently in
use, with more on the horizon. Systems which use geosynchronous satellites include those provided by AceS,
Inmarsat, Thuraya, MSAT/SkyTerra, Terrestar and Pendrell
Corporation (yet to be placed into service). Systems which
use LEO satellites are provided by Globalstar and Iridium.
Satellite phones operate in the “L” band which is defined
by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
(IEEE) as the band from 1GHz to 2GHz.
Iridium phones operate in the range from 1616MHz to
1626.5MHz; Inmarsat phones operate in the range from
1525MHz to 1646.5MHz; while Thuraya phones use the
range from 1525MHz to 1661MHz.
Compare this with land-based mobile phones which operate in the 800MHz to 900MHz and 1800MHz to 1900MHz
bands (although there are other bands coming on line as
other services are moved).
Note that while the L band is used for mobile uplinks and
downlinks, the satellites may use other bands for control
and management purposes and for communicating with
their companion satellites.
Satellite phone physical format
Portable satellite phones come in three main physical
forms.
These are: a standalone handset, which is usually larger
than a modern mobile, mainly because of the relatively large
external antenna; a separate “hot spot” device that wirelessly connects to a standard mobile and uses dedicated
Apps on the mobile; or a “sleeve” into which a standard
The Thuraya Satsleeve+. It clips to the
back of a smartphone and establishes
Inmarsat IsatPhone 2 handset. This a wireless connection. The phone
(with the appropriate App) acts as
phone is said to register onto the
Iridium Extreme 9575 handset. It is compact,
satellite network within 45 seconds the user interface. A dedicated model
for the iPhone also plugs in via the
rugged, water and dust resistant and offers
and also has a standby time of 160
four hours talk time and 30 hours standby time. hours and a talk time of eight hours. phone’s Lightning connector.
26
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Operational scheme for Iridium. The abbreviation AES stands for Aircraft Earth Station and is for communications
between an aircraft and the satellite while ISU means Iridium Subscriber Unit, for a handset or modem. Note the
communications links between the satellites.
smart phone is inserted and like the hot spot device, uses
dedicated Apps on the phone. In addition to these devices,
there is also a wide variety of dedicated marine, data and
other products.
Antenna systems
One challenge of satellite phones designers is to provide
a highly efficient antenna in a small package. Arguably, it
is one of the most important elements of a satellite phone.
Inmarsat Wideye iSavi terminal for the Inmarsat IsatHub
service. The IsatHub service offers stated data speeds of
240kbps uplink or 384kbps downlink, a high quality voice
line and ability to send texts, emails and access the internet.
It can be connected to an iPhone or Android mobile phone.
siliconchip.com.au
One type of antenna used as an external antenna for
Iridium phone equipment is a “hockey puck” style and
has a gain of 3dBic (dBic is gain over isotropic, circular
polarisation), 50 ohm impedance and uses right hand circular polarisation.
Another antenna type used for Iridium handset devices is
the 14mm by 33mm Maruwa MWSL-3105 dielectric-loaded
decafilar-helix (containing ten radiating helical elements
which we will discuss shortly) which provides excellent
beamwidth (>135°). Its gain is 2dBic at the zenith and it
has a 50-ohm impedance.
Circular polarisation of the radio signals means that for
each wavelength, the plane of polarisations rotates through
360° in a corkscrew fashion and energy is radiated in all
planes between horizontal and vertical.
It is like having a “spinning” traditional
dipole antenna (this analogy will be important
to recall later).
This is in contrast to traditional linear
Globalstar’s Sat-Fi will provide a satellite-connected “hot
spot” for your mobile device when out of cellular range.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 27
A standard helical antenna
design. B and E are support
structures, S is the helical
radiating element, R is the
ground plane and C is the
feedline. Author: Ulfbastel
Maruwa antenna
with cover as used
in Iridium devices.
It is designed to
produce signals with
right hand circular
polarisation.
polarisation produced by a dipole antenna which radiates
energy in one plane only. Typically the polarisation is vertical, requiring vertical antennas.
Circularly polarised signals are less dependent on antenna orientation and they are better at penetrating obstacles
such as trees, buildings or even adverse weather.
Circularly polarised signals can be either left or righthanded, which varies per carrier; Globalstar left, Inmarsat
right, Iridium right, Thuraya left.
There is no particular advantage for either polarisation
except one might be used over another to avoid interference
with nearby emission sources, in which case one would
choose the opposite polarisation to the nearby source.
A problem with traditional circular-polarised antennas
is that a signal is emitted from both above and below the
antenna, one signal right-hand and the other left-hand polarised, representing wasted energy.
The problem is solved by using a ground plane, which
acts as a “mirror” and changes the polarisation of one signal and reflects it in the desired direction.
However, the ground plane has to be about one quarter of
the signal wavelength (which would mean a ground plane
Murawa deca-filar
antenna. There are five
pairs of helices, with
each adjacent pair of
helices having a
phase-shift between
them to synthesise the
effect of an upward
travelling spinning dipole.
The green arrow is
the direction of the
current around the
base and the purple
arrow shows the resonant
wave travelling up an
individual helix.
of around 4.6cm diameter for Iridium signals) which is difficult because the phone has to be as compact as possible.
The Murawa multi-filar (it contains multiple helical elements) antenna solves the problem of a ground plane – in
fact it eliminates it, by producing a corkscrew radiation
pattern that travels up the antenna. It uses multiple pairs
of helical elements with a different phase between sequentially activated adjacent pairs.
These suppress the reverse-going wave by allowing the
signal to propagate only in the desired direction since a
reverse-going wave will be cancelled with an additional
wave going in the desired direction that is generated by
the next helical pair.
In the deca-filar antenna used for Iridium applications,
there are five pairs of helical antenna elements.
The physical structure of the Murawa antenna is in the
form of a metal pattern printed onto a low loss dielectric
base. The lower metallised part of the structure forms a
sleeve balun (a type of transformer, to connect a balanced
load to an unbalanced load). This serves to isolate the antenna radiation from the ground plane of the device, so
that antenna resonance is independent other structures in
Orange: Optimum reception
Yellow: Marginal reception
Grey:
Fringe reception
White:
No reception
Coverage area for Thuraya. Note that it is not global but
services most of Africa, Europe, the Middle East and
South East Asia. The area is serviced by two geostationary
satellites, Thuraya 2 and 3. Thuraya 1 was defective and
was parked in a junk orbit and permanently retired.
28
Silicon Chip
Globalstar coverage map for voice, duplex data and Sat-fi.
Sat-Fi is a Globalstar product which which establishes
a satellite link and also connects via a Wi-Fi link to any
device running Globalstar Apps such as a smart phone
or other suitable wireless device. This enables it to make
voice calls and send and receive SMS messages or establish
a data connection. It is like a wireless hotspot for your
phone but the wireless router connection is replaced with a
Globalstar satellite connection.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Satellite orbit
IRIDIUM
GLOBALSTAR
THURAYA
INMARSAT
LEO
LEO
Geostationary
Geostationary
Coverage
Total global coverage
Not global due to smaller
constellation than Iridium.
Not global,
Australian coverage can be
selected geographical
limited in the far north –
coverage but
just need to wait until the
available Australia wide.
satellite is in view.
Small, low cost.
Small, sleeve concept
Handset features
Small, rugged.
Rugged handsets
available for smart phones.
available.
Rugged models available.
2.4kbps
60kbps down
uncompressed on
9.6kbps uncompressed,
15kbps up on handset
Data available
handset, 1.5Mbps or
on handset
and 144kbps with
8Mbps on data
with kit.
terminal.
terminals.
Example cost of
voice call from one
Australian provider
40c to 99c
per 30s plus 40c
flagfall plus $40
to $99 monthly fee.
80c to $1
per minute plus
monthly fee of
$20 to $70.
80c to 99c
per minute plus
$15 to $65
monthly fee.
Global except for
latitudes higher than 82°
(ie, no polar coverage).
Medium cost.
Rugged handsets
available.
2.4kbps on handset and
492kbps with BGAN terminal
for standard IP data.
40c to 75c per minute
for outgoing calls plus
40c flagfall plus
$40 to $99 monthly fee.
Table 1: comparison of various satellite phone systems. According to one Australian dealer that sells phones for all these networks, the overall plan costs from cheapest to most expensive are Thuraya, Globalstar, Inmarsat and Iridium. Notably, the
two cheapest systems offer the most limited coverage and the two most expensive offer near global or global coverage. Data
rates available depend on various options selected. Note also that faster speeds are often quoted but these figures are for compressed data. Costs are examples only; like all mobile plans, a detailed comparison should be done for your circumstances.
the housing or unwanted loading caused by the body of
the person holding it.
Networks available in Australia
The four satellite phone networks commercially available
in Australia are Globalstar, Inmarsat, Iridium and Thuraya.
Iridium gives global coverage, Inmarsat is near global coverage except polar regions while Globalstar and Thuraya
are for specific regions.
Inmarsat was founded in 1979, then Globalstar (original company founded 1991, restructured 2003), followed
by Thuraya in 1997 and then Iridium (original service
launched 1998, bankrupt 1999, company restarted 2001).
These dates don’t necessarily reflect these company’s
offerings for handheld satellite phones however. Iridium
introduced a handset in 1998, Globalstar in 2000, Thuraya
Coverage map for Inmarsat’s Alphasat and Inmarsat-4
satellites whose purpose is to cover the main landmasses
of the world. Only the Arctic and Antarctic areas above
about 82° are not covered.
siliconchip.com.au
had a limited service from 2001 and Inmarsat introduced
a handset in 2006.
All services have specific strengths, weaknesses, coverage areas and costs (as of mid-2017) – see Table 1.
Iridium
Iridium were the first company to offer handheld satellite
phones in 1998 although the company soon went bankrupt
in 1999 due to the high cost of handsets, the call costs and
poor management.
Originally, the bankruptcy meant that the unused satellites would have to be de-orbited so they did not take up
valuable orbital slots but this fortunately did not happen,
mainly due to the efforts of one man, Dan Colussy.
The retired former President of Pan Am put together an
unlikely group of investors and purchased the assets of
Spot beam coverage areas for Inmarsat’s geostationary I-4
series satellites. Each colour represents a different satellite.
The satellites are part of Inmarsat’s BGAN Broadband
Global Area Network and offer data rates of up to 492kbps
to the highest capacity ground terminals.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 29
the bankrupt company at a bargain price of US$35 million
(original cost US$6 billion!) and relaunched it in 2001.
(See the panel elsewhere detailing the book “Eccentric
Orbits – the Iridium Story”, described as a “monumental
piece of nonfiction” and “high scientific journalism, exciting business journalism and a rattling good tale.”)
Iridium was originally intended to have 77 LEO satellites – which happens to correspond to the atomic number
of iridium, hence the name. However, it was found that
only 66 satellites were needed, although spare satellites
are kept in orbit.
Iridium satellites are in polar orbit and occupy six orbital planes. Each of the satellites communicates with up
to four neighbouring satellites in the constellation, two in
the same orbital plane and two in adjacent orbital planes
– one to the front and one to the rear.
The current satellites are being replaced with Iridium
NEXT satellites which will provide superior features such
as more bandwidth and higher data speeds. The new satellites will be backwardly-compatible with existing ones
ensuring there is no loss of service and existing equipment
can be used.
The NEXT satellites that replace the existing ones will
also consist of a constellation of 66 satellites and will
have 6 in-orbit spares and 9 on-ground spares. They will
offer voice at 2.4kbps and data speeds of from 128kbps to
1.5Mbps on L band and up to 8Mbps on large transportable or fixed terminals using Ka band (19.4GHz to 19.6GHz
downlink and 29.1GHz to 29.3GHz uplink).
An additional feature of the Iridium NEXT satellites is
they can carry third party “hosted” payloads (see box).
Argo buoys (see S ILICON C HIP July 2014 – www.
siliconchip.com.au/Article/7932) use Iridium communications to transmit their data. Iridium technology can also be
built into devices such as wildlife tracking collars.
Globalstar
Globalstar consists of a constellation of 24 LEO satellites
which provide coverage of up to 80 percent of the Earth’s
surface (excepting polar regions and oceanic regions for
True global tracking of aircraft with ADS-B via Iridium NEXT satellites
Aireon is an example of a hosted payload that is being
fitted to Iridium NEXT satellites.
It is a space-based aircraft tracking system which will
provide global tracking of aircraft in near real-time using
ADS-B (Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast), a
tracking system fitted to aircraft that automatically transmits GPS coordinates, airspeed, direction, aircraft identity
and other information from on-board systems.
ADS-B already exists on most commercial aircraft and
many private aircraft – and is in fact now mandatory in
the airspace of many countries. It even has anti-terrorism
features built-in, where that can be a problem.
(See the fascinating feature on ADS-B in the August
2013 issue: siliconchip.com.au/Article/4204 and how to
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Silicon Chip
use it in conjunction with flightradar24.com).
The problem is that the radio frequency used, 1090MHz,
is limited to line-of-sight and coverage depends on the
aircraft altitude, distance to the ground receiver station
and terrain and weather conditions.
Aireon doesn’t replace the existing ground-based ADSB receiver network but augments it, with space-based receivers to achieve true global coverage.
(Incidentally, as well as viewing ADS-B data from anywhere in the world on your computer, you can receive
ADS-B signals themselves, in your local area, with a bit
of hardware and software. See how to build one yourself
at low cost using a cheap USB DVB-T dongle, also in the
August 2013 issue: siliconchip.com.au/Article/4209).
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Oops! Iridium satellite collision
In 2009 an operational Iridium (number 33) satellite
collided with a retired Russian military communications
satellite, Kosmos-2251, that had never been deorbited.
The impact occurred at a combined speed of 42,120kph
or 11.7 kilometres per second. Around 2000 pieces of debris larger than 10cm resulted from the collision and in
2011 the International Space Station (ISS) had to perform
an avoidance manoeuvre. As well, the Chinese were concerned about debris hitting some of their satellites.
In 2012 debris again came near the ISS and astronauts
temporarily took refuge inside Soyuz capsules until it
passed. Software designed to track satellite orbits had
predicted that they should have missed each other by
just 584m.
Such events are rare but emphasise the importance of
deorbiting unused satellites or placing them into “graveyard” orbits.
Here is a video of a simulation of the collision: “Iridium 33 and Cosmos 2251 Collision - Evolve Based Debris”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaf0
Also see “LLNL TESSA Simulation of 2009 Cosmos+
Iridium Satellite Collision” siliconchip.com.au/l/aaf1
simplex data and less so for voice).
When a satellite receives a call from a handset it relays
the call to a terrestrial gateway which then directs the call
to the fixed or cellular phone network or internet. With
Globalstar’s second generation satellites, other satellites are
able to pick up a call simultaneously and if the first satellite moves out of range, others handle the call.
According to Globalstar the use of terrestrial gateways
allows key technology and equipment to be kept on the
ground and accessible and integrated to other phone networks, making Globalstar easier to expand and improve.
The technology is referred to as “bent pipe” architecture
meaning that the satellite is an analog repeater (like a mirror in the sky according to Globalstar) and can be simple
and cheap with the more complex technology of what is
essentially a large cellular base station kept on the ground.
There are 24 terrestrial gateways around the world each
of which can handle 10,000 simultaneous phone calls.
Globalstar uses CDMA technology.
The calculated debris field 50 minutes after the collision
between Iridium 33 and Kosmos 2251.
Author: Rlandmann.
voice services except for above 82° latitude.
Mobile handsets such as the Inmarsat IsatPhone 2 mentioned above use the Alphasat and Inmarsat-4 satellite
constellation (see coverage map). The Alphasat is a very
large satellite with a mass of 6.6 tonnes and dimensions of
7m x 2.9m x 2.3m. Its solar array span of 45m producing
12kW of power for communications, with extra power for
hosted payloads (see panel).
Its unfolded antenna reflector is 9m across. It uses chemical and plasma ion thrusters for station keeping.
A notable use of Inmarsat was in the search for missing
aircraft MH370. The aircraft used their Classic Aero Service to transmit routine engine information to the manufacturer. While this does not provide location information,
rough locations were determined
by mathematical analysis of the
data.
Thuraya
The Thuraya system uses two geostationary satellites to
offer regional rather than global coverage. In addition to
satellite communications, Thuraya handsets can communicate with regular terrestrial networks just like any regular mobile phone and they can do this in a large number
of countries due to extensive roaming agreements with
other carriers. Thuraya handsets can be in the form of either a dedicated phone or in the form of a “sleeve” which
attaches to a smart phone.
Inmarsat
Inmarsat uses 12 geostationary satellites for various services and is global in coverage except for polar regions.
It is a well-established network (1979) that was initially
offered to maritime operators (hence the name) but now
offers a wide variety of voice and data services, including
terrestrial, for all types of customers. Coverage is global for
siliconchip.com.au
The Iridium GO! is a satellite hot spot that wirelessly
connects to a smart phone or tablet at a range of up to 30m
and satellite calls and data are sent to and from the device
while the smart device acts as the user interface. Video:
“Iridium GO! Tutorial Video” siliconchip.com.au/l/aaf3
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 31
A usage map for Iridium showing phone usage by location (the white dots) for the week beginning 22nd July 2007.
Unfortunately this is the latest such map that Iridium published. Note how major shipping routes are traced out and heavy
use in Australia – and also a number of uses from Antarctica. Satellite telephones that use geostationary satellites do not
work beyond about 70-80° of latitude so LEO satellites, such as Iridium, are needed in such locations.
Phone number plan for satellite phones
In 1996 the International Telecommunications Union
(ITU) assigned a “country code” under the Global Mobile
Satellite System (GMSS) number space.
For satellite phones it’s normally +881 plus one or two
digits depending on which carrier is being used.
For example, Iridium is assigned +881 6 and +881 7.
However, Thuraya has been allocated +882 16 which is in
the number space for “International Networks”, telephone
services not exclusively dedicated to a particular country
but not generally for satellite telephony.
Presumably, there were no allocations available under
the +881 number space by the time Thuraya was launched.
Inmarsat, which predates the allocation, had already been
assigned +870 to +874.
Particular carriers may elect to provide a country-specific
phone number. For example, Iridium in the US provides an
Arizona-based number for those people unwilling to dial
the expensive GMSS number, while Globalstar provides
a local number in the country in which the user is based.
In Australia all available satellite phones using an Australian carrier or provider can be given an Australian 04xx
mobile number. If purchasing a satellite phone in Australia,
you should ensure that your provider is able to offer an
Australian number for the phone of your choice.
Iridium phones have an 8-digit number after the GMSS
number, Inmarsat have a 9-digit number and Thuraya have
an 8-digit number. To dial the phones directly using their
GMSS numbers rather than the local numbers, you would
dial the international access code, eg 0011 from Australia,
followed by the GMSS number, say 8816 followed by the
8 digit phone number, eg 0011 8816 99393295.
To make a call from a satellite phone when not using the
assigned local number you would dial 00 for outbound calls
How resistant are satphones to eavesdropping?
Most security experts seem to be of the
opinion that satellite phones do not offer
a high level of security against eavesdropping by unauthorised individuals. In 2012
researchers Benedikt Driessen and Ralf
Hund managed to break the two common
encryption schemes on satellite phones,
GMR-1 and GMR-2.
They were able to do this because the
phones do not use private keys for their
encryption and all that is therefore needed
is to understand the mathematical algorithm used.
With a private key encryption scheme
you cannot decipher the encrypted data
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Silicon Chip
even if you know the algorithm used. Of
course, in practice the likelihood of anyone
intercepting your call except for the government is likely to be low but it is important to
be conscious of the risk.
The report on the encryption weakness
“Don’t Trust Satellite Phones: A Security
Analysis of Two Satphone Standards” can be
read at siliconchip.com.au/l/aaep
Hacking Iridium
A presentation was given at the Eleventh
Hope conference in 2016 on security issues
with Iridium and how the claimed high level
of security arises from the complexity of the
Celebrating 30 Years
system rather than specific security protocols
that have been implemented.
It showed how they reverse engineered
the data structure of Iridium which was not
publicly documented and gained great insight
into the workings of the system. Signals were
received with RTL-SDR or HackRF/Rad1o.
Of course, what they did may not be legal
depending on jurisdiction.
Their video of the talk including a demonstration of connecting to a “secure” telephone
line of a C-37 aircraft of the US 310th Airlift
Squadron and some very high level technical
information is at “Iridium Satellite Hacking HOPE XI 2016”: siliconchip.com.au/l/aaez
siliconchip.com.au
Hosted payloads on Iridium NEXT and Inmarsat
Of the satphone providers, Iridium NEXT
and Inmarsat’s Alphasat are able to accommodate a third party “hosted payload”.
A hosted payload is a semi-independent
piece of hardware attached to the satellite
such as a sensor or instrument of some
kind that uses the host satellite for a “piggyback” ride into space.
It will typically use the host satellite’s
power supply and transponders for power
and to send and receive data.
Advantages of hosted payloads include:
• a shorter time to get the payload into
space as a launch vehicle does not
have to be organised and there are
many available launches
• lower launch costs as the launch vehicle
and other launch facilities are shared
• the possibility of more resilient infrastructure because instead of one satellite with
a lot of capabilities, a larger number
of hosted payloads each with a lesser
number of capabilities can be used and
a failure of one unit will not cause total
loss of the system.
One example of a hosted payload is a
UHF communications payload of the Australian Defence Force that is on the Intelsat
22 spacecraft.
Others include those for laser communications and a Ka band downlink for data link
speeds of up to 2Gbps, Q (33GHz to 50GHz)
and V (40GHz to 75GHz) band propagation
experiments, flight testing of a star tracker
followed by the country code, area code and phone number.
You dial the country code even if you are in that country.
Apart from a GMSS number and a local Australian mobile number that may be provided by an Australian carrier,
ACMA (the Australian Communications and Media Authority) have also allocated the following number prefixes
for Australian satellite phones: 0141, 0142, 0143, 0145 and
0147, each of which are followed by the six digits identifying that particular phone.
When dialling from a satellite phone to a local Australian number with area code, you would dial numbers the
same as you usually do, except you would include the area
code (even if within that area code’s calling zone). For others to call that satellite phone they would simply dial the
assigned local number.
Note also that in Australia, if you have a standard satellite number (such as from an overseas carrier) you will not
be able to call 13 or 1300 numbers, 1800 numbers or emergency numbers in the normal way and perhaps not at all.
This could negate one of the main reasons people, especially travelling in the outback, buy a satellite phone in
the first place.
and environmental sensors on Alphasat.
Aieron (see separate panel) is another
hosted payload to augment the existing
ground-based ADS-B global aircraft tracking system with satellite-based receivers
to cover “black spots”.
Iridium NEXT satellites can carry one
large hosted payload or a number of smaller ones. A total payload mass of 210kg can
be carried and a total of 650W of power
is available with an 1100W surge while a
combined data rate of 1Mbps with 10Mbps
surge is available.
Whether a LEO or a geostationary satellite is chosen as the host platform for a
payload is dependent upon the specific
application.
areas are quite large.
Most handsets (such as Globalstar) can give a rough location fix, with a maximum 20km radius of error based on
triangulation while Iridium, Thuraya and Inmarsat can
give an even-more-accurate GPS fix from phone handsets.
Unlike terrestrial mobile phones, which are all built to
the same hardware standards and which for an emergency
call can connect to any available mobile phone carrier’s
tower even if out of range of their own carrier, satphones
use different technology standards and can only connect to
the satellite system that the phone handset is designed for.
Debunking a dangerous myth!
There is a widely-held belief that if you dial the 112
emergency number from a terrestrial mobile phone (ie, a
standard mobile) that it will automatically connect to a
satellite if you are out of range of a tower.
This is simply not true. If you are out of range of a mobile
(cellular) phone tower, a non-satellite mobile phone cannot connect to a satellite and make any call – emergency
or otherwise.
Emergency calls from satellite phones
What are “Iridium Flares”?
It is mandatory for all satellite phones sold in Australia
to support dialling of the Australian emergency number.
In Australian territory (except Antarctica) and territorial
waters out to 200 nautical miles, emergency calls go via
an Australian operator.
Outside of the Australian mainland but in territorial
waters the Australian Maritime Safety Authority would
typically be involved in an emergency call and rescue.
Outside of territorial waters calls are expected to be handled by the service provider, who will pass the call to the
appropriate authority for the area.
An international inbound roamer in Australia could dial
112 for emergency calls but it is possible that their carrier
will also support 000 calls as operators try to keep phone
firmware updated and consistent with regional standards.
Emergency operators will generally receive a three digit
code giving the rough area of the originating call based
on maps of “standardised mobile service areas” but these
Iridium flares are flashes of sunlight reflected from the older
Iridium satellites (but not from Iridum NEXT). The web site
at siliconchip.com.au/l/aaf5 can be used to predict Iridium
flares (and other things) plus there are phone Apps.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 33
Spot beams
Interesting videos and web pages
All links in SILICON CHIP are quicklinks to save you the hassle of
keying-in (and making errors in!) sometimes long URLs. In the
SILICON CHIP online edition they are all direct one-click links.
Using an Inmarsat phone in the Outback
“Immarsat Satellite Phone Video”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaeq
Real-time tracking by an earth station with dish antennas following Globalstar satellites. (Note that this is a fairly uneventful video
but you do see the antennas moving as they track the satellites).
This earth station is located in outback WA, about 770km NE of
Perth. “Meekatharra Globalstar Satellite Teleport – for satphones”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaer
A teardown of a 2000 vintage Globalstar satellite phone by an
Australian blogger, David Jones. He has a lot of other interesting
videos on his channel as well. “EEVblog #721 – Globalstar Satellite
Phone Teardown”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaes
The teardown of an early model Iridium phone:
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaet
“Globalstar Overview (2012)”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaeu
“Iridium-1 Technical Webcast”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaev
“The story of Inmarsat I-4”
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaew
“Launch of Thuraya-3 Satellite” siliconchip.com.au/l/aaex
“Inmarsat – The Mobile Satellite Company” (corporate video)
siliconchip.com.au/l/aaey
The reverse is not true, of course: even if you are within range of a cellular tower, with rare exception (satellite
phones specifically designed for two bands) a satphone
will not try to connect to a standard mobile phone tower
– it will always connect via its carrier’s satellite.
The international standard emergency number 112
should get you through to local emergency services wherever you are in the world and whatever phone you are using, as long as you are in range of a tower or appropriate
satellite but you should confirm that your operator supports
that before going on any potentially hazardous journey.
In order not to waste communications bandwidth by
transmitting to areas not in a satellite’s targeted geographic
area and also to ensure the maximum number of communications channels are available, telephony and data satellites use spot beams.
These are concentrated radio beams using high gain antennas that send and receive signals to and from limited
geographic areas.
Iridium’s LEO satellites’ spot beams move with the satellite but all spot beams and satellite footprints overlap.
Each satellite can project 48 spot beams onto the Earth’s
surface, arranged in three sectors with 16 beams each,
each approximately 400km in diameter. The satellite’s full
48-beam footprint is approximately 4500km in diameter.
The large number of fast-moving satellites with multiple overlapping spot beams minimises missed connections
and dropped calls, since more than one satellite is usually
visible from any place on Earth.
Usually it’s more than that, with the constellation of interconnected, cross-linked satellites “talking” with other
nearby satellites in front, behind and in adjacent orbits.
For an animation of how an Iridium satellite’s coverage
area moves with the orbit of the satellite see siliconchip.
com.au/l/aaf4
On the other hand, Inmarsat’s I-4 geostationary satellites
can each generate 19 wide regional beams and around 228
narrow spot beams.
Geostationary spot beams generally remain in one area
on the ground, although they can be moved to a different
area if necessary.
Typical ways satellites can alter their spot beam coverage is by switching antennas or electronically steering the
beams with phased array antenna technology.
SC
Acknowledgement:
The author wishes to the thank Communications Alliance
Ltd for information on the operation of emergency numbers
from satellite phones.
“A rattling good tale”
Eccentric Orbits, the Iridium Story, by John Bloom
ISBN 978-0-8021-2168-4; Atlantic Monthly Press, New York
It might sound like a pretty dry subject but author John Bloom has managed to turn this (true!) story into a
book that you will find very hard to
put down.
The title page notes perhaps sum it
up best of all: “How the largest manmade constellation in the heavens
was built by dreamers in the Arizona
desert, targeted for destruction by
panicked executives and saved by a
single Palm Beach retiree who battled
Motorola, cajoled the Pentagon, wrestled with thirty banks, survived an attack by Congress, infiltrated the White
House, found allies through the black
34
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
entertainment network and wooed a
mysterious Arab prince to rescue the
only phone line that links every inch
of the planet”.
The retiree was former Pan Am
president Dan Colussy, who heard of
Motorola’s plans to scuttle the six billion dollar Iridium project (including
all its satellites) and against a huge
amount of opposition, managed to
revive the project for half a cent in
the dollar (just US$35 million!).
The 550+ page “Eccentric Orbits”
is available on line from a variety of
sources and believe us, once you start
reading it you definitely won’t stop!
siliconchip.com.au
Getting even more from
siliconchip.com.au
As a SILICON CHIP reader (thanks!) you’ve almost certainly visited the SILICON
CHIP website – siliconchip.com.au . . . You may have even spent some time on
line, looking for information. But we know that most people use only a tiny
fraction of any website – ours included. That’s usually because most people don’t
that know the features they want exist. Here’s how to get more – much more –
from the SILICON CHIP website. There’s a lot more to it than meets the eye!
W
e published an article on our newly-revised website back in April, 2013 – and as you might expect,
we have made a lot of improvements since then. Some of
them were issues identified over the years and now “fixed”,
Some are new features you’ve asked us for and we’ve been
able to include.
the online magazine “look and feel” as the printed edition, for familiarity if no other reason. But many (most?)
mobile devices, phones and tablets, don’t have the Adobe
Flash plugin.
The website automatically detects if you don’t have
this and switches over to an HTML rendering engine for
online issues.
In short, this means that you can view any of our online
(1) VIEW SILICON CHIP ONLINE ON MOST DEVICES –
issues on just about any device, as long as the screen is
PC, PHONE, TABLET, ETC
Along with viewing all SILICON CHIP articles online on sufficiently large.
Incidentally, we know that Flash support is supposed
PCs exactly as they appear in the printed edition, they can
be viewed on tablets/phones or on devices without Adobe to be ending within a year or so (it’s been annouced many
times!) but when (if?) it does, the webFlash (eg, on macOS).
By Nicholas Vinen
site will cater for this.
It was always our intention to have
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 35
Viewing issues is similar, regardless of whether you have
Flash or not. For example, when you click on the cover of
the current edition that appears on the “home” page (which
is the one currently available in newsagents) you will see
a list of articles in that issue on the left side.
Hover your mouse over an article name to see a short
description. Click on the name to jump to the first page. To
change to the next (or previous) page, click in one of the
corners of the magazine: the right-hand corners takes you
forward one or two pages; the left-hand corners takes you
back one or two pages (depending on whether you have
one page at view or two).
You can normally also use the left/right or page-up/pagedown keys on your keyboard to navigate the issue. If your
screen is small or low resolution and you’re having trouble
reading the magazine, try clicking on the “Fullscreen” button in the lower left corner.
Whether this helps depends on your screen layout; in some
cases it can substantially increase the screen area available
to the magazine while in other cases it makes no difference.
If you’re using the Flash plugin, next to the Fullscreen
button is a drop-down menu that lets you change between
three different display resolutions or switch to the HTML
version. Selecting a higher resolution makes the magazine
clearer but also means it takes longer to load.
If you have logged in to your account, your preference
will be recorded for the next time you view an issue.
The HTML viewer attempts to detect the size of your
browser window and optimise the image quality to suit
your screen.
If you have a screen in portrait mode, as is common with
mobile phones, it should switch to a single-page viewing
mode in order to maximise the viewing area of the page.
Browsing an online issue via HTML is similar to Flash –
you simply click at the left or right edge of the issue to flip
to the previous or next spread respectively, or you can click
on the name of an article at left to jump to its first page.
One extra thing we should point out is that from time to
time, we publish diagrams (especially circuits) rotated by
90° so that they will fit on the page.
Since you can’t necessarily rotate your display and rotating your head is quite uncomfortable, in this case, a link
should appear to the left of the page to allow you to open
This screen grab shows us browsing one of our online
issues using the Flash plugin. The contents of the issue are
shown at left, along with any shop items associated with
the article on screen. Note the double-page presentation.
36
Silicon Chip
a PDF showing the diagram right-way up.
If you have a mouse wheel or equivalent, you can zoom
in and out. When you zoom in initially, it may look fuzzy
but a higher resolution version should load momentarily,
sharpening it up.
Zooming on devices with touchscreens is one of the areas where we plan to improve the HTML viewer in future.
(2) SILICON CHIP SHORTLINKS
You’ve probably noticed that URLs (website addresses) in SILICON CHIP articles are now routinely converted
to “shortlinks” – a much shorter version which will take
you direct to the appropriate page without laboriously rekeying the URL.
These are in the form of siliconchip.com.au/Link/ABCD
They’re real convenient in the printed edition – and even
moreso in the online edition, because clicking on any
shortlink will take you straight to the webpage referenced
in the article.
Hyperlinks which redirect to articles (features or projects)
which have been previously published in SILICON CHIP
work exactly the same way but are in a slightly different
form; eg siliconchip.com.au/Article/ABCD will take you to
. . . this feature! Hyperlinks within articles should work
normally with the HTML viewer.
(3) LINKS IN ONLINE ADVERTS
SILICON CHIP advertisers are given the opportunity to make
any sections of their adverts links in the online edition. If
they do this, as you move your mouse over any links, the
image will change to the familiar “hand” logo; click on this
and you will be taken direct to the product/service being
advertised.
(4) ARTICLE SEARCHES NOW COVER ALL ISSUES OF
SILICON CHIP
Entering the contents of all issues was an exhaustive process but it is now complete, right back to to the first issue
from November 1987 (thirty years ago!). So you can search
all SILICON CHIP issues in one go.
(See section on “searching” – point 7).
Previous articles referenced are also converted to
shortlinks in the form of siliconchip.com.au/Article/1234
Now we are viewing the same issue (indeed, the same
pages) using the HTML version. You can’t see the difference
in an image this small but it isn’t quite as clear. However, it
will work on just about any device and browser.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Note though that searching the content of the issues
themselves (“Word Search”, explained below) is currently
limited to issues from May 1997 onward. That’s 20+ years
of content – keep in mind that components, etc, from that
long ago will now be difficult or impossible to obtain.
(7) EXPANDED SEARCH PARAMETERS
Search for any project or feature article ever published in
SILICON CHIP, based on its title, author, PCB code or other
parameters, including some or any of the words contained
in that article.
Click on the “Articles” menu near the top-left corner of
most pages on the website (including the front page). You
will then be presented with a series of checkboxes and entry
fields. By default, the website will search all articles. You
only need to fill in one of the entry fields below; searching
within either the article title (“Name”), its synopsis (“Description”), by Author name (“Author”) or a kit or PCB code
(“Kits / PCBs”).
You can narrow your search to a particular type of article by deselecting some of the checkboxes along the top;
to select just one type of article, click the “None” button
to the right of the checkboxes to clear them all, then select
the one that you want. You can also narrow your search to
a particular project or feature article category by selecting
that category from the dropdown below the entry fields.
Here’s the trick to easily find the article you are looking
for: only enter one or two key words related to that article
in the relevant entry field.
If you enter a word which is not found in that particular article, even if the other words are present, it will not
result in a match. You’re better off putting fewer words in
the search box and then manually browsing through the
resulting list.
For example, say you are looking for a lead-acid battery
charger that we published as a constructional project. Your
best bet is to deselect the “Circuit Notebook” checkbox (to
avoid spurious results) and simply to put “charger” into
the Name search field. If you put “battery charger” or “leadacid battery charger” you may not find it because it might
have been named “sla battery charger” or “lead acid battery
charger” (no hyphen).
The resulting list will include the year and month of
publication, the name of the article, the author(s) and information on any PCBs or kits related to that article. Each
entry also includes a link to any items in the SILICON CHIP
shop relevant to that project. So this is quite a good way to
find items in our shop, as well as articles.
Sometimes you may not know the name of an article but
you may remember something specific that is referred to
within the article. In this case, you can use the Word Search
feature. Open up the Articles menu at the top of the screen
and choose the “Word Search” option. You can enter one
word, several words, or even a phrase or phrases within
quotation marks.
Note that the search function will, in some cases, find
This shows how you can zoom in while viewing an online
issue, for example, to get a clearer view of a detailed
diagram. On a PC or laptop, this is quite easy — you just
point the cursor and spin the mousewheel to zoom in/out.
The results of searching the Name field in the magazine
contents database for the term “Micromite”. This gives us a
list of 25 articles with links to access them directly, as well
as listing the associated shop items for each article.
(5) ARTICLE PREVIEWS
You can view a “preview” of any article from any issue
of SILICON CHIP from May 1997 to the present, or from the
now out-of-print (but still requested) “Performance Electronics for Cars”
To do this, simply click on the “Issues” menu at the topleft corner of most pages of the website (including the front
page) and you will see the covers of all the available online issues, along with the month and year of publication
and number of pages below. Click on any of these covers to
open up a preview of that issue. The first one or two pages
of most articles will be visible. For more information on
how to navigate through the online issue/preview, see the
“Online issue navigation” section below. Viewing “Performance Electronics for Cars” is similar – just click on Books.
(6) 20 YEARS OF SILICON CHIP CONTENT
View the cover and contents listing of any issue of SILICON CHIP from May 1997 to the present (not available on
devices with touchscreen-only interface).
As above, click on the “Issues” menu to view the covers of the issue and then simply hover your mouse cursor
or pen stylus just above one of the covers. After a couple
of seconds, a short summary of the major articles in that
issue will appear. If you’re interested in any of them, you
can click on the cover to view the preview, as described in
(1) above. This can be a handy way to find an article if you
don’t know its name but remember the approximate date
of publication.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 37
matches within advertisements in more recent issues. This
depends on the format in which the advertisement was supplied to us – and whether the advertiser has themselves
highlighted products, etc.
(8) LIST ALL ARTICLES
You can list every project, feature article or review ever
published in SILICON CHIP
Click on the “Articles by category” entry in the Articles
menu to get a list of the (currently) 31 different categories
into which SILICON CHIP project articles are organised.
Click on one of the links and you will then be shown a
list of all the matching articles, in a format identical to the
contents search already described above.
(9) SEARCH INDEXES FOR ELECTRONICS AUSTRALIA
AND ELECTRONICS TODAY INTERNATIONAL
We’ve talked about finding SILICON CHIP articles but there
is also the an abbreviated listing of old Electronics Australia
and Electronics Today International projects, for which SILICON CHIP owns the copyright.
While we believe that the best way to find SILICON CHIP
articles is via the search tools, we also keep an up to date
index for each new issue that is published. Simply click on
the “Indexes” menu at the top of the website, somewhere
near the middle of the screen, and choose either “Silicon
Chip Projects Index” or “Silicon Chip Features Index”.
find that project, and then click on the resulting Shop link.
However, if you’d prefer to simply view any downloads
or purchases available for a given issue, open up the “Shop”
menu at top and then select the very last item, “by Year/
Month”. This will give you a matrix of years and months.
The number of items in the shop associated with the issue
published in each year/month combination is indicated in
parentheses.
Note that the shop includes all article-related downloads,
including those which may be available for free. We’ve done
this to keep all the downloads in one place.
You can purchase any or all items by adding them to your
trolley as you would do for other websites.
(12) VIEW ALL THE NOTES AND ERRATA FROM ANY
YEAR IN ONE PLACE.
We hate mistakes! But at least we tell you about them as
soon as we know. When you find when the original article
was published (from searching [above], if necessary), select
the “Notes & Errata” item in the “Articles” menu and then
click on the year your project was published and view the
resulting PDF. Scroll down to the particular year and month.
The Notes and Errata, not just for that year but ALL subsequently published for that project will be listed. This way,
if you’re building a particular project, you can easily find
any notes or errata published for it in later issues.
(11) EASILY FIND ANY SILICON CHIP ONLINE SHOP
ITEMS FOR ANY PROJECT
The easiest way to find downloads or shop items associated with a particular project is to use the contents search to
(13) CREATE A NEW NO-OBLIGATION SILICON CHIP
ACCOUNT
To buy anything from SILICON CHIP, to take out a subscription, etc, you need to set up an account. It won’t cost
anything until you actually order something from us – and
you can use Visa, Mastercard or Paypal. (We use the latest
SSL technology data encryption and we don’t retain your
card details, for your protection)
You’re free to set up your own user name and password,
and you can change that at any time.
If you provide an e-mail address, we will also use this to
send you a subscription renewal reminder.
Incidentally, your information is safe with us: we don’t
share it with any other organisation (the only exception is
when we send your address to our mailing house to send
your subscription, etc).
While browsing the magazine covers of all our online
issues, simply stop and hover your mouse cursor over one
cover to display this handy list of its main contents. You
don’t need a subscription or even account to do this.
You can browse our online shop in various different ways.
In this case, we are looking at the list of all components for
sale. This includes some handy pre-built modules that you
can use to build our projects, or for your own purposes.
(10) READ THE FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (AND
ANSWERS) FOR SILICON CHIP AND THE WEBSITE
If there’s anything you’re confused or unsure about, especially regarding the SILICON CHIP website, please read our
FAQ, which can be found under the “Help, Contact & FAQ”
menu on the right-hand side of the menu bar.
A lot of questions we get via email or over the telephone
are already answered in the FAQ! If it doesn’t answer your
question, please contact us and we may update the FAQ to
help others in future.
38
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
(14) ORGANISE OR RENEW YOUR PRINT/ONLINE/COMBINED SUBSCRIPTION, OR CHECK ITS STATUS
Once you have an account, subscribing to SILICON CHIP
is easy. If you want to subscribe to the print edition (via
either a print or combined print/online subscription), you
should provide your address while signing up. Then all
you have to do is click on the “Subscribe” menu at top and
follow the prompts
Remember, SILICON CHIP subscribers automatically qualify
for a 10% discount on any item from the SILICON CHIP online shop (except, of course, subscriptions!)
(18) ACCESS SUBSCRIBER-ONLY OR PAID DOWNLOADS
There are many downloads accessible on the SILICON
CHIP website, such as PCB patterns (PDF files), panel art,
microcontroller software (source code and/or HEX file) and
PC software.
Pretty much all downloads are free if you are a current
subscriber. You need to log in to your account to access these
free downloads. Some downloads are free regardless. For
the rest, if you are not a subscriber, you will need to pay a
small amount to download these files and for that you will
need an account – see above.
(15) ORGANISE A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION
Gift subscriptions are really appreciated by the recipient!
We have an easy, step-by-step process for giving a gift
subscription.
You don’t need an account to do so, although if you have
an account, you will be prompted for the necessary information so that the gift subscription purchase is added to
your account. An account for the recipient will automatically be created if it doesn’t exist (required to keep track of
their subscription and delivery address).
Simply click on the “Gift Subscriptions” menu item in
the “Subscribe” menu and then follow the steps to set up
the gift subscription, with a message from you to the recipient if you want (eg, “Happy Birthday!”).
Incidentally, we don’t share your data with any other organizations (obviously, we need to give your address when
delivering subscriptions, etc).
(19) SEND AN ONLINE ENQUIRY
If you click on the “Contact Us” item under the “Help,
Contact & FAQ” menu then you can see our address, phone
number and e-mail addresses. At the bottom of the page,
there is a link to a feedback form where you can send us
feedback or a question. We will answer your query as quickly
as we can; note though that we are often flat out working on
the magazine so we may not get back to you straight away.
(If we think other readers might be interested in your
query, it could be published later in “Ask SILICON CHIP”).
(16) VIEWING FROM OVERSEAS?
If you’re viewing from overseas, select the “Subscription
Rates” option under the “Subscribe” menu to view the cost
for subscribing to the print or online versions of SILICON CHIP
magazine. Combined subscription rates are also included.
(17) DON’T HAVE AN ACCOUNT YET? USE A TEMPORARY ONLINE TROLLEY
Even without a SILICON CHIP account/subscription, you
can add items your’re browsing from the SILICON CHIP shop
to a temporarily online trolley, to be purchased later (once
you have an account). That way you don’t have to go through
the selection process again!
(21) RECOVER A FORGOTTEN PASSWORD
Finally, if you’ve forgotten your password, don’t panic!
Hopefully you have provided us with your email address
at some point (eg, when you created your account).
Go to the login page (using the “Log In” button in the
upper right corner of the main page) and click on the “Forgot Password” link. Enter either your login name or your
email address in the appropriate field and click the “Let
Me In!” button.
You will receive an automatically generated email with
a link to access your account and change your password.
(If the email doesn’t arrive within a few minutes, check
SC
your spam filter).
Another way to browse the shop is via this handy year/
month matrix, which lists the number of items that are
relevant to the articles in a given issue. Simply click the
link to see a list of those items and possibly purchase some,
We collect the Notes and Errata published for every project
and put them together based on the year of the article that
they refer to. You can then download and view a PDF of
these for free on our website, via these links.
siliconchip.com.au
(20) UPDATE YOUR DETAILS (ADDRESS, PHONE, EMAIL,
ETC)
Moved? Changed phone numbers or email addresses?
Simply log into your account, go to the “management”
page and update as necessary. You can also update your
user name or password.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 39
This is, of course,
impossible!
High
performance
Dipole Loudspeaker
Design by
Allan Linton-Smith
This loudspeaker, intended for smaller homes and apartments, will really
challenge your assumptions about speaker cabinet design. In fact, it has
no cabinet – and yet it is a wide-range design with a frequency response
from 20Hz to 18kHz. To pinch a phrase from the Hitchhiker’s Guide to
the Galaxy, “This is, of course, impossible!” But as Arthur Dent and Ford
Prefect found, even the impossible can work, albeit (in this case) with the
aid of electronic skull-duggery (and perhaps the ultimate answer: 42#)!*
40
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
M
ore than a year ago, when this project was first
mooted for SILICON CHIP, we were very disparaging, making comments like, “Stupid, impractical
idea!”, “It could not possibly produce any useful bass!” and
some others which cannot be published.
Since then, there have been a number of prototypes produced and the electronic skull-duggery has been refined.
Now the results are quite impressive: real, wide-range high
quality sound from a loudspeaker system with no cabinet
at all, as can be seen in the photos.
But why would anyone want to build a loudspeaker system without a cabinet? Well, why not?
Cabinets can be hard to make and they can have unwanted
resonances. It turns out that there are a number of manufacturers around the world who do produce some weird and
wonderful dipole loudspeaker systems. But to purchase
them you’ll need to pay top dollar – we have seen prices
from $10,000 to, wait for it, $4,000,000!
Our Dipole Loudspeaker costs dramatically less than
even the lower figure – and can be built by any electronic
enthusiast. You don’t even need the wood-working skills a
normal speaker cabinet would demand.
In essence, it is just a large timber baffle with three loudspeakers mounted on it: a Celestion horn tweeter and two
10-inch woofers from Altronics.
And the electronic skull-duggery?
Well, this is an active (powered) loudspeaker system, with
three power amplifiers and the SILICON CHIP 3-way active
crossover featured in the September & October 2017 issues
(siliconchip.com.au/Series/318).
The suggested SILICON CHIP power amplifiers are the SC200
(135W into 8Ω) amplifier (described in January, February &
March 2017 – siliconchip.com.au/Series/308) and the Tiny
Tim 10W per channel stereo amplifier (described in October
& December 2013 – siliconchip.com.au/Series/131).
Why such a huge disparity in the power outputs?
We use the Active Crossover to provide lots of bass boost
to the woofer, hence the 135W amplifier, while the midrange
and horn tweeter can be driven to more than adequate levels
with both channels of the Tiny Tim stereo amplifier.
That is a brief description of the concept but let’s now
discuss the development of the Dipole Loudspeaker.
Development
The designer, Allan Linton-Smith, has been developing
the dipole loudspeaker concept over a number of years and
had produced some reasonably promising systems but these
had always been rejected by SILICON CHIP staff as being way
too “thin” in the bass department.
Bass is the real stumbling block, of course. After all with
no cabinet, there is nothing to prevent the out-of-phase output from the rear of the woofer from cancelling the output
from the front of the woofer. In fact, the overall bass response
will be mainly determined by the dimensions of of the baf* Above all, DON’T PANIC! Only those who have heard
the original BBC radio play “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the
Galaxy”, by Douglas Adams, or read the book, or even seen
the TV series or the movie (all with the same name) will have
the slightest idea what these obscure references are all
about, especially 42! Hitchhiker’s Guide graphic on opposite page courtesy http://hitchhikers.wikia.com/wiki/Earth
siliconchip.com.au
If money is no object (!),
you could consider a pair
of these Australian-made
“Kyron Gaia” dipole
speakers. Each one weighs
about 200kg and is made
to order by Adelaide-based
Kyron Audio. They might
look pretty cool. . . but
be prepared to fork out
around a quarter of a million
dollars, though!
(If that’s a bit too much for
you, their 3-way “Kyron
Kronos” model will set you
back just $121,000).
Or if you really wanted to
go all out, try the Swedish
“Transmission Audio Ultra”
system. They’re reputed to
be one of the most expensive
speakers in the world – at
about $2 million Australian
EACH!
fle board on which the woofer is mounted.
Some extremely expensive Dipole Loudspeakers attempt
to overcome this problem by using multiple woofers and huge
bass drive power but in the end, there are definite limits.
Allan Linton-Smith soon found that bass boosters, such
as the Bass Extender from the April 2005 issue (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/3034) only made things worse by creating
reasonable bass but a very distorted lower mid-range.
Not only was their performance simply not up to scratch
but these experimental systems used some very expensive
drivers with very impressive specs. These would have been
largely unobtainable and/or beyond the budget of average
DIY speaker builder.
Then he tried a commercial 3-way active crossover system and that enabled some reasonable progress to be made.
This involved using one 10-inch woofer from Altronics (Cat
C3026) to cover the low bass frequencies at 100Hz and below.
A second, identical woofer was then used to cover the
range from 100Hz to 2kHz. Finally, he used the well-tried
Celestion CDX1-1730 and Celestion T5134 horn to cover
frequencies from 2kHz upwards.
This is where the first problem arose because there is
a huge disparity between the efficiencies of the Celestion
tweeter and the Altronics woofer: 110dB/1W<at>1m compared
with 93dB/1W<at>1m.
Clearly the power amplifier for the tweeter only needs to
provide one or two watts. In fact, the tweeter’s output needs
to be attenuated by about 17dB to match the sensitivity of
the Altronics 10-inch driver used as the midrange unit and
it can also be driven to reasonable levels from a 10W amplifier such as the Tiny Tim.
But to get bass response to match the levels from the midrange and attenuated tweeter, the second 10-inch Altronics driver needs to be boosted by a whopping 25dB. To do
that you need a big amplifier and an active crossover with
attenuation slops of 24dB/octave – which the SILICON CHIP
Active Crossover is designed to provide.
OK, leaving aside the need for all this electronic augmentation, are there any advantages in a dipole system?
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 41
Front and rear views of the
final Dipole Loudspeakers. As
you can see, the woofer and
midrange (actually the same
drivers – Altronics/Redback
C3026) are mounted to the
“baffle” in the conventional
way, while the tweeter, a
Celestion CDX1-1730 matched
to a T5134 horn, is simply
screwed to the top of the same
sheet of timber. While the woofer
and midrange are identical.
they handle different frequency
ranges, fed to them via the three
sets of terminals at the back
(one pair feeding the tweeter), all
under the control of the SILICON
CHIP Active Crossover (September/
October 2017 – siliconchip.com.
au/Series/318). The side supports
and base were finished with a matte
black spray paint.
Note: if you’d prefer not to mar
the front panel with screws, you
could screw’n’glue the base,
side panels and front panel with
appropriately placed cleats.
Some people apparently like them because of their subjectively “light, airy and smooth sound”. (Does that mean
weak bass?)
Another stated advantage is that dipole loudspeakers are
“neighbour friendly” because high bass pressures are not created in a listening room and therefore therefore heavy bass
signals are not transmitted next door or through the floor –
a distinct advantage in flats or apartments where thumping
bass can be a major cause of complaint!
So does this mean that no real bass is apparent the listening room?
What you will tend to notice that there are no pronounced
standing waves in the room, compared to the sound from a
bass-reflex or sealed enclosure.
And don’t think that because there is no cabinet, just a
straight baffle, that most of the sound will be cancelled. If
Parts List - for EACH speaker
2
1
1
1
250mm (10”) woofers (Altronics/Redback C-3026)
Tweeter driver (Celestion CDX1-1730)
Tweeter horn (Celestion T5134)
580x864x18mm baffle, material and finish your choice
(we used Kaboodle [Bunnings] blind corner base panels)
1 18mm plywood sheet 610 x 1220mm
(or one sheet 2400 x 1200 customwood, etc – does two)
8 12mm x 8g round head screws [for mounting woofers] (or
30mm M4 screws, nuts and washers – see text)
8 30mm x 8g csk head wood screws [for side panels]
14 12mm x 8g stainless csk head wood screws [tweeter/hinges]
2 85mm stainless hinges
3 polarised binding posts (eg Altronics P9257A)
2.5m heavy duty figure-8 cable (with polarity trace/colour)
cable ties, black spray paint etc
42
Silicon Chip
that were true, there would be virtually no sound produced
by a loudspeaker suspended in air with no baffle. Clearly,
that is not the case and you can easily verify that for yourself.
But the bass will be weak. So bass frequencies below about
100Hz will need a significant boost in power, as noted above.
Actual performance
As you can see from the frequency response diagrams,
this Dipole Loudspeaker system is good from 20Hz to 18kHz
±5dB which is really remarkable when you realise that we
are using off-the-shelf drivers! We should state though that
it cannot deliver this very good bass response in large rooms
– the amount of power needed would simply overload and
burn out the woofer.
In fact, we are relying on the Bass Limiter in the SILICON
CHIP Active Crossovers to prevent the power amplifier and
woofer from being over-driven on loud music passages.
Overall, we were very surprised that a speaker which is
virtually “boxless” can produce such impressive bass and
which sounded so smooth!
We listened in a furnished room of 5 x 5.4 metres at a
distance of about three metres and the bass proved quite
substantial. But when we stepped outside the direct listening area, the bass was noticeably reduced.
And of course, there is an advantage when using an active crossover, in that the listener can play around with both
the crossover frequencies and the amplitudes of the signals
fed to the drivers.
Everyone had a slightly different opinion of how it should
sound and this pretty well depended on the program material.
Construction
We’ll look at the base and side supports first of all, be-
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Overall “room response” of the speaker, measured with a
microphone placed directly in front. It’s remarkably flat,
with just a slight dip above 12kHz; there is no detectable
bass roll-off.
Ampltiude of signals being delivered to each driver with
a constant amplitude sweep tone fed into the active
crossover. Note the large difference between the peak
woofer and tweeter power.
cause these are less obvious and can be cut from a variety of
timber. We used marine ply – because we had some – but
you could use just about any 18mm thick ply, MDF, chipboard, etc. (Don’t use anything thinner because it will not
support the baffle properly).
If you don’t happen to have suitable timber lying around,
there is an advantage in buying a single 2400 x 1200 x
18mm sheet of “craftwood” (or whatever brand it’s called!)
because this gives you much more timber than what you
need and we found it to be significantly cheaper than two
sheets of 1220 x 620 x 18mm ply ($33.00 vs $37.00 each
at Bunnings!) – and you’ll have plenty left over for another project.
A cutting diagram is shown for 1220 x 620mm but this
would be easily transcribed to the larger sheet. Even though
there are only a few pieces to cut, accuracy is important
because you need the pieces to fit together well.
If you are a competent woodworker with a saw bench
you should have no problem cutting the pieces but if you
doubt your skills we recommend having it cut professionally (most kitchen cabinet makers will do this for a reason-
able cost) and this will make assembly much easier.
If doing it yourself, cut out one speaker at a time to save
you correcting any errors twice!
The side supports are screwed to the base using M4
countersunk head (CSK) stainless steel woodscrews. The
side supports can be centred on lines 100mm in from each
edge, (see drilling diagram overleaf). Four screws are used
for each side support with the base countersunk to suit.
A narrow brace (380mm x 50mm) is cut and screwed
between the two side panels to support the three stereo
binding posts.
As mentioned elsewhere, we sprayed the side supports,
base and brace with matte black spray paint, just for appearance.
The Baffle
Like many of our earlier speakers, we used a 560 x 864
x 18mm “Kaboodle” blind corner panel (from Bunnings)
as a baffle. These are available in a variety of colours and
finishes and save us having to paint or otherwise prepare
and finish the baffle.
Cutting diagram for the base and sides from a sheet of
18mm ply. Further investigation suggests a 2400 x 1200mm
sheet of craftwood will cost significantly less and you’ll have a
lot left over for other projects!
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
There are only four holes to drill in
the base – these accommodate the
side panels shown at right.
November 2017 43
However, be careful with the surface: they mark
very easily if you aren’t careful. Leave the protective plastic on the panels until you are finished
working with them.
Unlike our earlier speakers, we only need two
of these panels because there are no box sides,
tops, bottoms or backs to worry about.
Carefully cut the woofer and midrange holes
(233mm) as shown in our baffle diagram – a circle-cutting router makes the neatest cut but if you
have to, you could use a jig saw, or drill a series of
small holes (say 6mm) inside the required areas
and finish off with a rasp, wood file, etc.
Cutting (and drilling) from behind results in less
chipping on the front. And remember that old adage: measure twice, cut once!
While you’re about it, drill the 4mm holes
through the baffle which will hold your side panels in place. The drilling guide (at right)shows
their position.
But as an afterthought, we imagine many people
would prefer not to have the side panel screws going through the polished wooden baffle.
You could instead use small (say 20 x 20mm)
cleats screwed and glued to the panels on the rear
side to hold them in place. These would be placed
on the inside of the side panels.
If you’re going to paint the side panels and base (we
sprayed them matte black) now is a good time to do it so
that the paint can dry.
Hinges hold it together
Rather than screw the base to the baffle we simply used
a pair of 85mm stainless steel hinges to join them. This
also allows the correct angle (8°) between the pair when
the two side panels are fitted.
You will need an extra pair of hands to hold the baffle
against the base when marking the hole positions. Drill
all 4mm holes (6 per hinge) to, say, 12mm deep – use the
old trick of putting some masking tape around the drill bit
(12mm from the pointy end) to ensure you don’t go too deep.
Again using an extra pair of hands, align a side panel
with the holes you drilled in the base and the baffle and
once happy with the location, screw it in position – then
repeat for the other side panel.
Placing the speaker drivers in position
If you are happy with the way your dipole speaker “box”
looks, you can mount the three speaker drivers.
Start with the two 10-inch drivers. These mount from
the front of the baffle. Whether you use 12mm woodscrews
or 20mm screws with nuts (ie, right through the baffle) is
entirely up to you. You can see the heads of either from the
front – so black screwheads will look the best.
In either case, place the driver in its 233mm hole and
mark the mounting hole positions (eg, with a felt-tipped
pen). Remove the driver (don’t be tempted to drill the holes
in situ!) and then drill either 3mm pilot holes (for woodscrews) or 4mm mounting holes (for screws and nuts).
Repeat for the other driver before mounting the speakers and (carefully!) placing and tightening the screws (or
screws and nuts).
Attach the tweeter driver to its horn, place the assembly
44
Silicon Chip
against on the top edge of the baffle and mark the screw
holes. Again, it’s your choice whether you use woodscrews
or screws and nuts but as it’s only held in with two screws,
we’d be more inclined to use the latter – say 4mm x 20mm.
Remove the tweeter/horn before drilling the two mounting holes, then screw the tweeter/horn firmly into position.
We used some weather stripping between the horn and
baffle to damp any possible vibration; you could also use
silicone or a strip of rubber – anything that will break the
metal to panel connection.
Wiring it up
Before screwing the terminal mounting bar to the side
hinges (where positioning isn’t at all critical), drill the holes
required to accommodate the three polarised binding posts.
Each requires a pair of 13mm holes at 19mm centres –
again, while overall positioning isn’t important, it will look
much better to have one on the centre line and the other
two equidistant apart – say about 75mm each.
Once done, and with the binding posts firmly mounted,
screw the bar to the two side panels, as shown above.
We’ve specified 2.5m of heavy duty figure-8 cable per
assembled speaker. Realistically, only the woofer needs
heavy duty cable (remember we’re going to pump up to
135W into it!) but there’s not too much point in using different cables for the other two drivers.
By the way, we’re not specifying “monster cable” or other
marketing cons – just polarised, garden-variety figure-8.
You’ll only need about 400mm to wire in the woofer,
about 600mm for the midrange and about 1000mm for the
tweeter. This is being generous, allowing the three cables
to be neatly laced together with small cable ties.
When wiring, watch the polarity: the red terminal should
always go to the + speaker terminals and black for - (regardless of what colours your wires actually are!).
While any terminal can be wired to any speaker, it makes
sense to go in the same order as the drivers: left to the
woofer, centre for the midrange and right to the tweeter.
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The three diagrams above and opposite, along with the photograph above, should assist
you in both drilling and assembling the Dipole Speakers. It’s relatively straightforward
– just make sure the panel cuts are true and they mate well with each other. While we
didn’t find it necessary, you could use some wood glue between the base and side panels.
That way, there won’t be any errors when you connect
your amplifier. (You could also attach some small labels).
Lace together the three cables with some small cable ties
– you might also wish to anchor the cable sets to a cabinet
side panel but that’s up to you.
Sanity check
Just to make sure nothing is amiss, give your finished
speaker the once over: make sure the wiring is correct; that
there are no rattles or movement etc. Pick the whole thing
up (with two people?) and give it a good shake!
If it all checks out OK, repeat the above steps to put together the second speaker.
Checking it out
Even without three amplifiers and the Active Crossover,
you can check out that there are no resonances or buzzes
etc, by feeding the woofer with a reasonably beefy amplifier (at least 50W or so), playing some good, bassy music
(did someone mention Toccata and Fugue in D Minor on a
pipe organ?) or even a signal generator feeding it 20-100Hz.
And finally . . .
Final wiring up is simple: connect your music source to
the Active Crossover, take the three active crossover outputs
(bass, midrange and treble) to your SC200 (bass) and Tiny
Tim (tweeter and treble) amplifiers and take their outputs
to the appropriate Dipole Speaker terminals, as shown in
the connection diagram below.
Some adjustment of the Active Crossover controls to suit
your particular tastes may be required – but having total
control is what it’s all about! As a start, aim for:
Lower crossover: 100Hz; Upper crossover: 2kHz
Woofer gain: 0dB (ie, maximum);
Midrange gain: 25dB below woofer
Tweeter gain: 42dB below woofer
# What has 42 (the answer to the ultimate question of
life, the universe and everything) got to do with anything?
Tweeter sensitivity is 42dB below the woofer, of course! SC
Wiring the Dipole Speaker pair requires a little more attention to detail than a “normal” loudspeaker setup. Here we’re
using two “Tiny Tim” stereo amplifiers to drive the midranges and tweeters and two (mono) 135W SC200 amplifiers to
drive the woofers. Note the unusual connections to the Tiny Tims – we’re actually using them as two mono amplifiers.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 45
Build your own Super-7
AM
RADIO
RECEIVER
by
John Clarke
All
on a
single PCB
– and no SMDs!
Why, in this day and age, would you want to build an AM Radio Receiver
– when you can probably buy one much cheaper? Well, you’ll never
learn anything by buying off the shelf . . . and you won’t have the fun of
constructing something that works. Nor will you have the satisfaction of
saying to your family and friends: “Look at this! I built it myself!”
T
he Super-7 Superhet AM Radio
makes a great beginner’s project
– whether you’re 8 or 88!
It is nice and easy to build since all
the components mount on a single
PCB. They’re all standard components
(no surface-mount devices to worry
46
Silicon Chip
about) that are easy to get and they’re
laid out in a neat manner, making assembly simple and also allowing you
to see how it works.
It’s powered from a 9V battery or
9V DC plugpack and it automatically
switches from battery to the mains
Celebrating 30 Years
supply when it’s plugged in.
Audio output is loud and clear
from a built-in 100mm (4-inch) diameter loudspeaker but it also has a
headphone jack, which automatically
disconnects the speaker when in use.
This set has good sensitivity and sesiliconchip.com.au
It’s all built on one
double-sided PCB –
and while it can operate
from an on-board 9V
battery (making it truly
portable, a 9V DC plugpack can also be
used (with automatic switchover when
plugged
in).
lectivity as well
as reasonably low
distortion.
It fits into a custom-designed acrylic case, with a transparent back, so the components are
protected but you can still see its workings. It has a large (hand-span) tuning
dial showing the current frequency
plus many of the available AM radio
stations around Australia.
Once built and aligned, you will
end up with a fully functioning radio
reminiscent of radio sets from the past
but using modern technology.
It’s called the “Super-7” partly because it is a superheterodyne but also
because it uses seven silicon transistors (plus two diodes). One transistor
is used for the mixer/oscillator, two
for IF amplification and four for the
Class-AB push-pull output stage. We’ll
explain all these terms as we go.
This month we will describe the
Super-7 AM Radio circuit, with the assembly
and alignment details to
follow.
If you know nothing
about AM radio technology
or the operation of a superheterodyne receiver, please
see the accompanying panels titled “What is AM radio” and “The
Superhet AM Radio Receiver” before
moving on to the circuit description.
Circuit description
Refer to Fig.1 which shows the complete circuit of our Super-7 AM Radio.
Each section of the circuit is labelled
so that you can see how it relates to the
block diagram in the panel on page 50
which explains how a superhet works.
The circuit does not have an RF
amplifier stage so the antenna signal
is coupled directly to the mixer stage.
The antenna coil (T1) is wound on
a small ferrite rod. The high permeability of the ferrite material allows a
compact antenna of this type to pick up
signals that would otherwise require a
fairly long standard antenna.
The primary coil is tuned in a parallel resonant circuit by one section of
the plastic dielectric tuning gang, VC1.
Trimmer capacitor VC2 is in parallel
with VC1 and is set during alignment
of the AM radio so that stations appear at the correct location on the dial.
A secondary coil on the ferrite rod
couples the tuned signal into the base
of transistor Q1, via a 22nF capacitor,
and Q1 functions as a self-oscillating
mixer.
It oscillates at a frequency set by the
parallel resonant circuitry connected
to its emitter, ie, the primary of T2 plus
VC3 and VC4.
This oscillator is tuned by the second section of the tuning gang, VC3.
Again, VC4 is a trimmer, connecting
in parallel with VC3, and is set during the alignment process so that the
oscillator frequency tracks the tuned
frequency with the correct offset of
455kHz.
The oscillator transformer, T2, has
its secondary winding connected in
series with the collector of Q1. This
provides feedback to Q1 to sustain
oscillation.
The output signal of the mixer/oscillator appears at the bottom end of this
secondary and is fed to the primary of
transformer T3.
This is adjusted (via its integral tuning slug) to be resonant at the intermediate frequency of 455kHz.
Here is the “front” side
of the Super-7 AM Radio
Receiver – the side which normally
faces you. It sports a quite large speaker
(which gives it really good tone!), the volume control
(the knob in the lower right), power LED and, not shown here,
the tuning dial, which attaches to the shaft in the centre of the circle at
right at right. Most major AM stations are shown on the dial and even some
minor stations, along with frequency around the circumference.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 47
So it selects the intermediate (difference) frequency and filters out most of
the original frequency as well as the
oscillator signal and sum products. Its
primary also forms the collector load
for transistor Q1 and a 1.2MΩ parallel resistor sets its Q, determining its
bandwidth.
The output IF signal from the secondary is applied to the base of the
first IF amplifier transistor, Q2. A 27kΩ
resistor from the positive rail provides
its base with a DC bias current. Its 1kΩ
emitter resistor is bypassed with a
22nF capacitor to maximise the gain.
Transformer coupling
These transformer coupled stages
may seem odd to readers who are used
to seeing circuits in which transistor
stages are directly coupled, ie, without
capacitors or transformers.
There are several reasons for using
transformers.
The first is that, as stated above, the
IF transformers filter out unwanted frequencies so that the transistors don’t
waste power amplifying unwanted
signals, which could potentially even
cause them to saturate.
48
Silicon Chip
They also improve selectivity, by
limiting the bandwidth of the signal
being amplified.
Second, the IF transformers provide the right degree of impedance
matching between the relatively high
impedance of the collector circuits of
the transistors and the relatively low
impedance base circuit of the following transistor. This optimises the available gain.
Note that in each case, the collector
current of the transistor passes through
only a portion of the transformer primary and this is part of the intended
matching process.
Note also the circuitous path followed by the DC collector current for
the mixer transistor Q1. The current
passes through part of the primary of
the 1st IF transformer (T3) and then
via the secondary of oscillator transformer T2), before arriving at the collector of Q1.
Now turn your attention to the second IF transformer, T4. Its primary
is the collector load for Q2 while the
output from its secondary is fed to the
base of Q3.
Besides a few details of the biasing
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of Q3, this amplification stage is essentially identical to Q2 and it provides
more gain for the signal before it’s fed
to the detector.
Detector diode
This role is performed by diode D1
but while the detector looks simple,
there is more to it than first appears.
The detector diode is driven by the
secondary winding of the third IF
transformer, T5.
This diode performs two tasks.
Firstly, it detects or demodulates the
amplitude modulated IF signal to produce an audio signal and secondly, it
produces the AGC voltage which is
used to control the gain of the 1st IF
amplifier, Q2.
D1 is a Schottky diode, selected for
its low forward voltage drop of about
0.3V. Germanium diodes, with a 0.2V
forward voltage drop, have traditionally been used as detectors but they
are starting to be hard to find.
D1 rectifies the negative-going portion of the IF signal, resulting in a
negative output voltage. Its anode is
connected to a 22nF capacitor and
provides the first stage of RF filtering,
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Fig.1 : the Super-7 receiver uses seven commonly available transistors. The incoming RF signal is picked up by
the ferrite rod antenna and fed to Q1 which functions as a self-oscillating mixer. The “difference” signal (between
the oscillator and tuned input signal) is then coupled via T2 to the two IF amplifier stages and onto detector
diode D1, to recover the audio signal and generate AGC, which is fed back to Q2. The audio signal is then fed, via
volume control VR1, to the amplifier stage comprising Q4-Q7.
and then via a 2.2kΩ resistor to a second 22nF capacitor for more filtering
of the final audio signal before being
applied to the 10kΩ volume control
potentiometer, VR1.
The demodulated signal is also coupled via a 3.3kΩ resistor to a 10µF filter capacitor, which forms a low-pass
filter with a -3dB point of 5Hz. Thus,
the audio portion of the signal is eliminated before being fed back to the base
of Q2 via T3’s secondary.
The AGC works as follows: if a large
signal is being picked up, diode D1 will
produce a larger than normal negative
DC voltage and this will tend to throttle
back the base bias voltage of Q2.
So Q2 will conduct less current and
its gain will consequently be reduced.
The stronger the signal, the greater the
gain reduction and hence the chance
of signal overload is greatly reduced.
Note the rather complicated bias
network for the base of Q2. Current
passes first via the 27kΩ resistor, the
3.3kΩ and 2.2kΩ resistors associated
with diode D1, and then via the 10kΩ
volume control pot VR1. The base
current flows from the junction of the
27kΩ and 3.3kΩ resistors via the secsiliconchip.com.au
ondary of the 1st IF transformer (T3).
Another thing to consider is that the
current flowing through the 27kΩ and
3.3kΩ resistors will tend to forwardbias D1 slightly, offsetting its forward
voltage and thus slightly increasing
its sensitivity and reducing audio
distortion.
Having the bias current flow through
the volume control pot is not ideal because pots with DC flowing through
them will cause a little noise during
rotation.
Potentiometers become even noisier
if DC current flows via the wiper but
this does not happen in this circuit
since we use a 10µF coupling capacitor.
Audio amplifier
The audio signal from the volume
control is fed to a 4-transistor amplifier
consisting of Q4, Q5, Q6 & Q7. This
amplifier is directly coupled throughout, apart from the output capacitor
which we’ll come to in a moment. Q4
is connected as a common-emitter
stage with all its collector current becoming the base current of the following PNP transistor, Q5.
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Q5 also forms a common-emitter
stage and provides most of the voltage
gain of the audio amplifier. Its collector current flows partly into the bases
of the push-pull output transistors, Q6
and Q7, while the rest goes through
the 1kΩ resistor and loudspeaker to
ground.
Output transistors Q6 and Q7 are
connected as complementary emitter
followers in class-AB mode.
To explain class-AB, this is a variant of class-B operation. In class B,
Q6 conducts for one half of the signal
waveform, then turns off, and Q7 takes
over for the second half of the signal
waveform.
This switching process inevitably
causes crossover distortion which
can make the sound quality quite unpleasant.
Class-AB fixes this by making sure
the transistors never fully turn off.
So the two output transistors are
slightly biased into forward conduction by the voltage developed across
diode D2 and trimpot VR2. VR2 provides quiescent current adjustment to
minimise (but not completely eliminate) crossover distortion.
November 2017 49
The Superhet AM Radio Receiver
The basic operation of a superheterodyne AM radio receiver (usually abbreviated to “superhet”) is shown in the block
diagram below.
There are many variations on this theme
but all rely on the principle of heterodyning,
or mixing, different frequencies. Heterodyning is applied in order to provide high
gain, without instablility.
The antenna is tuned by a variable capacitor in a parallel resonant circuit.This variable capacitor is one section of a “ganged”
capacitor (ie, two sections on the one shaft
or control). The other section of the ganged
capacitor varies the local oscillator which
we’ll come to in a moment.
The parallel resonant circuit is tuned by
the variable capacitor so that the wanted
signal is selected while signals at other
frequencies are rejected. The signal from
the antenna is then fed to the mixer and
this is where the “superheterodyne” process takes place,
The word “heterodyne” refers to the
“beating” effect generated by mixing two
signals of different frequencies. “Hetero”
is derived from the Greek word for “other”
while “dyne” is derived from the French
word for power. “Super” here refers to the
fact that the second frequency is higher
than the frequency of interest.
In the Mixer stage, the Local Oscillator
signal is mixed with that from the antenna.
The result is a signal with components at
four different frequencies: the two original
frequencies (ie, the carrier and local oscilla-
tor), plus the sum and difference frequencies.
Assuming the carrier and local oscillator frequencies are close together, the sum
will be at around twice the tuned frequency
while the difference will be at a much lower
frequency.
This resulting signal is passed to an amplifier stage or stages tuned to the difference
frequency, which results in the rejection of
signals at the three other frequencies. The
difference frequency is referred to as the
Intermediate Frequency or IF.
In most radios of this type, the Intermediate Frequency is 455kHz or 450kHz. The first
superhets had an intermediate frequency of
50kHz which gave very sharp selectivity but
poor audio response, because of the necessarily low bandwidth of the IF filters. Later,
the standard IF was 175kHz and later still
this was standardised at 455kHz.
The output of the IF stage is then applied
to the detector, which in transistor radios is
usually a germanium diode, selected because
of its low forward voltage drop. (We’ve used
a “schottky” diode in the Super-7 circuit for
the same reason – ie, low voltage drop).
The diode rectifies the IF signal which is
then filtered to remove RF carrier, leaving
the audio signal. This is then fed to the audio
amplifier, which drives a loudspeaker.
Automatic gain control
Apart from demodulating the IF signal,
the detector is also used to produce the AGC
voltage. AGC was regarded as a wonderful innovation when it was introduced as it
eliminated the need to adjust the set’s gain
each time you tuned into a new station. Gain
adjustment is necessary to stop the IF stages
from overloading on strong signals while still
providing sufficient gain for very weak signals
(eg, from distant or low-powered stations).
To derive the AGC voltage, the raw DC
output from the detector is heavily filtered
to remove the audio signal, producing a DC
voltage that is proportional to the amplitude
of the IF signal.
This is then used to control the gain of the
IF stages and sometimes also the RF stage,
so that the signal is held to a more or less
constant level, ie, using negative feedback.
So why “superheterodyne”, rather than
“subheterodyne”, ie, with the local oscillator below the station frequency? After all,
this would produce the same difference
frequency. This was tried but it results in a
lower sum frequency component which can
be within the broadcast band, resulting in
“ghost stations” (or “image frequencies”)
on the dial, at higher frequencies than the
actual station. This is pretty much totally
eliminated in a superhet.
Local oscillator
The local oscillator frequency always
tracks the tuned frequency of the RF amplifier.
So for an IF of 455kHz, if the radio is tuned
to 1370kHz, the local oscillator will be set to
1825kHz (1370 + 455). Similarly, if the radio
is tuned to 702kHz, the local oscillator will
be at 1157kHz (702 + 455).
All this happens automatically by virtue of
The general configuration for a superheterodyne radio
receiver. The incoming RF signal is mixed with a local
oscillator signal to produce an intermediate frequency (IF)
signal, which is then fed to a detector stage to recover the
original audio signal.
50
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
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the 2-section capacitor tuning gang – one
section is for tuning the antenna and the
other for the local oscillator. These variable capacitors track each other over the
adjustment range. Various tricks are used
to create the necessary frequency offset
while maintaining good tracking.
Variations on a theme
While we have just described the broad
concept of the superhet, there are many
variations on this theme. For example,
many superhet circuits have a tuned RF
Amplifier stage and some do not have a
separate local oscillator. Instead, the local oscillator is combined with the mixer
stage in what is known as a self-oscillating
mixer or mixer/oscillator (as in the Super-7 circuit).
Others may have two or three IF stages
and some may have a separate detector to
produce the AGC voltage.
Another important variant is the double
conversion configuration used in some
high-performance communications receivers. This combines two superhet
stages to shift the signal frequency in two
“steps” and is usually used for receiving
shortwave signals, as these are at much
higher frequencies (up to 30MHz) than
broadcast AM stations.
The Super-7 circuit is a “single conversion” superhet, meaning that it performs
just one conversion from the incoming RF
frequency to the intermediate frequency.
Other variations which are common include “permeability tuned” superhets and
today’s frequency synthesised receivers
with digital readouts and microprocessor control.
Permeability tuning was common in car
radios, where tuning was done by varying
inductance rather than capacitance. One
advantage of permeability tuning, especially useful in cars, is reduced susceptibility to vibration.
Regardless of all the variations, you will
find that all superhets have the same operating mode and same circuit functions
as described by the block diagram above.
By the way, Edwin Armstrong, who invented the AM superhet receiver was the
same person who later developed the principles of FM transmission and reception.
One further note before we leave the
origins of the superhet: apparently, radio
(or “wireless”) circuits working along the
same principle were used in British submarines during the First World War.
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Negative feedback from the output
of the amplifier is provided by the
4.7kΩ resistor to the emitter of Q4.
The AC voltage gain of the amplifier
is set to about 47 by the 100Ω resistor
from the emitter of Q4, while the series 47µF capacitor sets the bass roll
off of the amplifier.
Amplifier output with no signal sits
at about half supply, ie, around 4.5V.
This DC offset is removed by using a
470µF coupling capacitor between the
amplifier output and the loudspeaker.
The capacitor allows the AC signal
to pass to the loudspeaker but blocks
the DC voltage. The DC needs to be
blocked to prevent the loudspeaker
cone being forced away from its normal resting position and increasing
distortion.
By now, you’ve probably realised
that this design aims to achieve good
performance without using too many
components, similar in concept to a
portable AM radio.
For example, the output stage component count has been minimised by
connecting the 1kΩ resistor to 0V via
the speaker coil.
The same DC bias conditions could
have been obtained in the output stage
by simply connecting the 1kΩresistor
directly to the 0V line but there is a
good reason for doing it the way we
have.
Bootstrapping
By connecting the 1kΩ resistor via
the speaker, we take advantage of the
fact that the output stage transistors
are emitter followers. In this mode,
these transistors have a voltage gain
just slightly less than one.
This means that the AC signal voltage at the emitters of Q6 and Q7 (and
hence across the speaker) is only
slightly less than the signal voltage at
the bases of these two transistors. Because of this, the AC voltage applied
across the 1kΩ resistor is very small
and so little AC current flows.
Hence, transistor Q5 “sees” a much
higher collector load than the nominal
1kΩ. This means it is able to provide
more drive to the output stage and
higher overall voltage gain.
This technique is known as “bootstrapping” and is commonly used in
audio amplifiers. However, while this
is an effective method which improves
the overall performance, it does have
one drawback.
If the loudspeaker or headphone
Celebrating 30 Years
is not in circuit, no current can flow
through the 1kΩ resistor. If this happens, the output stage is not biased
on and the whole amplifier draws no
current at all.
This may not seem important because the speaker will normally always be connected. But if you try to
monitor the amplifier without the
speaker connected or plug in a bare
jack socket into CON2, no current will
flow through it and the amplifier won’t
work. So don’t be trapped!
One other little circuit trick needs to
be noted before we finish this article
and this involves the 470µF capacitor
that connects across the 9V supply.
This relatively large capacitor may
seem unnecessary. But since the circuit can be powered from a 9V battery as well as a DC plugpack, it is a
requirement.
That’s because as the battery ages,
its internal impedance rises and so it
is less able to deliver the relatively
high current pulses demanded by the
amplifier and the result is more distortion from the amplifier.
By placing the 470µF capacitor
across the 9V supply, we effectively
reduce the AC impedance of the battery and thus enable it to deliver those
higher current pulses. The result is
better sound quality.
Note that the speaker signal goes
via the integral switch in headphone
socket CON2, so that if headphones/an
earphone is plugged in, the speaker is
automatically disconnected.
Note also that the tip and ring connections are wired in parallel, so you
will get audio from both sides of stereo
headphones/earbuds, even though the
AM radio output is mono.
Finally, indicator LED1 shows when
the circuit is switched on, via power
switch S1 and reverse battery protection diode D3.
D3, is another schottky diode, which
means that its very low forward voltage
will result in minimum loss from the
battery, while still protecting against
accidental polarity reversal.
While you can’t permanently fit a 9V
battery in the holder the wrong way
around, you can certainly make accidental contact the wrong way around.
In the next article, we will show you
how to assemble your Super-7 AM Radio, including its custom-made case
and hand-span dial.
We will also describe the alignment
procedure.
November 2017 51
What is “AM” radio?
When radio stations first began broadcasting in Australia (and
for many decades after), they all used the amplitude modulation
(AM) system, predominantly using the “broadcast band” which
covers 531kHz to 1.602MHz.
The other transmitting system, FM, or frequency modulation
only commenced in Australia in the 1970s and uses a higher frequency band, from roughly 88 to 108MHz. And more recently,
the digital system, DAB+, transmitting on a range of frequencies
around 200MHz, has started mainly in capital cities.
Apart from the difference in frequencies, trying to listen to AM
with an FM receiver (or vice versa) will not be successful. The
same applies to DAB+ on any other receiver.
AM transmission
AM is relatively simple: it involves transmitting a signal with a
fixed frequency (known as the radio frequency [RF] carrier) but its
amplitude (power) is modulated, or varied, by the voltage level of
an audio signal such as from a microphone or music being played.
The receiver is tuned to the carrier frequency and once it picks
it up, it’s “demodulated” to produce a voltage that’s proportional
to the signal amplitude. The resulting signal is then amplified and
fed to the radio’s loudspeaker.
The “state of the art” analog approach for receiving an AM
signal is superheterodyne (or “superhet”) principle, invented by
Edwin Armstrong in 1918. The first commercial AM superheterodyne radios were put on the market by Radio Corporation of
America (RCA) in 1924. Later, RCA licensed other manufacturers
so that the design was used worldwide.
Prior to the superheterodyne, radios were either crystal sets
or used the tuned radio frequency (TRF) principle, of which there
are a number of variations. In a TRF receiver, all amplification
up to the detector (demodulator) takes place at the frequency of
the incoming signal.
The superheterodyne radio brought with it two major advantages over previous circuits. The first was greatly increased
gain. This was a big boost compared to TRF tuners which were
strictly limited as far as maximum gain was concerned when
using valves (or “vacuum tubes”). Any attempt to increase the
gain over this limit would cause the circuit to oscillate, resulting
in a loud squeal.
Second, the selectivity of the superheterodyne was a big improvement over previous circuits and this meant that weak stations could be separated out from strong stations that would
otherwise tend to blitz half or more of the tuning dial.
Finally, the superheterodyne receiver brought with it the possibility of automatic volume control (AVC), also known as automatic gain control (AGC), although this did not become a feature
until around 1930. AGC did away with the need for manual gain
controls and meant that all stations came in with roughly the
same loudness, in spite of the fact that some stations may be
very strong and some very weak.
Since the advent of the superhet, there have been relatively
few changes to the basic circuit configuration until the advent
of software-defined radios (SDRs), although the components
used have changed radically over time. Originally, valves ruled
but now transistors are used or even a single integrated circuit
with just a few external components.
So if you decide to build this AM superhet receiver, you will be
building a circuit configuration which has been around for over
90 years but one which is still just as relevant today.
52
Silicon Chip
Parts list –
Super-7 AM Radio Receiver
1 double-sided PCB coded 06111171, 313 x 142.5mm
1 set of laser-cut acrylic case and dial pieces (SILICON CHIP
Online Shop Cat SC4464)
1 AM radio coil pack (Jaycar LF-1050) (T2-T5)
1 mini tuning gang capacitor (Jaycar RV-5728) (VC1-VC4)
1 ferrite rod with coil (Jaycar LF-1020) (T1)
1 100mm (4-inch) 4- or 8-ohm loudspeaker (Jaycar AS3008)
1 DPDT push-on/push-off switch (Altronics S 1510) (S1)
1 round knob for switch S1 (Altronics H 6651)
1 16mm 10kΩ logarithmic taper potentiometer with 6.35mm
D-shaft (Jaycar RP7610, Altronics R2253) (VR1)
1 knob to suit VR1
1 2.1 or 2.5mm inner diameter DC socket (Altronics P 0621A,
P 0620, Jaycar PS-0519, PS-0520) (CON1)
1 6.35mm stereo switched jack socket (Altronics P 0073,
Jaycar PS-0190) (CON2)
1 9V DC 250mA (or higher current) plugpack and/or 9V
battery
1 9V PCB battery holder (Altronics S 5048, Jaycar PH-9235)
12 PC stakes
8 M3 tapped 25mm spacers
8 M3 flat washers
8 M3 x 10mm machine screws
4 M3 x 15mm Nylon or Polycarbonate machine screws
4 100mm cable ties
3 No.4 x 6mm self-tapping screws
4 M3 x 15mm machine screws and nuts (for mounting
speaker)
1 150mm length of medium-duty hookup wire
Optional knob to suit the dial (Jaycar HK7010/HK7011)
Semiconductors
4 BC547 NPN transistors (Q1-Q4)
1 BC327 PNP transistor (Q5)
1 BD139 NPN transistor (Q6)
1 BD140 PNP transistor (Q7)
1 BAT46 schottky diode (D1)
1 1N4148 diode (D2)
1 1N5819 schottky diode (D3)
1 3mm high brightness blue LED (LED1)
Capacitors
2 470µF 16V PC electrolytic
1 47µF 16V PC electrolytic
4 10µF 16V PC electrolytic
3 100nF ceramic
5 22nF MKT polyester
1 10nF MKT polyester
1 4.7nF MKT polyester
Resistors (0.25W, 1% [^5% carbon OK])
1 1.2MΩ^ 1 1MΩ
1 820kΩ
1 56kΩ
1 47kΩ
1 39kΩ
1 27kΩ
1 22kΩ
1 12kΩ
1 10kΩ
1 4.7kΩ
2 3.3kΩ
1 2.2kΩ
2 1kΩ
1 470Ω
2 100Ω
1 200Ω miniature horizontal trimpot (VR2)
Celebrating 30 Years
SC
siliconchip.com.au
TEST, MEASURE
& MAKE
LEARN
ABOUT...
...CURIE
POINT TEC
H
UPGRADE YOUR TEST & TOOLS
$
99 95
48W TEMPERATURE CONTROLLED SOLDERING STATION
TS-1564
Features accurate analogue temperature adjustment,
ceramic element and a lightweight pencil for fatigue-free soldering.
• Temperature range: 150 - 450°C
• Lead-free rated
• 150(L) x 115(W) x 92(H)mm
ALSO AVAILABLE:
SPARE SOLDERING PENCIL TS-1565 $39.95
0.5MM CONICAL TIP TS-1566 $9.95
2.0MM CONICAL TIP TS-1567 $9.95
SERIOUS ABOUT
SOLDERING?
$
299
SAVE $60
Jaycar has a se
le
soldering statio ct range of advanced
ns
Heating techno that use Curie Point
logy. High cont
rol
tip temperature
, cannot oversh of
oo
the Curie point
temperature du t
ring tip
temperature re
co
soldering expe very, means a better
rience, professi
onal
outcome and le
ss
components or risk of damage to
boards.
TS-1584 RRP $359
An outstanding, fast, accurate 50W ESD safe soldering station
from Thermaltronics uses the proven Curie Point technology to
bring the tip up to operating temp using fast RF induction. It works
with leaded and unleaded solder. Mains powered. 0.5mm chisel tip
included. 155(H) x 110(W) x 92(D)mm.
ALSO AVAILABLE:
SPARE TIPS WITH HEATING ELEMENT FROM $29.95
LEDs
NOW
129
$
159
19 95
$
SAVE $20
300W HOT AIR REWORK STATION PORTASOL PRO PIEZO GAS
WITH LED DISPLAY TS-1645 WAS $149 SOLDERING KIT TS-1328
By using hot air rather than a soldering iron,
you get a more uniform heat transfer and
melt all solder pads at once making SMD
chip removal safe and effective.
• 100-500°C temperature range
• Pushbutton / digital display
• 160(L) x 113(W) x 123(D)mm
1795
Features 120 minutes run time, 10 seconds
fill, and 30 seconds heat up. Maximum 580°C
tip temperature (max 1300°C for built-in blow
torch). Includes quality storage case.
See website for full contents.
ALSO AVAILABLE:
BUTANE GAS NA-1020 $4.95
16 95
$
$
$
25W SOLDERING IRON
WITH LED TS-1468
Illuminate the area so you have a
better solder joint. Fast heat up,
good temperature constancy, and
replaceable tips. Mains powered.
• Integrated switch
• 1m cable length
• 215(H) x 35(Dia.)mm
$
39 95
PIEZO IGNITION MICRO TORCH
TS-1660
Ideal for brazing, silver soldering, jewellery
work, heat shrinking, plumbing and general
hobby work. Includes bonus stand.
• High temperature 1300°C flame
• Adjustable flame
• 155(H) x 35(Dia)mm tank
ALSO AVAILABLE:
BUTANE GAS NA-1020 $4.95
5 ea
15 95
ea
$ 95
$
SOLDERING IRON TIP CLEANER
METAL DESOLDER TOOL
200G DURATECH SOLDER
GOOT DESOLDER BRAID
TS-1510
Eliminates the temperature variation
associated with the wet sponge.
• Supplied with spare insert
TH-1862
Made of lightweight metal and has strong
suction.
• Automatically cleans itself with each action
• 195mm long
60% Tin / 40% Lead. Resin cored.
2 sizes available.
0.71MM NS-3005
1.00MM NS-3010
High quality, Japan made.
• 1500mm long
1.5MM WIDE NS-3026
2.0MM WIDE NS-3027
3.0MM WIDE NS-3028
VISIT OUR BRAND NEW STORE IN MALAGA, WA
Catalogue Sale 24 October - 23 November, 2017
To order phone 1800 022 888 or visit www.jaycar.com.au
TEMP & ENVIRONMENTAL MODULES FOR YOUR ARDUINO®
$
3795
9
9
$ 95
ULTRAVIOLET
SENSOR MODULE XC-4518
$
Can be used to measure UV exposure from
the sun, or even check that your UV steriliser
or EPROM eraser are working correctly.
• Response wavelength 200-370nm
TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY
SENSOR MODULE XC-4520
19 95
DATA LOGGING SHIELD XC-4536
Save your data to an SD Card (not included),
and use the inbuilt battery backed clock
module to timestamp your readings.
RAIN SENSOR MODULE XC-4603
This sensor will detect contact from any
conductive object, not just rain, so it could
be used for as a large touch sensor panel as
well as letting you know when it's raining.
$ 95
Fully digital operated so no analogue-todigital calibration is required.
• Temperature Range: 0 ºC - 50 ºC +/- 2 ºC
• Humidity Range: 20 – 80% +/- 5%
• Sample Rate: 1Hz
9
9
$ 95
30A CURRENT
SENSOR MODULE XC-4610
Outputs a voltage proportional to current
passing through the sense pins on the
module. Uses ACS712 hall effect sensor.
• Output ratio is 66mV/A
• Compact board only 31mm x 13mm
5
$ 95
$ 95
ALCOHOL SENSOR MODULE XC-4540 PHOTOSENSITIVE
LDR SENSOR MODULE XC-4446
Detect alcohol, smoke and other volatile
substances. Check for gas leaks, use it as
Measures light levels. Connect it straight
a smoke detector, or even track how your
into your Arduino® board to build a night/day
home brew is going. Adjustable sensitivity.
sensor, a sun tracker or combine it with our
laser module XC-4490 to make a laser trip
wire. Includes breakout cable.
$
99
5
DELUXE MODULES PACKAGE XC-4288 WAS $129
Get more savings by purchasing this 37 modules-in-1 pack. Includes commonly used
sensors and modules for Duinotech and Arduino®: joystick, magnetic, temperature, IR,
LED and more. See website for details.
PCDUINO V3.0
WITH WI-FI XC-4350
LCD SCREEN OUTPUT
USE XC-4356
• Built in Wi-Fi capability
• Supported digital audio via I2C
• 121(L) x 65(W) x 15(H)mm
MICROSD CARD SLOT
ON BACK
89
SOIL MOISTURE
SENSOR MODULE XC-4604
Outputs an analogue voltage that varies
directly with temperature. Connect it straight
to one of your duinotech analogue inputs.
Max 100°C.
• 21cm breakout cable included
Automate your garden with Arduino® and use
this module to detect when your plants need
watering.
• Analogue output
• Current less than 20mA
7" LCD TOUCH
SCREEN MONITOR XC-4356
USB DEVICES 1024 x 600 resolution. LVDS screen with driver board.
EG. KEYBOARD
167(L) x 107(W) x 10(D)mm
$
WI-FI
IR RECEIVER
CAMERA INPUT
USE XC-4364
AUDIO
OUTPUT
TV OR MONITOR
PCDUINO 5MP
CAMERA XC-4364
$
19 95
Page 54
8995
SHIELD
CONNECTION
HDD INPUT
USE XC-4366
SATA CABLE
95
Connects directly to
pcDuino V3.0, and
captures an active array
of video and images up
to 2592 x 1944 resolution.
$ 95
TEMPERATURE
SENSOR MODULE XC-4494
LEARN MORE ABOUT PCDUINO, VISIT:
jaycar.com.au/pcduino
$
4
$ 95
SAVE $30
POWER INPUT - 5V USB
USE MP-3449
VOLTAGE CONVERTER
MODULE XC-4362
Marries 5V Arduino® shields
with the 3.3V pcDuino to stop
damage caused by connecting
a 5V shield to pcDuino. 70(L) x
NETWORK / 50(W) x 4(D)mm
INTERNET
$
BLACK ENCLOSURE XC-4354
SATA CABLE XC-4366
House your pcDuino in this
enclosure for a safe and
presentable appearance.
• Suits XC-4350
Connects your pcDuino V3.0
to a hard drive or SSD.
• 150mm long
(approx.)
$
19 95
Follow us at facebook.com/jaycarelectronics
24 95
4
$ 95
Catalogue Sale 24 October - 23 November, 2017
PROJECT OF THE MONTH
WI-FI ENVIRONMENTAL
DATALOGGER
NERD PERKS CLUB OFFER
BUY ALL FOR
$
If you’re interested in measuring what’s going on
in your environment, this project is a handy thing
to build. It has sensors to measure temperature,
humidity and light levels, but it can be made
to log just about anything an Arduino can
sense. What’s great on this project is you can
download the data via Wi-Fi, and view it in a
spreadsheet program. Some soldering required!
8995
SAVE OVER 25%
VALUED AT $122.50
SEE STEP-BY-STEP INSTRUCTIONS AT:
jaycar.com.au/wifi-datalogger
WHAT YOU NEED:
UNO MAIN BOARD
WI-FI SHIELD
DATALOGGING SHIELD
PHOTOSENSITIVE LDR MODULE
TEMPERATURE & HUMIDITY SENSOR MODULE
SOCKET-SOCKET JUMPER LEADS
8GB MICRO SDHC CARD WITH SD CARD ADAPTOR
HEADER TERMINAL STRIP
XC-4410
XC-4614
XC-4536
XC-4446
XC-4520
WC-6026
XC-4983
HM-3211
$29.95
$34.95
$19.95
$5.95
$9.95
$5.95
$14.95
$0.85
XC-4410
XC-4614
XC-4536
XC-4446
XC-4520
WC-6026
XC-4983
HM-3211
DON'T FORGET THE MAKER ESSENTIALS
FROM
5
$ 45
4
$ 95
$
L293D QUAD HALF H-BRIDGE
MOTOR DRIVER ZK-8880
Four high power outputs to drive a 1 x
stepper or 2 x DC motors. 3.3V or 5V.
2795
FROM
6
$ 95
PCB ETCHING KIT HG-9990
JUMPER LEAD KITS
Complete with assortment of double-sided
copper boards, etchant, working bath and
tweezers.
Ideal for connecting devices for testing.
10 leads supplied.
STANDARD
WC-6010 $6.95
HEAVY DUTY WC-6020 $11.95
RETRACTABLE WT-5334 $29.95
RELAY BOARDS
Provides the easiest way to use your
Arduino® project to switch real world
devices.
• Status LEDs show channel status
• Screw terminals for easy connection to
relay contact
1 CHANNEL 5VDC XC-4419 $5.45
4 CHANNEL 12VDC XC-4440 $12.95
8 CHANNEL 12VDC XC-4418 $19.95
HP-9544
FROM
HP-9540
4
$ 50
PC BOARDS - VERO TYPE STRIP
Alphanumeric grid, pre-drilled 0.9mm,
2.5mm spacing.
95MM(W) X 75MM(L) HP-9540 $4.50
95MM(W) X 152MM(L) HP-9542 $7.95
95MM(W) X 305MM(L) HP-9544 $11.50
8
$ 95
SPOT FACE CUTTER FOR STRIP
BOARDS TD-2461
Designed to neatly remove copper track on
strip type prototyping boards.
• 110mm long
To order phone 1800 022 888 or visit www.jaycar.com.au
$
13 95
8
$ 95
ANTI STATIC WRIST STRAP TH-1780 ISOPROPYL ALCOHOL NA-1066
• Adjustable hook and loop wrist strap
• Coiled lead and banana plug/alligator clip
• Expanded lead length approx 1.8 m.2.
See terms & conditions on page 8.
Many uses such as head, surface, prep, and
contact cleaning plus, stain removal in the
laundry etc.
• 99.8% concentration
• 250ml pump spray
Page 55
MEASURE TEMPERATURE & MORE
SOLAR POWER METER
NOW
199
$
QM-1582 WAS $129
Optimises solar panel installations by
finding optimum locations for the panels.
Expressed as W/m2 (Watts per square
metre), or BTU/ft2 (British thermal units per
square foot). Includes carry case.
• Powered by 3 x AAA batteries (included)
• 63(W) x 162(H) x 28(D)mm
FROM
119
$
SAVE $50
PRO HIGH TEMPERATURE
NON-CONTACT THERMOMETER
USB TEMPERATURE &
HUMIDITY DATALOGGERS
QM-7226 WAS $249
Measure high temperatures with
safety. Supplied in a robust blow-moulded
case.
• Laser pointing targeting
• Temp range: -50 to 1000°C
• 30:1 distance-to-spot ratio
• 230(L) x 100(H) x 56(W)mm
Log, read and store data in internal
memory for later download to a PC.
• Temp range: -40 to 70°C (±1°C)
• Humidity range: 0 to 100% (±3°C)
DIRECT PLUG-IN QP-6013 $119
USB/LCD READOUT QP-6014 $149
NOW
$
99
29 95
SAVE $20
DIGITAL STEM THERMOMETER
QM-7216
Features fast response, min/max memory
and data hold. Stainless steel probe,
splashproof body. LR44 battery included.
• Range: -50 - 200°C / -58 - 392°F
• 5000 hour battery life
• 205mm long
Features a flexible "clamp" loop that unclips
on one side. Min/max, data hold & backlit
LCD. CATIII 1000V and CATIV 600V rated.
• Autoranging
• 2 x AAA batteries included
• 105(W) x 270(H) x 28(D)mm (when closed)
39 95
DIGITAL THERMOMETER WITH
K-TYPE THERMOCOUPLE QM-1602
Excellent measurement range and a hold
function to lock the reading on the display.
Thermocouple and 2 x AAA batteries
included.
• 3.5 digit LCD display
• Range: -50 - 750°C
• 128(L) x 61(W) x 25(H)mm
Please note: Measuring up to 750°C will require
the use of an additional thermocouple probe
available separately (QM-1282)
$
14 95
$
Allows measurement of external
temperature readings on DMMs.
• Measures temperatures from below
minus 50C to over 250C
• Suitable for gas and liquid with accuracy
of 0.75%
ALSO AVAILABLE:
WIRE TYPE K THERMOCOUPLE
QM-1283 $11.95
$
PRO DIGITAL LIGHT METER
QM-1584 WAS $169
Uses photopic spectral sensitivity which
closely mimics the response of the human
eye to changes in light. Measurement can
be switched between LUX and FC (foot
candles). Carry case included.
• Long-life silicon photo diode sensor
• Min & Max measurements
• Easy to read backlit display
• Data hold
NOW
349
$
SAVE $30
K TYPE THERMOCOUPLE
PLUG IN PROBE QM-1282
24 95
1195
$
WIRE TYPE THERMOCOUPLE
WITH TWIN BANANA PLUGS
QM-1284
Similar to our other thermocouples, this
one is fitted with banana plug terminations
but does not have a `probe' assembly.
• Typical thermocouple measurement
range from as low as -50°C to over 250°C
$
34 95
POWER POINT AND EARTH
LEAKAGE TESTER QP-2004
Shows how much
an appliance is
costing to run and
tracks the total
power being used.
10A max rating.
Assess the safety of installed main sockets
and earth voltages and identify dangerous
electrical installations. IP65 rated enclosure.
ALSO AVAILABLE:
INLINE RCD CIRCUIT BREAKER
QP-2002 $34.95
Page 56
34 95
PRO SOUND LEVEL METER
WITH CALIBRATOR
MOISTURE METER - WOOD &
BUILDING MATERIALS QP-2310
QM-1592 WAS $379
Ideal for vehicle traffic or aircraft noise
testing, race scrutineering, or any
evidence-based noise testing. Includes a
calibrator to verify your results.
• A & C weighting scales
• AC & DC analogue outputs
• Min/max measurement
• 278(L) x 76(W) x 50(D)mm
An intelligent meter with 8mm electrode
suitable for measuring water content
in building materials and wooden fibre
articles.
• Range: 6 to 44% (Wood) / 0.2 to 2.0%
(Material)
• 96(H) x 40(W) x 20(D)mm
$
MAINS POWER
METER MS-6115
NOW
149
SAVE $20
$
99
SAVE $30
$
TRUE RMS AC 3000A FLEXIBLE
CLAMP METER QM-1568 WAS $119
$
NOW
$
FROM
24 95
$
69 95
SELF-POWERED LED
PANEL METERS
DIGITAL DC POWER METER MS-6170
An ideal addition to any low voltage DC
Simple 2 wire connection for voltage readout. system this digital power meter features real
time display of the voltage, current draw, and
Auto zero calibration and easy to read
power consumption. Includes internal shunt.
display. Automatic polarity sensing. Cutout
size 42 x 23mm.
• 5-60VDC
LED VOLTMETER 8-30VDC QP-5586 $24.95
• 45(W) x 75(L) x 23(D)mm
LED AMMETER 0-50ADC QP-5588 $39.95
Follow us at facebook.com/jaycarelectronics
Catalogue Sale 24 October - 23 November, 2017
IT'S NO FLUKE,
OUR DMM'S ARE BETTER VALUE
COMPARISON TABLE:
VIEW THE FULL RANGE OF DIGITECH DMMS:
www.jaycar.com.au
Built for precision and reliability the
mid to advanced range of DIGITECH
Digital Multi- Meters (DMM) come
with LIFETIME WARRANTY, delivering
the same measurement precision as
other more expensive brands, but at
a fraction of the price, making them
better value and an excellent choice for
professionals in the field or workshop.
QM-1549
The table here is proof why we believe
your next DMM has to be a DIGITECH.
At less than half the price of its name
brand rivals, the DIGITECH QM-1549
packs all the key features to meet
the needs of the most demanding
professional.
ENTRY LEVEL
400mV – 1000V (0.5% accuracy)
600mV – 600V (0.5% accuracy)
AC Voltage Measurement
True RMS
True RMS
AC Voltage Reading
400mV – 1000V
(0.8% accuracy)
600mV - 600V
(1% accuracy)
Resistance reading
400 Ω – 40 MΩ
(0.8% accuracy)
600 Ω – 40 MΩ
(0.9% accuracy)
Safety Rating
CAT IV
(600V max)
CAT III
(600V max)
IP Rating
IP67
IP42
Warranty
Lifetime
3 Years
Price
LESS THAN $100
MORE THAN $300
MID RANGE
FROM $9.95
FLUKE 117
DC Voltage Reading
FROM $69.95
ADVANCED
FROM $129
AFFORDABLE WITH TRANSISTOR
& DIODE TEST QM-1500
TRUE RMS WITH TEMPERATURE
& NON-CONTACT VOLTAGE DETECTION
TRUE RMS AUTORANGING WITH
WIRELESS USB INTERFACE
Perfect first meter! Includes
transistor, diode test & test
leads.
• 2000 count
• CATII 500V
• AC/DC voltages: 750V/1000V
• 10A DC only
• 125(H) x 689(W) x 23(D)mm
QM-1551
True RMS for higher accuracy.
Measures AC and DC (600V), and
current (10A). Includes test leads.
• 4000 count
• CATIII 600V
• AC/DC voltages: 600V/600V
• 10A AC/DC
• K-probe included
• 138(L) x 68(W) x 37(D)mm
$
QM-1571
Wireless USB interface and included
logging software allows for computer
based live data logging whilst keeping
your computer completely isolated and
protected. IP67 waterproof, duty cycle,
data logger, relative measurement etc.
Includes test leads.
• 4000 count
• CATIV 600V
$
• AC/DC Voltages: 1000V/1000V
• 10A AC/DC
• 170(L) x 79(W) x 50(H) mm
9
$ 95
AUTORANGING WITH NON-CONTACT
VOLTAGE DETECTION QM-1529
Exceptional value for money.
Measures both DC and AC voltages
and currents. Continuity, diode and
data hold. Includes test leads.
• 2000 count
• CAT 111 600V
• AC/DC voltages: 600V/600V
• 10A AC/DC
• 144(L) x 70(W) x 32(H)mm
$
24 95
69 95
TRUE RMS AUTORANGING - MINI
QM-1570
Compact, IP65 (weather
resistant). Drop tested from
2m height. Includes test
leads and carry case.
• 4000 count
• CATIII 600V
• AC/DC voltages:
600V/600V
• 135(H) x 70(W) x 45(D)mm
$
MULTIFUNCTION
ENVIRONMENT METER
QM-1594
Combines the functions of
a sound level meter, light
meter, humidity meter and
temperature meter. Non
contact voltage.
• 4000 count
• CATII 600V
• AC/DC voltages: 250V/250V
• 170(H) x 78(W) x 48(D)
89 95
AUTORANGING WITH TEMPERATURE
TRUE RMS AUTORANGING - IP67
QM-1323
A budget-priced meter with everything you need capacitance, temperature & 10A on AC & DC. Duty cycle,
data hold, relative measurement etc. Includes test leads.
• 4000 count
• CATIII 600V
• AC/DC voltages: 600V/600V
• 10A AC/DC
• K-probe and case included
• 137(H) x 65(W) x 35(D)mm
QM-1549
Large, easily read display and
carries an IP67 environmental
rating. Includes data hold, diode
test, relative measurement etc.
Includes test leads and carry case.
• 4000 count
• CATIV 600V
• AC/DC voltages: 1000V/1000V
• 10A AC/DC
• IP67 waterproof
• 182(L) x 82(W) x 55(D)mm
$
49 95
To order phone 1800 022 888 or visit www.jaycar.com.au
$
94 95
129
$
129
CAT III INSULATION
TESTER/
MULTIMETER
QM-1493 WAS $269
Commonly known as a megger and
suitable for high voltage insulation
testing up to 4 gigaohms at up to
1000V. Analogue/digital display, data
hold. Includes test leads.
• 4000 count
• CATIII 1000V
• AC/DC voltages: 750V/1000V
• 200(L) x 92(W) x 50(D)mm
$
249
SAVE $20
See terms & conditions on page 8.
Page 57
WORKBENCH
ESSENTIALS
There has been an obvious resurgence in people getting back to the workbench and
reviving skills involving manual dexterity. As you will see across the following pages,
Jaycar has all the DIY tools you'll need to equip your workbench so you can create
projects from the power of your brain and your hands.
NOW
2
$
$
NOW
849
99
SAVE $20
SAVE $50
1
6
129
$
$
NOW
249
SAVE $50
5
4
$
39 95
12 95
$
3
12
$
16
95
$
95
PRECISION SIDE CUTTERS TH-1897 WIRE STRIPPER TH-1824
Easily cut leads, ideal for fine PCB work.
Soft padded handles.
• Carbon steel
• 127mm
Strips cable without damaging the
conductors. Automatically adjusts to
insulation diameter.
• Spring return
100 PIECE DRIVER BIT SET
19 95
$
CRIMPING TOOL TH-1935
Magnetic holder, adaptor, Phillips bits,
slotted bits, torx, tamperproof, pin drive,
wing nut driver etc. Suits standard 1/4
inch driver handle. TD-2038
ALSO AVAILABLE:
HEX DRIVER
TD-2032 $6.95
Crimp 6P2C, 6P4C-RJ11, 6P6C-RJ12 and 8PRJ45 plugs. Also cuts and strips the cable.
SMARTPHONE REPAIR KIT
27 PIECES TD-2118
Designed to repair iMac®, Mac® Air,
iPhone®, Samsung®,
HTC®, Nokia®, Sony®
as well as many
brands of mobile
phone.
• 190(L) x 130(W) x
26(D)mm
$
29 95
See website for full specifications.
2. LED ILLUMINATED MAGNIFYING LAMP
QM-3548 WAS $119
• Magnify and illuminate objects
• 5 dioptre lens
• Mains powered
• 77(L) x 38(H) x 25(W)mm
3. BENCHTOP WORK MAT HM-8100
• Cut, solder, write on it and not damage your
workplace
• Durable A3 size PVC
• 450 x 300mm
GAS BLOW TORCH
WITH BUTANE GAS
TH-1632
Ergonomically
designed torch
features an adjustable
flame, lit with an
integrated piezo igniter.
• Adjustable temperature
• 180(L) x 60(W) x 35(H)mm
$
34 95
$
3795
ea
NASHUA GAFFER TAPE
$
24 95
$
59 95
8 PIECE SCREWDRIVER AND
TOOL SET TD-2031
Features quality rubber-moulded insulation
for in-hand comfort.
• VDE approved to 1000V
See website for full details.
Page 58
1. 100MHZ DUAL CHANNEL OSCILLOSCOPE
QC-1936 WAS $899
• 7-inch colour-LCD
• Waveform generator
• PC connection via USB
• SD Card support
• Includes 2 probes and USB cable
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SERVICEMAN'S LOG
Rangehood repair full of red herrings
Dave Thompson*
No matter how good you are or how much experience you might have,
sometimes servicing just comes down to luck. That can mean good luck,
where you take apart a monstrously complex device and immediately
spot the simple problem which is preventing it from operating. Or bad
luck, when you are trying to repair the simplest device and nothing you
try seems to help. This is the second kind of story.
I've had some brilliant successes
but more than once, and especially
lately, I’ve completely misread clues
and then made assumptions that
steered me away from the true cause
of a problem.
Once, I stripped a lawn mower motor down to the block, looking for all
manner of non-existent faults, when
all I needed to do was change the
spark-plug; something even the least-
experienced DIY enthusiast knows is
the first thing to check!
Another time, I stripped every nut
and bolt from a vacuum cleaner in
order to disassemble it when just a
few screws held it all together — I
just didn’t twist it the right way to
pull it apart.
We've pretty much all had this kind
of experience and while you just have
to chalk it up to experience and learn
from your mistakes, it's still incredibly frustrating.
So I'd like to play a game
with you, dear reader. I'll
describe the symptoms
of a very real problem we
had with our just one-year-old range
hood and see whether you can guess
what was wrong while you're reading through all the trouble-shooting I
did, which only served to demonstrate
what wasn't wrong with it.
The appliance in question is a Robin
Hood Range Hood, model RWV3CL6G.
It was installed almost exactly one year
ago, having been purchased brand new
from a local big-box store. It wasn't
even at the age of a toddler yet but was
already starting to spit the dummy.
This particular model has five illuminated buttons along the front panel
(called "sophisticated electronic controls" in the user manual) to control
the fan and the two 24V, 1.5W LED
downlights in the front corners. The
buttons turn a function on with one
press, and off with another, each time
accompanied by a soft beep.
A blue LED backlight indicates the
button’s state; illuminated when on
and dark when off. The buttons are
positive, tactile and worked well, and
the three-stage fan and LED lights were
both powerful and efficient.
We use this appliance frequently.
It sits directly over a gas hob in the
kitchen and is vented to the outside
world through the wall, via a short
piece of steel ducting.
Items Covered This Month
•
•
A rangehood of repairs
MIG welder repair
*Dave Thompson runs PC Anytime
in Christchurch, NZ.
Website: www.pcanytime.co.nz
Email: dave<at>pcanytime.co.nz
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 61
All is not well in the
serviceman's abode
A few weeks ago, while cooking,
and with the fan and lights on, the
LEDs flickered in unison before coming back to full brightness. I switched
them on and off a few times and they
still operated normally, being flickerfree for the next few days. I put that
event down to a one-off power issue
and forgot all about it.
Less than a week later, though, the
same thing happened again, with both
lamps dimming to a dull glow before
coming right. The following day, I
switched the lights on and halfway
through cooking our meal, they dulled
down and then went dark altogether.
Of course, this had to happen just a
few weeks after the (rather short) warranty ended. Like many others, I suspect companies choose their components very carefully so as to maximise
the chance this sort of thing happening, so you have to run out and buy another one... and another... and another.
Many of my own customers have
often joked that computer manufacturers must install a timer into their machines so they fail just out of warranty.
All joking aside, though, it does seem
awfully coincidental and convenient
for the manufacturer…
So, both LEDs were not working.
Pressing the light control button still
resulted in a beep and the blue LED
lit up but there was no light output.
Occasionally, when switching on, the
LEDs would flash at full brightness but
almost instantly go dark again. This
always happened to both lamps at the
same time but after this, for the most
part, there was no output at all.
So here's the fun part. What do you
think? What would you have done,
which parts would you have blamed
from such a fault? See if you can outsmart the serviceman and figure it out
before the end of the story.
Given these symptoms, I suspected
the LED driver. One lamp behaving
badly might be a failing LED, but both
behaving in an identical manner? And
anyway, surely LEDs would last longer
than this, while drivers can fail quite
early due to dodgy electrolytic capacitors, voltage spikes on the power lines
or various other woes.
access issues. I disabled power to it at
the breaker board before removing the
lamp assemblies. These were held in
using clip springs and simply needed
to be prised out with something flat
and thin.
Once out of the housing, the LED
units hung on their respective power
cables. The lens and reflector assemblies were held together in a bayonetstyle fitting; a quick twist anti-clockwise separated the lens, reflector and
the brushed-aluminium trim ring, revealing a G4-type LED.
The heavy-duty lamps were virtually all aluminium heatsink, with the
LED die itself set into the very end.
Rated as being equivalent to a 15W
incandescent bulb but drawing just
1.5W, I was reasonably sure that they
were bulletproof, and with no signs of
overheating, I set them both aside and
dug further into the hood’s internals.
Removing the aluminium filter
from underneath gave both better
access and more light, so I could at least
see what was going on. This model
range hood has a thick, curved glass
canopy, which is held onto the body of
the appliance with four large set screws.
To get to these screws, I had to remove the stainless-steel chimney,
which is a three-sided cover that
conceals the fan, output ducting and
electronics.
It is simple enough to remove the
two small PK screws holding it in place
but awfully fiddly to get free due to it
being right at the ceiling and with me
not wanting to stand on the benchtop
or gas hob.
A bit of wiggling around (and cursing) got it free, but I wasn’t looking
forward to having to get it back up
there; we’d had issues lining it all up
when we first installed it, and there
were two of us on the job back then.
Still, I’d cross that bridge when I got
to it; all I could do now was carry on
and find out why these lamps weren’t
working.
With the panels and canopy off, I
had a clearer view of the internals. The
front switch panel was connected with
a ribbon cable to a controller circuit
board further back in the guts of the
range hood somewhere. To get to the
board, I’d have to dig deeper. However,
right in front of me, mounted on the
shoulder of the main frame, was the
LED power supply/driver.
This unit was smaller than I expected, being only about 30 x 30mm
and around 20mm thick. It had a twopin terminal block for mains power
input and a similar terminal block
that the dangling LED holders were
wired into. It only had to deliver 3W
in total, so I guess it didn’t need to
be very large.
Much wasted effort later
Pulling the thing apart was relatively
simple but the fact it is stuck to the
wall above the hob introduced some
62
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
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Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 63
With the driver nicely accessible, I
broke out my multimeter and, ensuring all the wiring was in a relatively
safe state, restored power. I pushed
the light switch, saw that the blue
LED lit up and with my meter sitting
on the kitchen benchtop, I carefully
measured across the input terminals
of the driver. The meter read around
230VAC on the 250V scale, which was
close enough for me.
Add cornflour to plot,
stir until it thickens
I use an analog meter for this type
of work, as it is easier for me to read a
meter needle position than having to
read and understand a numerical value. So after adjusting the meter range,
I measured across the driver’s output.
Hmm, I got 24V; I was expecting nothing, or thereabouts. Still, it might be
intermittent so I switched it on and off
a few times, checking each time. getting a stable 24 volt output. Curious.
After powering things down, I reinstalled the bulbs into their respective holders. This time, when I pushed
the light switch, for a brief moment,
both bulbs lit up to full brightness
before going dark again. What was
going on here? With the light switch
on, I set about wiggling and measuring
in equal amounts, but aside from the
briefest of dull glows, they remained
stubbornly dark.
Somewhat puzzled, a notion was
beginning to poke its way through to
64
Silicon Chip
the front of my mind; after all, despite
the appearances of the LEDs, there
could only be one explanation, given
the results of these tests.
To confirm my diagnosis, I took
out the LEDs again and departed to
my workshop, where I broke out my
benchtop power supply. After carefully setting the output to 24V and
limiting the current to about 100mA,
I connected each LED up to the supply using small, alligator-style clips.
As had slowly dawned on me, neither
bulb showed any sign of life.
Actually, that’s not quite true; once
or twice, as power was applied, I saw
the briefest of glow from the LEDs.
If I interrupted the supply by touching and releasing one leg of the LED,
I could very infrequently get a fullbrightness flash, almost like a flashgun, from one of the bulbs. In laymans’
terms, they were both poked.
How could I be so thick? A simple
bulb failure, and here I am with the
range hood lying all over the kitchen
bench. Both bulbs gone, failed at exactly the same time and exhibiting (for
all intents and purposes) exactly the
same symptoms. Apparently, failed
LEDs can show full brilliance for short
periods of time. I know this seems unbelievable, even unlikely, but I assure
you I’ve described things exactly as
they happened.
If only one bulb had failed and had
flickered from full brightness to a dull
glow, I would have assumed that bulb
Celebrating 30 Years
had failed and simply replaced it; a
five-minute job (if that) which doesn’t
involve disassembling the range hood
into component parts. To my mind,
both LEDs exhibiting exactly the same
behaviour as they failed beggars belief.
Surely, the driver had something to
do with this? Perhaps it surged and
took the LEDs out, fooling me into
thinking it had failed instead. To determine if this was the case, I removed
the two screws holding the driver to
the frame and took it out to the workshop, where I proceeded to connect
some strip LEDs I had on the bench
and powered them up using mains
power input, just as it would be in the
range hood.
I ran the strips for about an hour at
full power, monitoring the voltage output and current, and everything was as
stable as could be expected. Annoying
to say the least but at least I know the
driver likely had nothing to do with
anything, and it is just a LED failure,
pure and simple.
An easy fix. Or is it?
Well, this one really got me good.
Hopefully, I’ll be a bit more aware
in the future but the way these LEDs
failed is a new one on me.
Now all I had to do was find some
replacement LEDs and get the range
hood reassembled. But finding replacement LEDs turned out to be
tougher than putting the range hood
back together.
siliconchip.com.au
The only G4 LEDs I could find locally (and when I say locally I mean
within New Zealand) were listed on a
campervan manufacturer’s website at
a whopping $43 each! Needless to say,
I wasn’t paying those daylight robbers
anything like that for a LED. After a few
more wild goose chases, with similar
results price-wise, I decided to try my
luck over at AliExpress.
Sure enough, there were hundreds
of listings of G4-type LEDs, the vast
majority being replacement lamps for
chandeliers and cove lighting. But
they would likely be suitable for our
needs as well.
The LEDs I ended up buying have
a 12-24V AC/DC input range and are
rated at 3W each. The cost was just
US$7.80 for a pack of six. While they
might be a little over the top for a range
hood, there was nothing with a lower
power rating that I could find with a
G4-style connector.
We put up with not having lights
in the range hood until the new LEDs
arrived. They are actually rather impressive in the flesh. For a start, they
are quite large; at 15 x 45mm they are
about 10% larger than the originals,
and therefore barely fit into the receptacles in the range hood.
However, they are also flexible, being made out of some kind of amazingly-clear and pliable silicone material,
so a bit of fettling got them fitting OK.
However, it appears I didn’t choose
well, as the driver won’t power up
the new LEDs.
All I get with one LED plugged in
is the LED flashing at full brightness
at about two hertz. I didn't want to try
plugging both LEDs into the driver
since that would be a 6W load and
as far as I know, it's only designed to
handle the original 3W worth of lamps.
I tried powering the new LEDs with
my benchtop supply, thinking perhaps
I’d purchased blinking LEDs by mistake but I found that even at 10V and
20mA, they easily lit up. So perhaps
there is something awry with that
driver after all.
That said, it did test out OK, powering up the strip lighting with no apparent problems, so it is more likely just
a mismatch between it and the new
LEDs that leaves it unable to power
them properly.
Regardless, I’ll have to either replace
the LEDs or find another driver. After
another quick look on AliExpress, I
found a new driver that should do the
siliconchip.com.au
job. While a little bit larger physically,
it will still easily fit in the space for
it within the range hood, and with an
output of 12V and 2A, it has more than
enough grunt to drive these two LEDs
at full noise all day long.
At just US$4.50 with free shipping,
it is also affordable and, I think, a reasonable upgrade to the range hood. It is
yet to arrive, but I have no doubt it will
be the answer to this whole problem.
So once again it seems I overthought what turned out to be a stupidly-simple fault. In my defence, given
the symptoms and the fact that both
bulbs failed at exactly the same time,
I didn’t even consider the LEDs could
be the issue.
I expect LEDs to last a lot longer than
a comparable halogen or incandescent
bulb of similar output, as per all the
marketing hype, and to have them fail
at just over a year with very little actual
use is a big disappointment.
I would guesstimate that, on average, they haven’t been used for more
than a couple of hours a week over
that year, resulting in a lifespan of only
around 100 hours.
And I consider a replacement price
after such a paltry life of 40 plus bucks
each a huge rip off. The pair of halogen
bulbs in our previous kitchen’s range
hood only needed to be replaced twice
each in 10 years and likely had more
Celebrating 30 Years
use than the LEDs in the range hood at
this house, so either we got unlucky,
or we got burned. Time will likely tell
which it is.
Well, I hope you enjoyed playing
"outsmart the serviceman" and I'm sure
many of you made better guesses than I
did initially. At least I'm on the way to
having this one sorted but really, you'd
think that replacing a lamp would be
an easy job for an old hand like me.
Metal inert gas (MIG) welder repair
The next story is from M. H., of
Albury, NSW who had to first reassemble and clean out what was left
of a MIG welder before he could even
have a go at fixing the fault which left
it in this sorry state. His story is as
follows:
My friend’s mate gave him a MIG
welder that was not working and he
asked me to fix it. When I first looked
at the beast, it appeared that lots of
different people had previously had
a crack at getting it going again.
The handover ceremony involved
the presentation of an ice-cream container of assorted parts along with the
statement "It's beyond us, Mike. If you
can get it going, it is yours!"
I own a handbag-sized IGBT welder
with rod and TIG options and at the
time, had developed just enough skill
for backyard, weekend-warrior type
November 2017 65
The control knob is connected to a stepped rotary encoder
on the front display PCB. The mounting pins were repaired
and copper wires added to provide anchoring.
welding. I had observed professional
welders using a good MIG unit, but
when I investigated the cost, I decided
I really did not need one. Well, this
was my opportunity to gain a working
MIG unit as well as further my skills
at saving stuff from the landfill.
The broken unit I was given is a
BOC Smootharc 180 MIG Welder. MIG
stands for metal inert gas and it works
by feeding a wire out of the handset
end to maintain the arc and also provide the metal for welding. A gas is
simultaneously discharged under the
hood around the arc to exclude oxygen, which would prevent a proper
weld from forming.
You can also use "gasless" wire that
contains a material which vaporises,
providing the same oxygen displacement protection as the inert gas would.
This has the advantage that you don’t
need to rent a gas bottle, lug it around
or have it periodically re-filled.
Anyway, having decided to fix it,
I placed the unit on the bench in my
workshop and attacked the obvious
faults first. No need to remove the
cover; it was already in the ice-cream
container.
I cleaned out all the bent and melted
tips from the wire feed compartment.
It seemed that this side of the unit
At a glance everything in the power section of the welder
looked like it would work OK, until it was switched on. The
fault lay on the main PCB.
has been used as dumping ground for
busted parts.
I then checked the action of the motor drive for the wire feed by manually turning the motor parts and all
seemed okay. The other half of the
casing contains the main circuit board
and it was lined with dirt and dust and
metal shavings from years of grinding
near the unit.
Evidence of attempted repair action was everywhere. The main heat
sinks were floating free off the board.
The IGBT drivers were floating free
and there were broken wires on the
gas solenoid. Transistor clamps had
also been removed and a heat-sensing
thermistor had been torn from the
mountings.
What a mess! It was going take a lot
of work to put everything back in place
before this baby got mains power connected again.
The front of the unit housed a control knob to vary settings on the display, which was broken and wobbling
free. It was connected to a stepped
rotary encoder. The shaft retaining
pins were broken and it required
some restoration work and wire strips
added over the base unit to give it
strength.
With all the obvious faults restored,
Servicing Stories Wanted
Do you have any good servicing stories that you would like to share in The Serviceman
column? If so, why not send those stories in to us?
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.
66
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
it was time to review what this thing
was actually capable of doing. 15A
mains power passes through a toughlooking mains filter to keep the noise
inside the box from getting out on the
mains and then immediately through
two large bridge rectifier blocks and
then off to the main board via oversized red and black wires.
A thick cable runs from a very large
heatsink to a lug terminal secured by
a 10mm bolt, to connect the welding
cable to the front of the unit. The other work cable passes though a large
toroidal coil and then through what
looked like a final filter. I assumed this
section basically operated as a “buck”
step-down converter, but that’s unimportant at this point.
Since all was looking good and
clean, and everything appeared to
be in place, it was time to "light this
thing up". So with mains on, the fans
were running and display on. Good.
The knob varied the display numbers.
Pressing the wire feed button caused
the wire to spool out. All was looking great.
I pulled the trigger on the handset
and tapped the work clamp with no
result; no sparks, no action. I now had
the original fault to chase.
What should have happened when
I pulled the trigger was that the wire
feed motor should have started.
When the wire hits the workpiece,
this should cause the current to flow,
creating the welding arc. But tapping
the wire to the workpiece produced
nothing. It was time to visit the main
board and inspect it further.
I am always pleased to see designsiliconchip.com.au
This interior shot of the MIG welder shows the main control The wire feed motor is mounted at the opposite end of the
PCB and the power supply filter board above it. The failed
case. One of the symptoms of the fault was that it did not
component is at lower left; see the close-up image below.
operate when expected.
ers of equipment using LEDs on the
boards to indicate conditions. A LED
blinked when I tapped the wire to the
work, so clearly it was detecting this
action. But nothing happened when
the trigger was pulled.
I then investigated if there was a
fault in the trigger or handset. Using
my old faithful Dick Smith analog
multimeter it was easy to prove the
trigger signal arrived at the main
board.
Near the connector for the trigger
was a cluster of resistors, a transistor
and a few diodes to form what looked
like a trigger detection circuit. Its output was fed to an opto-isolator.
I powered the unit up again and
measured the voltage across the input
side of the opto-isolator, which revealed 14V when closer to 1V should
have been present, ie, the forward voltage of its internal infrared LED.
So this LED must be open circuit. A
quick Google search showed that the
opto-isolator was nothing special and
just had the typical transistor output.
As I am a “throw nothing out” sort of
guy, a quick search in the junk pile
revealed a replacement. I used a heat
gun to de-solder the SMD opto and the
replacement was soon in place.
At last, I was ready to apply mains
again. The fans ran, the LED displays
came on and the unit seemed ready.
So to test it I tapped the wire to the
work and pulled the trigger.
Sparks flew everywhere and red
dots dashed about on the floor. The
carpet mat at my feet was smoking
with burn holes. Wire was feeding out
of the handset. It was like Christmas
siliconchip.com.au
on Black Saturday and my workshop
filled with smoke. I decided that perhaps I should control the situation a
little better before the next strike on
the work clamp.
To control the wire feed, I removed
the drive clamp. This will allow the
motor to drive without feeding wire
out of the handset. I then pulled the
trigger and viewed the main controller
board. Lots of LEDs blinked, indicating
the IGBT driver section was operating
and output was present. When the
trigger was pulled, the output floated
about 20V.
It was now time to move outdoors
to make more smoke and try melting
stuff. It all seemed to do what it should,
so I was convinced it was time to visit
a friend that has a proper MIG to compare with my now-working unit.
It compared well, so the conclusion
is that this wonderful beast had been
brought crashing down by the failure
of a 20¢ opto-isolator and was almost
relegated to the dump because my
mates tried to fix it by "just undoing
stuff" with no real idea of what the
fault may be.
Luckily I managed to rescue it! SC
The faulty opto-isolator is near the top of the photo (U16), while the hand trigger
switch connectors are at lower left (CON3). Both solder joints had blown for
some reason or another.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 67
Do-it-yourself
Bass Guitar kit
Building your own guitar has a real attraction
for many musicians. But normally,
left-handers are left right out! Here’s a
complete kit that comes with all the parts
needed to build, string and get playing
your own electric or bass guitar.
I
f you’ve been frequenting the internet lately, you may have noticed a
lot of advertisements from Banggood
and similar outfits, of interest to readers of this magazine.
Most of the items are electronic
gadgets but recently I started seeing intriguing ads for DIY electric guitar kits.
These provide you with all the necessary wood, electronics, strings etc;
it’s then up to the purchaser to do the
assembly, nut and bridge adjustments, connect the internal electronics
and so on, but most importantly, apply
the finishing coat to the woodwork.
One common query I noticed was:
“Do you make left-handed versions?”
and it was clear from the sometimes
nonsensical answers that the good
people at Banggood had no idea what
was being asked!
I play left-handed and after doing
Some of the parts included in the kit, from left to right: pickguard, two pickups,
bridge with saddle, volume & tone controls, nickel-plated strings, tuning pegs,
assorted screws plus nuts and backplate cover.
68
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
some research, I found that the only
company who appear to offer lefthanded bass kits are Pit Bull Guitars
(www.pitbullguitars.com), based in
Western Australia. I also discovered
that, once exchange rates and shipping
are taken into account, the Pit Bull
products work out to be only slightly
more expensive.
But Pit Bull offer a much bigger
range of models and build options,
plus you get the benefit of local, English-language backup.
They even host a builders’ support
website: www.buildyourownguitar.
com.au/forum
Pit Bull’s main line of business is
supplying fully-finished guitars to
music shops in Australia, but clearly
they thought there was also a market
for enthusiasts who wanted to “roll
their own”.
So they appear to be just supplying
the same kit of parts that their Chinese factories use to assemble their
fully-finished products. There are a
few other places in Australia who also
offer DIY guitar kits, but none appear
to have anything like Pit Bull’s range.
I’ve always wanted to own an electric bass but left-handed models of
reasonable quality are hard to come
by and not particularly cheap. Pit Bull
have a range of 14 different left-handed
guitar models, including three basses,
and I chose the JB-4L, “inspired” by
the Fender Jazz Bass, as played by
siliconchip.com.au
By Keith Walters
Michael “Flea” Balzary of the Red Hot
Chili Peppers.
The JB-4L kit costs just $199 including shipping anywhere in Australia.
So I clicked the appropriate boxes, hit
the PayPal “Pay Now” button and Australia Post delivered it a few days later.
It came adequately packed in a stiff
carton with lots of ecologically-correct
cardboard and paper padding. The
screws were all sealed into pockets in
one plastic bag with no identification;
you have to work out where they go.
All the other bits are sealed in their
own separate plastic bags.
There are also no real assembly instructions; Pit Bull suggest you visit
their website for that. They do recommend you carry out a “mock build”,
basically placing all the parts in their
approximate positions to check that
everything is there, but that’s pretty
much it.
I did all that and after confirming
that everything was there, immediately started the assembly. There are
actually four main parts to the process
and there is no specific order in which
they need to be done (although this is
for a bass, the instructions are pretty
much identical for a 6-string guitar
apart from the extra two strings):
A. Metalwork assembly, basically
getting all the mounting screw holes
in the right places
B. Fitting and wiring up the electrical parts
siliconchip.com.au
C. Painting or otherwise finishing
the woodwork
D. Adjustment of frets, action and
intonation.
In my case I did them in the order
above, which gave me a presentable
guitar after step C. To be honest, if I’d
know how little time step D was actually going to take, I probably would
have done it A-B-D-C. Normally, you
would want to leave the finish until
last, to avoid damaging it.
The first thing you need to do is
attach the neck. Some people recom-
mend temporarily clamping it in position when you’re getting the rest of the
components lined up, but I can’t see
any real value in that, at least with a
bass, so I decided to screw it into place
immediately.
The neck comes pre-drilled with
four holes, and you first have to drill
matching pilot holes in the body,
which was where I ran into my first
snag...
There is a metal backing plate that
the screws are meant to pass through
to spread the load. I left that off during
The neck of the guitar is attached to the body via a bolt-in joint, with four holes
drilled through the body. This type of joint is quite strong, fairly easy to produce
and doesn’t require glue.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 69
Preparing the holes for attaching the bridge (left) and one of the pickups (right). The bridge is the sheet of metal that is
secured to the body, while the saddle is attached to the tail-end of the bridge and the strings then sit on top of the saddle.
The type of bridge/saddle combination used in this guitar is called a Tune-O-Matic bridge. It is adjusted by tightening or
loosening the screws, thus altering the tension the springs apply on the strings.
the drilling because I didn't want to
scratch it, and when it came time for
the assembly, I encountered this:
The screw holes on the backplate
that thread through to the neck didn’t
align properly, as shown in the photo
below.
I mentioned this on the forum, and
another builder making the exact same
“lefty” bass reported he had the exact
same problem! So somewhere in China
is a jacked-up drilling jig. Anyway Pit
Bull say they are looking into it.
To be fair, they probably don’t sell
all that many JB-4Ls, and nobody has
reported similar problems with other
models. Fortunately, I found some
bamboo skewers that were exactly the
right size to fill the erroneous hole, and
after gluing one of those in there I soon
had the neck re-drilled and properly
attached.
The next stage is fitting the bridge.
There are various techniques described on the forum. I decided to use
some cotton kitchen twine, normally
The backplate had one misaligned
screw hole, which meant that the hole
had to filled and then re-drilled.
70
Silicon Chip
used for tying up roasts and the like. I
used this because it doesn't stretch and
used Blu-Tack to secure two lengths of
the twine behind the nut.
I marked the position of the 12th fret
with a Texta pen, and then doubled
the twine back and marked it where
it passes through the nut (it's better
if you can get someone to help with
this). That way, the first mark should
be at exactly half the scale length, and
the second should be twice that (the
actual required scale length).
We need to measure the scale length
as it’s used to help set the location
of the saddle on the bridge, once the
strings are attached.
I added some weights to the other
ends of the twine so it hung over the
end of the body, keeping the twine taut.
The reason for this is because the
distance from the 12th fret to the nut is
the same as the distance from the 12th
fret to the bridge, plus some compensation depending on the type of bridge
and other factors.
Then it's a simple matter of dropping
the lengths of twine into the relevant
slots on the bridge and moving the
bridge around so that the twine lines
up with the outermost pickups, and
the pen marks line up with the centred
adjustable bridge saddles.
I recommend you just drill two pilot
holes at first to make sure the bridge
hasn't moved, and re-check the alignment before you put the rest in.
Unfortunately, I subsequently encountered another snag! Despite one
poster on the builders’ forum stating
that the bass bridge saddles should be
centred exactly at twice the 12th fret
distance as shown, it turns out for a
bass, the bridge needs to be mounted
another 5mm or so further away from
the pickups. Otherwise you may not be
able to get the intonation right.
Editor's note: This is typically due
to the total string length being longer
than the scale length to provide a
buffer distance (about the distance the
string bends when pressed to the fretboard), and is typically done by having
the saddle set at an angle.
Intonation of the guitar
Editor's note: we recommend doing the body finish before attaching
The 12th fret is marked in black on two pieces of cotton twine and we use the
total distance from the nut to this marking to calculate half the total scale length
for the guitar.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
the electronics/strings and doing the
intonation, as you will need to remove
them before applying the finish.
Take for example the E string. You
normally tune the guitar so that the
“open” (unfretted) E string is tuned to,
well, “E”. Then, when you hold the E
string down at the 12th fret and pluck
it again, it should sound 12 semitones
higher, that is, E again, but one octave
above the open frequency.
The problem is, when you fret a
string you’re both tightening it, which
will increase its pitch, and lengthening
it, which will tend to lower it. Normally, stretching wins out, so if the
12th fret is positioned exactly halfway
along the string, the fretted note will
sound slightly higher than E.
You correct this by adjusting the individual saddles on the bridge with the
adjustment screws. If the fretted note
is too high, the saddle has to be moved
away from the pickups.
This is complicated by the string
“action” chosen, that is, how high the
strings sit above the fretboard, since
that affects how much the string has
to be stretched during fretting. The
action is adjusted using an Allen key
they supply, with the small screws
fitted to the bridge saddles (see later).
This does open a bit of a can of
worms, because while lower action
allows you to play faster and there
is less intonation shift, it makes the
guitar more prone to fretboard buzz
if the neck is not quite straight or the
fret heights are uneven.
As it turned out, I couldn’t quite get
the intonation correct on the E string
because the spring around the saddle
adjustment screw wouldn’t let me
compress it enough.
I solved that by simply cutting the
spring in half! I have heard that if you
use higher-gauge strings you need to
move the bridge forward, but in that
case, they recommend you put on a
better quality bridge.
There was still a bit of an issue with
the over-winding that holds the brass
stopper at the end of the string fouling
on the bridge saddle, but I fixed that
by putting a couple of nyloc nuts on
as spacers. A bit feral, but it works!
I am jumping the gun a bit here, because after fitting the bridge I needed
to fit the machine heads before I could
put the strings on! Lining the machine
heads up is pretty easy; you just press
the metal ferrules into the holes, fit the
heads, line them up by eye, then mark
siliconchip.com.au
This photo shows the four
tuning pegs attached to the
headstock. The headstock is pre-shaped
but does leave some room for a custom design.
The small hole you can see where the headstock
meets the neck is where the truss rod is located. This rod
helps to adjust upwards or downwards tension on the neck.
and fit four screws for each one.
Here I ran into yet another minor
problem. The “reproduction” screws
they supply are a bit on the cheap
and nasty side, and I had the choice
of either risking stripping the heads
or breaking one trying to screw them
into the maple neck, or drilling bigger pilot holes and risk having them
work loose.
In the end I went into Bunnings and
bought some much more solid-looking
sheet-metal screws and drilled the pilot holes out to 2.5mm. They may not
be as authentic-looking but they still
look pretty good.
After that you really need to get the
pickups wired in. Conveniently, the
neck and bridge pickups are slightly
different sizes, and the neck pickup
(red wire) will only fit in the cutout
closest to the neck.
The pickups are each held in place
by four long wood screws, with springs
fitted over the screw shaft between the
pickup and the body to allow height
adjustment.
I simply fitted the pickups into po-
sition (you have to feed the shielded
lead through a hole in the body first)
and then used the point of a hand-held
4mm drill bit to mark where the pilot
holes should go.
After that I drilled four pilot holes
for each pickup with a 2mm drill. At
first glance it might seem like a nightmare getting the screws and springs
to stay together while wiggling the
pickups into position. Actually it’s
no problem at all; the magnets hold
everything together nicely!
The pickup wiring is pretty straightforward: the shields simply are soldered onto their appropriate pot metalwork, while the signal wires solder
to the wipers of their respective pots.
This is not the usual method, but
since the Jazz Bass doesn’t have a
pickup selector switch, wiring the pots
in the conventional manner would
cause interaction between the volume
settings.
But then another quirk revealed itself: the pots were wired in reverse of
the normal action, so fully clockwise
meant minimum volume!
There are two knobs to control volume and one for treble. Initially the
potentiometers were wired in reverse, so that winding clockwise would
decrease volume.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 71
It’s possible that whoever designed
this guitar decided that since everything else in a left-handed version is
a mirror-image of the right-handed
model, the pots should be wired backto-front as well! None of my other lefthanded guitars are wired like this, so
I re-wired it to the conventional configuration.
Another point that needs to be addressed somewhere in the assembly
process is the matter of electrical
shielding of the pickup and volume
control cavities.
I have my doubts that this achieves
very much, given that my other guitars don’t have this feature. There
were suggestions about using copper
foil but I simply painted the interior
with “aquadag”, which is the graphitebased conductive paint they put on the
back of CRT TV picture tubes. Jaycar
sell a very similar product called “Wire
Glue”, Cat NM2831.
I then ran copper wires through the
access holes and fastened the wires
to the conductive surface with small
screws. There is also a grounding wire
that sits under the bridge metalwork.
You just thread the wire through an
already-drilled hole, strip off some of
the insulation and screw the bridge
bracket onto it.
After that I fitted the supplied
strings and used the truss rod to adjust the neck tension. The truss rod is
adjusted with a supplied Allen key via
a small hole behind the nut.
There was initially a bit of confusion
as to how this adjusts, but eventually I
realised that there is a half-turn “dead
zone” between the clockwise and anticlockwise directions where the rod
turns with virtually no resistance, then
become progressively tighter in both
directions.
The truss rod I received from Pit
Bull was set for zero tension, which
led to the middle of my neck curving
up towards the strings. This meant that
the truss rod needed to be adjusted to
exert force in the opposite direction
until the neck was straight, such that
using a straight-edge the frets will line
up to the saddle.
Editor’s note: it’s important to note
that typical fretboards for electric and
acoustic guitars have a convex curvature with a radius of somewhere between 7 and 16 inches. So it’s important to differentiate between the neck
bending up or down, and the fretboard
not being flat when doing intonation.
72
Silicon Chip
This is what the body of the guitar looked like after applying the first few coats
of oil and wax finish.
Many guitarists find it easier to play
chords and bend strings due to this
curvature.
Finishing coat
Once I’d done all that and gotten the
intonation and action approximately
right, I turned my attention to the actual timber finish.
Instead of the usual approach of either painting or lacquering, I decided
to use two products I’ve had great success with in the past: Feast Watson
Fine Rubbing Oil and Gilly Stephenson's Cabinet Maker’s Wax.
Both products are available from
Bunnings and are not particularly expensive; plus they keep in their tins for
years. These two products are meant
to be applied to bare wood and give an
old-fashioned low-sheen finish that’s
quite unlike any kind of painted or
sprayed-on lacquer.
I’ve used these products for restoring a number of items of period furniture, and they are particularly useful
if you’re not interested in doing a full
restoration (which can drastically reduce the value anyway), but simply
making the wood look “presentable”.
I simply strip off all the old varnish,
leave all the cuts, nicks, cigarette burns
etc exactly as they are, and apply the
above two products with 0000 grade
steel wool (also available from Bunnings).
Apart from the fact that I had some
of both products already, there are a
number of advantages:
1. There’s no need for pre-sanding;
the steel wool smooths down all the
imperfections, which produces a
Celebrating 30 Years
smooth finish, while preserving the
“character”. But make sure to give it a
quick wipe down to remove any leftover residue before applying the finish.
2. There’s no real issue with the finish quickly hardening or otherwise
“going off”, so you can do as little or
as much as you like each night, spread
over several evenings.
3. Both products have a pleasant
gum turpentine smell; they don’t smell
at all “painty”. You could even work
on it indoors, while watching TV!
On the downside, it’s a fairly slow
process, and the finish takes a couple
of weeks to dry completely, but the results are well worth it. The grain comes
up beautifully, the finish is surprisingly durable, and best of all, if it gets
damaged, it’s pretty easy to repair (Pit
Bull sell and recommend what sounds
like a broadly similar product called
“Dingotone”).
If you want to do an actual paint,
lacquer or shellac finish on your guitar,
there is plenty of advice on how to do it
on www.buildyourownguitar.com.au
However, it is far from a simple task
to do properly, similar to re-painting a
car. And you have to face facts. However good you are at it, you’re still
pretty much going to wind up with
something that looks like a cheap Chinese copy bought from a music store.
With the “antique” oil finish, nobody
is going to know what it is!
It’s worth noting that Flea of the
Red Hot Chili Peppers mostly uses a
custom 1961 "shell pink" Fender Jazz
Bass, which appears to have had an
extremely hard life. But not only is
Flea clearly not interested in getting it
siliconchip.com.au
The guitar after applying the finish, with masking tape covering the fretboard to protect it from damage when doing fret
adjustments. The tools below it are all exceedingly useful for this type of work and are as follows, from left to right: a
radius gauge, 12-inch radiused sanding block, fret rocker (level-gauge type tool for measuring three frets at a time), set of
diamond files, a fret-crowning file, fret hammer and rulers.
refurbished, Fender also now sell the
“Flea” Jazz Bass, with all the beat-up
pink paintwork faithfully replicated!
Back to building, the first step in
finishing the woodwork is to remove
all the metal hardware, placing the
various pieces into labelled zip-lock
sandwich bags with the relevant
screws. I also removed the neck, but
put two of the neck screws back into
the neck and the other two into the
body. That makes them easy to hang
up between coats.
I spent about 30 minutes each evening for a week applying the rubbing oil,
then another week applying the cabinet wax. The instructions are on the
cans, but basically you just apply the
product by rubbing it along the grain
with the steel wool, give it a half-hour
or so to dry a bit, then polish with a
soft cloth.
You can put on as many coats as
you like but after about seven you will
not see much more improvement. The
photo to the left shows how it looked
about halfway through the procedure, which does look pretty good
but I found it near impossible to take
a photograph that does the actual finish full justice!
siliconchip.com.au
The end-grain is more problematic,
because it’s a lot harder to get that
smoothed right down, but it still comes
out looking OK; certainly no casual
observer would be likely to notice.
There are various schools of thought
about how the rosewood fretboard
should be finished, but for my money,
a single buff-up with cabinet wax is
more than enough.
Editor's note: typical fretboard
woods like ebony and rosewood don't
necessarily need a finish due to how
much natural oil they produce, compared to drier woods such as maple,
but it’s always something that can be
done at a later time.
Headstock design
In case you’re wondering about the
“hatchet-like” headstock, that’s how
it comes from Pit Bull. For legal reasons, suppliers can’t sell exact copies
of name brand guitars (Fender, Gibson etc).
Apparently, it’s difficult to copyright
the body shape, but the headstock
designs are regarded as registered
trademarks. There’s nothing to stop
a home builder re-finishing his headstock to the standard Fender “Treble
Celebrating 30 Years
Clef” design and in fact blueprints for
all popular guitar models are readily
available on the internet.
But because this is being published
in a magazine, I’ve left the headstock
as is for now. I’m actually intending
to make my own design anyway, and
I also didn’t want to run the risk of
damaging something before photographing it!
On that subject, if by any chance you
ever manage to hit the big-time playing your DIY guitar, you may have to
consider trading up to “the real thing”.
While the leading guitar manufacturers generally turn a blind eye to copies of their products being played in
pubs and so on, they tend to get a bit
tetchy if they start appearing in music
videos and on CD covers!
Fretwork
After you’ve gotten your guitar all
assembled and prettified and so on,
you should have a playable instrument, but the next thing that will need
attention is the frets.
The fret heights must be carefully
aligned, otherwise you will get fret
buzz where the string makes contact
with frets it’s not meant to. This is a
November 2017 73
Part way through shaping the frets. You can see a slight protrusion where not all
of the markings have come off the crown of the frets, indicating that they are not
yet all lined up.
The frets crowned and polished with 0000 grade steel wool. The profile on these
frets weren’t as circular as they could be, but they do the job well enough.
The fret-levelling gauge (fret rocker) being used to show that these three
adjacent frets are all level.
74
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
highly specialised subject and is covered in considerable detail at www.
buildyourownguitar.com.au
If you intend to make more than one
guitar, some of the specialised (and
quite expensive) luthiers’ tools may
be a reasonable investment, otherwise
you can still get a surprising amount
done with some of the more basic tools
available online.
A steel ruler, a fret flatness gauge
(fret rocker), a lightweight fret hammer, a basic fret file and a 12-inch radiused sanding block are the minimum
requirements. A cheap set of diamond
or sapphire files can be helpful too.
The radiused sanding block is similar
to a standard sanding block except that
the side where you attach the sandpaper has been machined to match the
curve of the frets in the instrument you
are working on.
They are available in various sizes,
but virtually all electric guitars use
a 12-inch radius, meaning the frets
match the curvature of a circle with
a 12 inch (~300mm) radius. If you’re
not sure, you can spend a few dollars
more and get a radius gauge which is
the pincushion-shaped thing in the
image above.
The basic procedure is to first take
the strings off and get the neck as
straight as you can by adjusting the
neck truss rod and checking the flatness of the frets with the steel ruler.
However, before you do anything I
strongly recommend you tape up the
fingerboard between the frets with
strips of masking tape to avoid damaging the wood and to stop steel filings
from getting near it. The photo to the
left shows my bass taped up and ready
for adjustment, the tools laid out below
it and the Allen key fitted to the truss
rod adjustment.
After you’ve gotten the neck as
straight as you can, the next step is to
identify any offending frets with the
fret gauge. The fret flatness gauge is
simply a piece of steel plate cut with
straight edges of various lengths that
allow you to bridge just three frets at
a time. If the middle fret of the group
of three is higher than the other two,
you will be able to detect this by rocking the plate.
Starting at the pickup end, identify
any offending frets and then carefully and extremely slowly reduce
their height until the gauge can be
laid across the group of three with
little or no rocking. Actually, you can
siliconchip.com.au
Above: a close-up of the bottom side of the chrome tuning pegs.
Right: close-up of the saddle showing adjustment springs. You
can see the spring for the E-string’s saddle (the lowest one) has
fewer turns than the other saddles as it was cut in half to help set
the intonation correctly.
start by simply tapping the offending
frets down with the fret hammer. In
some cases, that will be all you need,
but usually you will need to use the
fret file.
The fret file is actually smooth
where a normal file is rough; the roughened parts are cut into the edges (it’s
a bit like a rat-tail file in reverse). You
can get radiused fret files (crowning
files) but they’re horribly expensive
and require considerable skill to use
properly.
I must re-emphasise the “extremely
slowly” part! If you overdo the filing
on just one fret, you will have no option but to shave all the others down
to match. Work your way along the
frets, starting from the pickup end.
When you reach the nut, re-check
the overall straightness, re-adjust the
truss rod if necessary, then repeat the
entire process.
You are unlikely to get all the frets
completely level this way, so once you
have the frets as even as you can get
them, the next step is to lightly sand
the frets using the radiused sanding
block and some extremely fine (800
grit or more) wet and dry sandpaper.
You can get fancy sandpaper specifically designed for this application but
it’s not particularly cheap and I don’t
see that it makes a lot of difference,
although people will argue otherwise.
The first step is to mark all the frets
with a felt-tip marker. That way you’ll
be immediately able to see which frets
are being touched by the sandpaper
and which are not.
After an extended period of sanding
and re-marking, you should get to the
siliconchip.com.au
point where all the frets get the ink
taken off together, and at that point
they are as level as you are ever likely
to get them.
The very top left photo on the opposite page was taken part-way through
the process. You can see how the two
towards the centre have a slight “dip”
which basically means the rest of the
frets will have to be sanded down to
match.
The final step is to carefully polish
the frets with 0000 grade steel wool.
This is where the masking tape comes
into its own.
You can’t expect to get these adjustments absolutely perfect if you’re
not a professional luthier with all the
expensive tools, but that will by no
means make the guitar unplayable. It
will mostly limit how low the action
can be set. It will certainly still be
plenty good enough for most people!
The main difference between a fullpro job and what I’ve described here,
is that with the pro job, the fret crowns
will end up precisely semi-circular,
while yours will be more trapezoidshaped. Generally, people have rated
a well-built Pit Bull kit as roughly
equivalent to a $500 “store bought”
job, but with vastly more “street cred”!
Setting the action
Setting the playing action is simple
enough, you just adjust the screws on
the saddles to raise or lower the string
height off the fingerboard. Of course,
as soon as you do that, the tuning will
shift and will need to be re-set.
The minimum action height Fender
recommend for a genuine Jazz Bass is
Celebrating 30 Years
about 2.4mm, but in practice you’d
need the frets dressed by an expert for
that to work without fret buzz. Setting
mine to 3mm gave a satisfactorily fast
playing action with zero fret buzz, and
I doubt that the extra 0.5mm would
make a whole lot of difference.
With a guitar tuner, setting the intonation is really quite easy (I have a
modern digital one but I still prefer my
1980s vintage analog Korg for this).
You simply adjust the “E” bridge
adjustment screw to the correct pitch
while holding down the 12th fret, then
re-adjust the open E pitch, and if necessary, adjust the bridge screw again
and repeat as necessary.
With my tuner, it was easier to simply “hammer on” the 12th fret, playing
it like a piano, rather than plucking
the string. In most cases doing this
procedure just twice per string should
be enough.
Additional information
You can get more information on
the process of building and setting up
guitars, or purchase tools to aid you,
at the following websites:
www.anzlf.com is an online Australian and New Zealand instrument
maker’s forum; they also have a list of
local vendors.
www.stewmac.com is a fairly popular American-based luthier shop that
supplies hardware, wood and everything else you could need to build
primarily guitars and some other instruments.
http://luthierssupplies.com.au/ is an
Australian-based business which supplies luthiery tools and supplies. SC
November 2017 75
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.
PICAXE-based Chess/Games Timer
This chess/games timer/clock provides a similar function to traditional
mechanical chess clock. It forces players to make a move within a fixed
amount of time which can be set from
10 to 90 seconds in 10-second increments.
Both players have a two-digit clock
display showing the number of seconds remaining for their move.
Additionally, they each have an illuminated button and pressing it stops
their clock and starts their opponent’s
clock. Player clocks run alternately,
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Silicon Chip
with the time counting from the set
value down to zero.
The circuit design is modular, with
two identical timer modules, one for
each player, and a single control panel
that ties them together.
On the circuit diagram, the two
identical clock module circuits are
shown in boxes, with the remaining
control panel components to the left.
Eight-way headers connect the two
clock modules together and to the
control panel.
The timer modules are based around
Celebrating 30 Years
PICAXE 20M2 microcontrollers (IC1
and IC2) and each drive two 7-segment common cathode LED displays
(DISP1-2 and DISP3-4).
The display anode pins are wired
in parallel and driven by outputs pin
12-18 of the PICAXE via 100W current
limiting resistors. The cathode pins are
multiplexed using two BC337 transistors (Q1-Q2 and Q3-Q4).
Of the eight external connections
for each clock module, two are for
the power supply (+V and GND), four
are inputs to the clock module (start,
siliconchip.com.au
stop, reset and beep) and two are output outputs, one to drive the relevant
player active LED and one to drive the
common piezo buzzer.
All four inputs are active-low, with
internal pull-ups in IC1 and IC2 to
keep them high when they are not being pulled low by the control panel.
Pulling the start input low starts
the timer while pulling the stop input
low stops and resets it. The function
of the beep input is discussed below.
The common reset line is used to simultaneously reset both timers when
starting a new game.
The LED output is driven high
when the timer is active, lighting that
player’s LED. Only one timer is active
at any given time during a game. The
piezo output is used to drive the piezo
transducer.
The transducer is connected across
the piezo outputs of both clocks so
that if one holds its end high or low
and the other produces a square wave,
it will sound a tone at that frequency.
The only other components in the
timer modules apart from those mentioned above, are two power supply
filter/bypass capacitors, an in-circuit
programming (ICSP) header to allow
the PICAXE chips to be re-flashed and
a series resistor to limit current for the
LED in the player button.
Turning now to the control panel
at left, the switch inside each player
button (S1 or S2) is wired to the start
input of one timer module and the stop
input of the other.
So if player A presses button A
(S1), their timer stops, the other timer
starts, player A’s LED (in button A)
switches off and player B’s LED (in
button B) illuminates. The opposite
happens if Button B (switch S2) is
pressed.
The reset button (S3) normally resets
both clocks, but can also set the default
move time as explained below. Fitting
a jumper on LK1 pulls the beep input
on both timer modules low, switching on the option for warning beeps
which start three seconds before the
timer reaches zero.
The remaining components are the
power LED (LED1) and 330W currentlimiting resistor, 6V battery (4 x AA
or similar) to power the unit, power
switch S4 and diode D1, which provides reverse battery polarity protection and also drops the voltage from
6V to around 5V to suit IC1 and IC2.
When first switched on, the default
move time will load onto both clocks
and they pause until a player button
is pressed.
Then the active player button will
illuminate and the active clock will
start counting down towards zero. The
player has this time to make their first
move before they press the player button to stop (and reset) their clock and
start the opponent’s clock.
Each move must be made before the
zero alarm sounds or the player will
forfeit the game.
To change the default move time,
hold down reset button S3 while turning the power switch S4 on. Both player clocks will count up to 90 seconds
in steps of 10 and the time displayed
when you release the reset button is
saved in EEPROM. The new default
move time will not be lost when the
power is turned off.
Pressing the reset button during a
game gives a master reset and the default move time will reload on both
clocks and a new game starts.
The PICAXE software uses the
“time” variable in BASIC to regulate
the seconds count.
The device is battery powered (four
AA cells, or similar), and has a power
indicator (LED1) and a reverse polarity protection diode (D1) which also
reduces the supply voltage to around
5V, to suit IC1. Four AA Alkaline cells
give many hours of service.
The prototype was built to resemble
a traditional chess clock by installing
the two player clocks on the front face
of the enclosure and the player controls on top.
The illuminated push buttons in the
prototype were Jaycar SP0706 types
while the piezo transducer device
may be either a Jaycar AB3440 or the
Altronics S6140. The recommended
7-segment displays are blue Jaycar
ZD1856 modules.
The software for this project is
named “chess_clock_20m2.bas” and
is available for download from the
Silicon Chip website, free for subscribers.
To load it into the PICAXE chips,
you will need a PICAXE-compatible
USB programming cable and the free
“program editor software” from the
PICAXE website.
Ian Robertson,
Engadine, NSW. ($60)
Caravan water tank level meter tracks water usage
The water tank in my camper van
came with a four-stage level sensor
which often did not work properly
and gave a very coarse reading of the
amount of water remaining.
I recently replaced it with a new meter which uses a tilt switch to detect
when the tank is full and then measures how much water is drawn from
the tank, to track its level accurately.
This has proven to be very reliable.
It’s based on an Arduino Nano and
it shows the water level percentage on
a 64x128 pixel OLED display which
is controlled via I2C (see the read-out
photo to the right).
When the tank is filled, the float
siliconchip.com.au
triggers a microswitch which connects
pin D5 to ground. An internal pull-up
current in the Arduino keeps this input high the rest of the time and the
100nF capacitor debounces the switch
contact.
Celebrating 30 Years
So while D5 goes low, the level
reading shows 100%. Then, once the
switch opens, the Arduino counts
pulses from the Hall-effect based flow
meter.
Each pulse corresponds to a certain volume of water flowing out of
the tank, so after a certain number of
pulses, the level reading is reduced
by 1% and this continues until either
the tank is re-filled (pulling D5 low),
or the tank is empty.
Once the tank is empty, switch S2
should be pressed manually. The number of pulses received from the flow
meter since the tank was filled indicate
...continued next page
November 2017 77
Circuit Notebook – Continued
the full capacity and this value is then
stored in EEPROM, to be used to accurately calculate the level percentage in future. This only needs to be
done once.
The unit automatically switches
on the OLED display when water is
flowing (ie, pulses are being received
from the flow meter) and switches it
off after fifteen seconds of no pulses,
to save power (and extend the life of
the display).
If the unit loses power, it stores the
current reading in EEPROM so that
it can pick up where it left off when
power is restored.
The pulse output from the flow meter has a 5.6kW pull-up resistor as it
is an open-collector output. A 100nF
capacitor to ground debounces the
signal and this is applied to pin D2
and triggers a software interrupt on
every pulse.
The 12V supply voltage is measured
at input D3, which is connected to a
divider across the supply with a 5.1V
zener diode to protect the Arduino
from over-voltage and a 100nF smoothing capacitor.
If the 12V supply drops too low,
this triggers a separate interrupt in the
software which saves the current tank
level in EEPROM.
The two 2200µF supply bypass capacitors, along with diode D1, ensure
78
Silicon Chip
that the Arduino will run for long
enough to finish this process.
The 22W series resistor, in combination with the two large capacitors also
serve to filter out spikes from the camper van’s power supply. A 1kW resistor
across the supply ensures it drops
quickly when power is switched off.
The Arduino software sketch is
named “flow_01.ino” and this is available for download from the Silicon
Chip website.
The library required to drive the
OLED display, U8glib, is included in
the download package as a ZIP file and
must be installed prior to compiling
the sketch. The only other library used
is the EEPROM library, which is supplied with the Arduino IDE.
A sample PCB layout (in PDF format) is also supplied in the download
package. My unit was wired up on a
prototyping board.
The 1/2-inch BSP threaded flow
valve was purchased on eBay. Similar
devices are also available from AliExpress, for example: http://siliconchip.
com.au/l/aaf6
Alfred Hirzel,
Auckland, New Zealand. ($70)
The 1/2-inch BSP threaded flow valve that was
purchased on eBay.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 79
High power H-bridge uses discrete Mosfets
This circuit is basically a standard
H-Bridge design but what makes the
difference is the minimal dimension
of the assembled unit, making it highly
competitive with more sophisticated
and expensive units, eg, the Pololu
PL-758.
The Pololu unit uses all SMDs and
is of a similar size to the prototype of
this circuit, which is based on throughhole components.
The two types of Mosfet used are capable of handling high voltages (55V)
and currents (up to 49A).
The final unit is approximately
57mm x 23mm and about 45mm high
with the heatsink installed. The heatsink is cut from a Jaycar HH-8526
standard unit and is about 9.5mm
wide. An insulating sheet isolates the
two sets of Mosfets.
Both the power supply and the motor leads can be soldered directly onto
the PCB or connected through two
2-way PCB-mounting terminals with
5mm spacing.
The circuit works as follows. The
control circuitry is powered from 5V
via CON1 and there are three logiclevel input signals: PWR, D11 and D12.
The H-bridge outputs are disabled
when the PWR input is low and enabled when it is high. When PWR is
80
Silicon Chip
high, bringing either D11 or D12 high
drives the motor in one direction or
the other. If both D11 and D12 are
driven low, the motor is braked.
The drive logic signals are combined using two sections of a 78LS08
quad two-input AND-gate. When output pin 3 of IC1a is high (ie, the PWR
and D11 inputs are high), this switches
on N-channel Mosfet Q5 directly, pulling the OUT2 pin of CON2 low.
It also switches on NPN transistor
Q1, which pulls the gate of P-channel
Mosfet Q2 low, also switching it on, so
current can flow from the +12V terminal on CON2 to the OUT1 terminal.
Note that there is no crossconduction protection, so the
driving circuitry must ensure
that all three inputs can not
go high at the same time.
If they did, all four Mosfets would be switched on
and this would short out the
supply, possibly damaging
the Mosfets and/or the supply itself.
It’s helpful to switch one
output low momentary before
bringing the other high, to allow time for the two active
Mosfets to switch off before
the other two switch on.
Celebrating 30 Years
Each Mosfet gate is protected from
voltage spikes by a 15V zener diode
and schottky flyback diodes parallel
the body diodes of all four Mosfets,
to quickly catch and clamp inductive
spikes from the motor during switching. PDF files of the top and bottom
layer PCB artwork can be downloaded
from the Silicon Chip website.
Gianni Pallotti,
North Rocks, NSW. ($50)
siliconchip.com.au
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 81
Four-channel RF wireless remote control has three different modes
This entry consists of two circuits.
One is a four-button coded 433MHz
transmitter and the other circuit is a
matching receiver which incorporates
a 433MHz receiver, microcontroller,
LCD and four relays.
The receiver can be set up so that
when a button is pressed on the transmitter, the corresponding relay on
the receiver either toggles, latches on
(switching the other three off) or closes
momentarily, while the transmitter
button is being held down.
The transmitter is based around the
common PT2262 remote control encoder IC. We’ve had Circuit Notebook
entries using this before, as part of an
infrared remote.
But in this case, rather than driving
an IR LED, it is driving an oscillator
tuned to 433MHz which it pulses in
a coded fashion, depending on the
address selected and which button is
being pressed.
When one of the five pushbuttons
(S1-S5) is pressed, they connect the battery to the VCC pin of IC1. This IC then
reads the states of its D0-D3 inputs. If
S1 has been pressed, D0 is high and so
on. This determines which button code
is transmitted by pulsing output pin
17 (DOUT). Each time DOUT goes high,
a 433MHz radio burst is transmitted.
When DOUT goes high, it drives the
base of NPN transistor Q1 up to +12V.
This is configured as a current-limited
emitter-follower and it supplies current to the collector of NPN transistor
Q2 which drives the low-distortion
82
Silicon Chip
oscillator. A DC bias current is applied to its base by the 68kW resistor
and the Colpitts oscillator tank is also
connected between collector and base.
This comprises three capacitors (one
in series with a trimmer capacitor) and
one inductor. The series inductor and
capacitors set the oscillating frequency
while the other two capacitors provide
energy storage to sustain oscillation.
This is aided by Q2, which
replaces the energy in the tank circuit
which is dissipated during operation,
to sustain oscillation.
Diode D5 prevents Q2’s base from
being pulled too far below ground
during negative excursions. VC1, in
series with a 2.2pF capacitor, forms
a variable capacitance of 1.27-1.8pF
which theoretically gives an adjustment range of 412-474MHz.
This allows the oscillator frequency
to be set to 433MHz for inductances
of L1 in the range of 90-120nH, ie, it
allows for a tolerance of -10,+20%.
Inductor L2 isolates the antenna’s
impedance from the oscillator as otherwise, a low-impedance antenna (such
as a quarter-wave whip) would prevent
Q2 from oscillating.
A quarter-wave whip antenna can be
made simply by straightening and cutting a 73mm length of enamelled copper wire. A superior half-wavelength
antenna would be around 146mm.
The bursts from the transmitter are
picked up by a commercial 433MHz
receiver module in the receiver circuit
and then fed to IC1, a PT2272 remote
Celebrating 30 Years
control decoder IC which has its address pins set to the same configuration
as the PT2262 in the transmitter unit.
You can change the addresses of
the transmitter and receiver units by
connecting any or all of the address to
either VCC or VSS. Both units must be
configured identically.
When the receiver module decodes
a valid transmission, it drives one of
its D0-D3 pins high and these feed
digital inputs PD4-PD7 on IC2, an Atmel microcontroller. At the time same,
IC1 also drives its Valid Transmission
pin (pin 17) high, lighting LED5 and
also pulling the PD0 digital input of
IC2 high.
Depending on the position of mode
selector switch S2, one of its PD1-PD3
digital inputs will also be pulled low.
IC2 uses the state of these pins to decide which of digital outputs PB0-PB3
(pins 14-17) to drive high.
These in turn switch NPN transistors
Q1-Q4 which controls output relays
RLY1-RLY4. The status of the alphanumeric LCD is also updated to indicate
the current mode and output states.
The receiver unit is also powered
by a 12V battery which drives the four
relay coils as well as REG1, which supplies a regulated 5V rail to the rest of
the circuit.
Software for the ATmega8P in the
receiver circuit was written in BASCOM and the BASIC source code (UHF
Remote Switch.bas) is available for
download from the Silicon Chip website. This can be compiled to a HEX
siliconchip.com.au
file using the free demo version of the
BASCOM compiler.
Mahmood Alimohammadi,
Tehran, Iran. ($50)
Editor’s note: this circuit was submitted with a design frequency of
315MHz which is not legal for unlicensed use in Australia above 50µW
and this would be the case in other
countries too. We have modified it to
operate at 433MHz, which is legal in
Australia for power levels up to 50mW.
This involved designing a new oscillator circuit which has a simulated
transmit power of 12mW for antennas
with a characteristic impedance of 50150W. An LTspice simulation file for
siliconchip.com.au
the oscillator is available for
download from the Silicon
Chip website and indicates
that it should have very low
distortion and thus minimal spurious
emissions.
Circuit Ideas Wanted
Got an interesting original circuit that you have cleverly devised? We need
it and will pay good money to feature it in the Circuit Notebook pages. We
can pay you by electronic funds transfer, cheque (what are they?) or direct
to your PayPal account. Or you can use the funds to purchase anything from
the SILICON CHIP on-line shop, including PCBs and components, back issues,
subscriptions or whatever. Email your circuit and descriptive text to editor<at>
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 83
6GHz+ Touchscreen
Frequency & Period
Counter
This new Frequency
Counter has greater
bandwidth and more
sensitivity than any
previously published
design and its large
touchscreen display
makes using it a breeze.
Now we’ll describe how to
assemble the two PCBs, test
them, load the software and
put the case together.
I
f you’ve read the first article on
the Frequency Counter last month,
you should have an idea of just
how good its performance is and also
a fairly thorough understanding of
how it works.
As the photos in that issue showed,
it’s built using a PCB populated mainly
with surface-mount devices (SMDs)
plus a few RF connectors so it piggybacks onto the Explore 100, which
in turn is plugged into a 5-inch fullcolour touchscreen LCD panel.
We also showed the rather spiffylooking laser-cut clear acrylic case
that it’s housed in on the last page of
that article.
So having explained all that in detail last month, we’re now going to go
through the assembly procedure. It
may seem a little daunting, as you have
to build two separate PCBs and then
assemble those two plus the pre-built
LCD panel into a “sandwich” before
building the box around it.
Actually, besides a couple of fine84
Silicon Chip
pitch SMD ICs, most of the components are relatively easy to work with
and the Explore 100 module can be
put together in just a couple of hours.
The Frequency Counter board may
take you a little longer but it isn’t too
difficult and a reasonably experienced
constructor can probably put it all together and get it working in one day.
Having said that – don’t rush it! It’s
far better to take your time, especially when working with SMDs, rather
than risk damaging the PCB or any
components.
Even if you stuff something up, it’s
generally possible to remove it, clean
up the board and then try again. The
assembly actually lends itself to being
done in stages so you may prefer to
spend a couple of hours at a time on
it, then stop and move onto the next
stage when you’re fresh.
Assembly
There are four main steps in putting
together the 6GHz Touchscreen FreCelebrating 30 Years
Part 2: by Nicholas Vinen
quency Counter. You can do the first
two steps in either order: assembling
and testing the Micromite Plus Explore 100 module, and assembling the
Frequency Counter PCB. Once those
two are finished, you can plug them
together and test the unit as a whole,
before assembling the case around it.
With the exception of the 5-inch
LCD touchscreen, all the parts for the
Explore 100 module are available as
a short form kit from the Silicon Chip
Online Shop. Note though that assembling this does involve soldering the
100-pin SMD PIC32 microcontroller.
You can also get a slightly different
version of the Explore 100 PCB with
the SMDs, including the PIC32, presoldered from RicTech in New Zealand. This also comes with the other
parts to fit yourself, in a similar fashion
to the Silicon Chip short form kit. See
www.rictech.nz/micromite-products
for details.
The circuit details of the Explore
100 module were published in the
siliconchip.com.au
September 2016 issue of Silicon Chip
while the construction details were
given in the October 2016 issue (see
siliconchip.com.au/Series/304). We
won't repeat them here, however, if
you don't have that issue, the process
is relatively straightforward.
Briefly, you need to fit SMDs IC1
and Q1 first, being very careful to orientate them correctly and ensure that
all the fillets are properly formed and
no pins are shorted. Then solder the
10µF SMD capacitor in place, near IC1.
Next, install the through-hole components as shown on the PCB silkscreen printing. These consist of nine
resistors, 13 ceramic capacitors, two
electrolytic capacitors, three LEDs,
one crystal, one transistor, one regulator, one tactile switch and numerous
connectors. The LED cathodes (shorter
leads) go into the holes nearest the adjacent PCB edge.
When fitting the connectors, make
sure that CON6 and CON9 are fitted
to the underside. You don't need to fit
CON1, CON4, CON5, CON7, CON10,
CON13, CON14 or the headers for the
real-time clock. But if your kit comes
with those parts anyway, it certainly
won't hurt to install them. We do recommend that you fit JP1 as it will aid
in testing.
If you haven't used a pre-programmed PIC32 then the next step is
to program it using a PICkit 3 or similar
in-circuit serial programming (ICSP)
tool. This is done via 6-pin header
CON3. Then we suggest you test the
board to make sure it's working before
fitting the LCD panel.
The easiest way to do this is to connect a USB/serial adaptor to CON6
and then open a terminal emulator,
set to the default baud rate of 38400.
Make sure the correct COM Port for
your USB/serial adaptor is selected
and then wire up its Tx, Rx and GND
pins to the appropriate pins on CON6,
making sure to wire Tx to Rx and vice
versa.
To power the unit, if your USB/serial
adaptor has a 5V output, you can wire
this to the bottom-most terminal of JP1
(if fitted). Alternatively, fit a jumper to
JP1 and plug a mini USB cable from
your PC to CON2.
As soon as the unit has powered up,
you should see the Micromite's banner
appear on your terminal emulator. If
you don't, disconnect power and recheck your wiring and COM port selection. Normal power consumption for
siliconchip.com.au
A couple of small errors to correct
In writing this article, we found a couple of errors in part one, published last
month. Firstly, CON1 is a PCB-mounting right-angle SMA connector, not SMD
connector as stated in the parts list.
Secondly, in the text at the end of page 28 and the start of page 29, it says
that 32-bit timer 4/5 is used for the reference oscillator but as shown in Fig.1,
it's actually timer 2/3. Similarly the previous reference to timer 2/3 in relation
to the high-frequency input should have been timer 4/5.
Also, the parts list called for four 6mm M3 machine screws but we found
construction a little easier using two 8mm long machine screws instead. If you
can't get these, you can still use 6mm but may need to attach the spacers in
a slightly different order. Or as stated in the text, 10mm screws might work.
the Explore 100 sans screen is around
100mA (at 5V). If yours is well under
or over this, something is wrong, so
check the PCB carefully for soldering
defects and misplaced components.
Assuming you've had success, remove power and plug the LCD screen
into CON10, attaching it with four
12mm tapped spacers and eight machine screws. You will then need to
power it up and run the following
commands on the console, to set up
and test the LCD. Note that power
consumption will jump to several
hundred milliamps.
OPTION LCDPANEL SSD1963_5,
LANDSCAPE, 48
OPTION TOUCH 1, 40, 39
GUI TEST LCDPANEL
You should now see coloured circles
being drawn on the screen. Press enter in your terminal emulator to stop,
then run this command to calibrate
the touch sensor:
GUI CALIBRATE
You will then need to use a thin object that will not scratch the screen,
like a toothpick, to carefully press
and hold in the centre of the targets
which appear in each corner of the
screen. Hopefully, you will get a message on the console that says "Done.
No errors". Otherwise, try calibrating
it again. That completes the initial setup of the Explore 100 module.
Main PCB assembly
There are many more SMDs on this
board, plus a few through-hole components. Note though that the lead
spacings of the components on the
main board are, with one exception,
much larger than those of IC1 on the
Explore 100. Overall, you should find
the components on this main board
easier to solder.
Celebrating 30 Years
The main board is double-sided,
coded 04110171 and measures 134 x
51.5mm. Almost all components are
fitted on the top side.
Start with IC4. You can use a standard soldering iron as long as the tip is
not too large but we recommend that
you purchase a small tube or syringe of
flux paste and some solder wick if you
don't already have some. Good light
and a magnifier are also important.
Place a small amount of solder on
one of the corner pads for IC4 and
then orientate the part on the board
as shown in the PCB overlay diagram,
Fig.3. Pin 1 goes towards upper left –
this should be indicated on the PCB
silkscreen. Once the IC is orientated
correctly, heat the solder you applied
to the corner pad and then carefully
slide the IC into place and remove the
heat. This process should take no more
than a few seconds.
Now carefully check that the IC pins
are centred on their pads. Check all
four sides. Use magnification to make
sure that all pins are properly centred
on their pads. If not, re-heat the solder
on that one pad and gently nudge the
IC towards the correct position.
Repeat this process until you are
happy that the IC is correctly located
and check that its pin 1 is in the correct position before tack soldering the
diagonally opposite pin. Re-check that
all the pins are correctly located; you
can re-heat either solder joint at this
point to make slight adjustments.
Now apply a thin layer of flux along
all the IC pins and then apply solder
to all the pins. Make sure you apply
enough to get proper fillets. It's difficult to avoid bridging the pins at this
point; what's most important is getting
the solder to flow onto each pin and
pad on the PCB.
Once all the pins have been soldered,
apply another thin layer of flux paste
November 2017 85
Fig.3: use this PCB overlay
diagram for the main
Frequency Counter board
as a guide during assembly.
Most of the components are
SMDs with the exceptions
being RLY1, REG2 and the
connectors. It plugs into the
Micromite Plus Explore 100
module via CON3, a 2x20-pin
female header socket that’s
mounted on the underside of
the board. CON3 and CON6
are the only components
fitted to that side of the PCB.
and then use a piece of solder wick to
remove any excess solder, especially
where adjacent pins are bridged. Proceed carefully and re-apply flux paste
if necessary.
Once you have finished, clean off
the flux residue (using either a proper
flux solvent or ethyl alcohol/methylated spirits and a lint-free cloth) and
examine the solder joints under good
light and magnification to ensure they
are all good and there are no more
bridges left.
When you have completed soldering IC4, you can fit IC3 in the same
manner. IC3 has smaller, more closelyspaced leads but there are only eight of
them, four each on two sides of the IC.
One additional thing you will have to
take into consideration is that IC3 has
a thermal pad on the underside and
ideally, this should be soldered to the
matching pad on the PCB.
If you have a hot air reflow system
this is quite easy, as it's just a matter
of spreading some solder paste on the
nine pads for this IC, putting it in position and then gently heating it until
all the solder paste melts and reflows
If you are just using a regular old
soldering iron, you should spread a
thin layer of solder paste on the large
central pad, then drop the IC down into
position and tack solder it in position.
After checking that its orientation
and position are correct, solder the
remaining leads using the same technique as for IC4. Then flip the board
over and squirt some flux paste into
the hole directly under IC3.
Melt some solder into this hole and
heat it for several seconds. Remove
heat and carefully check that IC3 is
hot by quickly touching it with your
finger. This indicates that the solder
86
Silicon Chip
has conducted enough heat through
the hole to melt the solder paste you
placed under it earlier.
Solder IC7 next. This is in a rather
tiny 2 x 1.6mm metal can package but
luckily it only has four pads, one in
each corner. So soldering it is not that
hard but identifying pin 1 requires significant magnification. You should be
able to see a dot in one corner of the
top surface and this goes to the lowerright pad.
Tin one of the pads and flux the others, then heat the tinned pad while
very carefully sliding it into place. Apply a small amount of solder the other
three pads, then refresh the initial one
and check with a magnifier that none of
the joints is shorted to the can (solder
shouldn’t stick easily to it).
Note that there is provision for a
micro USB power socket on the underside of the board but we haven’t
tested this and we don’t recommend
you use it, for two reasons.
One, the output voltage of a USB
charger is unlikely to be well-regulated
and the LCD panel is quite fussy about
its power quality. And two, there’s the
possibility of RF noise getting back
into the USB cable and producing a
lot of EMI.
Remaining SMDs
The rest of the parts are quite easy
to install as they have more widely
spaced leads. Solder IC1 and IC2 next,
making sure their “pointy” pins go to
the pads marked for pin 1, facing the
top edge of the board. Follow with L1
and L2, both of which are in six-pin
packages. Their pin 1 dot should be
orientated as shown in Fig.3, towards
upper left.
You can then move onto IC5, IC6,
Celebrating 30 Years
IC8 and IC9 which are all in standard
8-pin SOIC packages. These are quite
easy to solder. Identify pin 1, indicated
by either a dot/divot/logo in the corner
or a bevelled edge on that side of the
PCB. You can then orientate each IC
as shown in Fig.3, tack down one pin
and solder the others using a similar
procedure as before.
Next on the list are regulators REG1
and REG3. These are identical parts,
each with one large tab and five smaller
pins. The packages have considerable
thermal inertia, so spread a thin layer
of flux paste on the large pad with a
little extra paste on the smaller pads
and drop the part in position. Then,
tack solder one of the smaller pins (you
can pre-tin the pad and heat it while
sliding the part into place, if you like,
as you did with IC3).
You can clean these joints up with
some additional flux paste and an application of solder wick.
Now for the large tab. Apply some
solder to this tab and hold your iron
in contact with both the regulator tab
and PCB pad. You may need to hold it
there for some time before the whole
assembly heats up enough for the solder to flow down onto the board. Keep
adding solder until the tab is covered
and looks shiny, then remove the heat.
Inductors L3 and L4 are similarly
quite large, so again, spread flux paste
on each of their pads before soldering.
You can then add some solder to one
of the pads and slide the inductor into
place while heating that solder.
Again, you may need to wait some
time before the inductor heats up
enough to slide fully into place and
you can then add more solder until a
nice, shiny fillet has formed. Let that
cool down a little, then solder the
siliconchip.com.au
opposite end, again waiting until it's
hot enough to form a good joint (this
should be quicker as both the inductor
and PCB will retain significant heat).
The next components on the list are
REF1, Q1 and diodes D4-D13. These
are all in small 3-pin SOT-23 packages
so don't get them mixed up. One of
these diodes is a BAT54S (D12) while
the others are all BAV99s.
In each case, tack solder one pin,
check that the pins are properly
aligned, solder the other two pins and
then refresh the initial pin. It's easier
if you spread a little flux paste on the
pads before soldering each part.
Now fit diodes D1 and D2, which are
in similar but slightly smaller packages than D4-D11, followed by diode
D3, which is in a two-pin rectangular
package. Make sure its cathode stripe
faces towards REG2 (indicated with a
“k” on the PCB).
You can then fit all the ceramic capacitors and resistors to the board, as
well as SMD ferrite bead FB1, where
shown in Fig.3. Orientation is not critical for any of these. Note that some of
the ceramic capacitors are in slightly
smaller 2.0 x 1.2mm packages, compared to the majority of capacitors and
resistors which are in 3.2 x 1.6mm
packages, but these are not much more
difficult to solder.
Also, one of the resistors is a much
larger 1W type but the procedure to
mount this one is pretty much the
same as the others. It just might take
a bit more heat and flux paste.
Through-hole components
With all the SMDs in place, you can
now proceed to solder reed relay RLY1
in place. It’s in a DIL package, like an IC
but without pins in the middle section.
Ensure its pin 1 indicator is towards
the top of the board, as shown in Fig.3.
Next on the list is REG2 which is in
a TO-220 package that’s mounted flat
on the board with a small flag heatsink. This is important since it needs
to deliver several hundred milliamps
and it can get quite hot.
Bend its leads down so they fit the
pads with its mounting hole correctly
located, then place the heatsink underneath and screw the whole assembly
firmly to the PCB.
You can then check that the regulator’s package is straight before soldering and trimming the three pins.
Solder the electrolytic capacitor in
next, being careful to feed the longer
siliconchip.com.au
This photo shows the Frequency
Counter PCB mounted on top of the
Explore 100. They are held together by CON3
and CON6 at this stage. The LCD screen has
not been plugged into the bottom of the Explore 100 yet.
(+) lead through the hole marked “+”
on the PCB, closest to REG2.
The next component to fit is pin
header CON3. CON3 is a 40 pin DIL
socket (2x20 pins) which is mounted
on the underside of the board and
plugs into the Explore 100. Make sure
it’s pushed down fully onto the PCB
and nice and straight before soldering,
or else you may have trouble plugging
it in later. Follow with 6-way standard
pin header CON8 and link LK1, both of
which go on the top side of the board.
Now mount SMA connector CON1,
barrel connector CON5 and BNC sockets CON2 and CON7. In each case, ensure the part is pushed down fully onto
the PCB before soldering the pins. The
larger metal connectors such as CON1
require quite a bit of heat to form good
solder joints.
Note that the pads for CON1 are
designed to allow either a right-angle
or edge-mounting (“end launch”) connector. However, we recommend using
a right-angle connector like we did in
our prototype so that it lines up with
the BNC sockets
Finally, solder CON6 in place. This
is a female header socket with long
pins. The socket portion goes on the
underside of the board, with the pins
sticking through the top (see photos).
This way, it plugs into the standard
header already on the Explore 100
board and allows you to reprogram
the PIC32 without having to remove
the Frequency Counter board. It also
helps to hold them together so don’t
leave it off.
Celebrating 30 Years
GPS module wiring
You don’t need to connect a GPS
module but it improves accuracy and
doesn’t add terribly to the cost of
building the unit, so we expect most
constructors will do so. If you’re using the recommended VK2828U7G5LF
module, it’s supplied with a short sixwire cable with a small plug at one
end that goes into a socket on the GPS
module itself.
The wires are colour coded yellow
(enable), black (ground), green (Rx),
blue (Tx), red (Vcc) and white (1PPS).
Crimp and solder these wires to the
pins supplied with the 6-way polarised plug, then insert them in the same
order as they are listed above.
Because the plug is polarised, you
will need to ensure you start inserting
them from the correct end of the plug
housing. It’s simply a matter of lining
this housing up with the socket on the
PCB, checking which end is labelled
EN and then insert the pin soldered
to the yellow wire into that end of the
plug housing, followed by the others
in sequence. Push each one in with a
small screwdriver until it clicks into
place.
The next step is to select the
GPS module operating voltage by
bridging two of the three pins on
LK1 with a shorting block. For the
VK2828U7G5LF, use the 3.3V setting,
bridging the pins indicated on Fig.3 or
the PCB silkscreen.
This actually powers the module
from the 3.4V rail, which is good, since
3.3V is the minimum VCC specificaNovember 2017 87
right-most button in the toolbar at the
top of the window, with an icon that
looks like a blue stick figure running
while holding a torch.
You should then see a progress dialog and the upload will take a minute
or so. If it fails, close this window and
re-check the COM port settings.
Once the upload is complete, the
MMChat console window will automatically appear. Type “OPTION
AUTORUN ON” into the text entry
window at the top and press enter.
This will cause the software to run
each time power is applied.
You can then type “RUN” to start it.
However, it will not work properly yet
because the Frequency Counter board
has not been plugged in. This will allow you to check that the software has
been loaded, though.
Initial testing
The LCD screen fits through a large rectangular
cut-out in the front of the case, sitting almost flush with
its surface. A notch in this cut-out is provided for the ribbon
cable at lower right. You can also clearly see how the top panel of
the case is recessed to give access to the power, input and output connectors.
tion for this module and the extra 0.1V
gives us a small safety margin.
If using a different module, check
its data sheet. Most modules will run
from either 3.3V or 5V (or both). Make
sure your module uses TTL serial signalling at 9600 baud and it will need a
1PPS output to work with this project.
Also, check the data sheet to determine the pinout and route the correct
wires to the plug. Some modules may
not have an enable pin, or they may
allow you to leave the enable pin disconnected for normal operation. The
VK2828U7G5LF uses an active-high
enable signal so if your module requires an active-low enable signal, you
will have to wire it to GND.
You don’t need to plug the GPS
unit in straight away; it may be a good
idea to check the unit works first, then
switch off and plug it in later before
checking the GPS-specific functions.
Loading the software
The recommended Explore 100 kit
comes with a pre-programmed microcontroller. This is loaded with MMBasic but does not have the BASIC (and
C) code required for the frequency
counter loaded into it yet. Luckily,
88
Silicon Chip
since we have already used the serial
console to test the unit and set up the
LCD, we can use this to load the software into the chip too.
The easiest way to do this is to
download the free MMEdit software
which is specifically designed to interface with Micromites. This will run
on Windows or Linux machines and
is available from www.c-com.com.au/
MMedit.htm
As well as downloading and installing this program, you will also need
to download the BASIC code from the
Silicon Chip website. This is free for
subscribers and it’s also available to
those who have purchased the Frequency Counter PCB.
Extract the .BAS file and open it in
MMEdit. Open the Advanced menu
and make sure the “Auto crunch on
load” option is selected. You then need
to set up the COM port. Make sure
you’ve closed the terminal emulator
you were using before, to free up the
port, then select the “New...” option
in the Connect menu and select the
relevant port. Set the baud rate to the
default of 38,400.
You can then click on the “Load and
run current code” button which is the
Celebrating 30 Years
Before plugging the Frequency
Counter PCB into the Explore 100
(which by now you should have tested
on its own), we should do some basic
checks to the Frequency Counter addon board. The first check is to measure
the power consumption and check that
all the supply rails are within the expected ranges. It’s best to perform these
checks with the GPS module initially
disconnected.
The expected current drain for this
board by itself is around 500mA so if
you have a bench supply, set its current
limit somewhere between 500mA and
1A. If you don’t have a bench supply,
connect a DMM set to measure amps in
series with a 6V DC regulated plugpack.
If that’s too hard, you can simply skip
this step and just check the voltages.
With power applied, connect a
DMM set to measure volts between
the GND and 5V test points at lower
left. You should get a reading between
4.8V and 5.2V. If it’s outside that range,
switch off and check for faults.
A much lower reading suggests a
short circuit or incorrectly orientated
component somewhere on the PCB
(eg, D3) while a higher reading should
not be possible and suggests that REG2
has failed.
Now measure between GND and the
3.4V test point. You should get a reading between 3.3V and 3.45V. Again, a
low reading would suggest a short circuit, most likely associated with IC1,
IC2 or IC4 but could also be caused
by a problem with REG1 or one of its
associated components. A high readsiliconchip.com.au
ing would suggest a fault with REG1.
The reading at the 2.5V test point
should be in the range of 2.475-2.575V
with a low reading likely indicating a
soldering fault with IC7, the temperature-controlled crystal oscillator. A
high reading would indicate a likely
fault with REG3.
The measurement at the 1.4V test
point should be around 1.41-1.44V
with a low reading suggesting a problem with the 300W and 390W resistors located just above IC4 or one of
the components surrounding REF1. A
high reading suggests a fault with REF1
itself, or a soldering problem with it or
one of the adjacent resistors.
Assuming that all checks out, you
can power it down and plug the GPS
module back in (assuming you’re using one). Make sure LK1 is set properly, power the unit back up and check
that the power consumption has only
gone up by about 50mA and that the
5V and 3.4V rails have not dropped
significantly, which would indicate a
wiring problem with the module.
You can now power the PCB down
and plug it into the Explore 100 board.
Make sure to power the whole assembly through the DC power socket on
the Frequency Meter board since the
regulator on the Explore 100 is unlikely to cope with the extra current
drawn by the combination.
More advanced testing
It’s probably a good idea to put the
unit through its paces now before it’s
in the case. While you can quite easily change the software once it’s in
SILICON
CHIP
This rear view of the
completed unit shows how
the case is put together. Both the
front and rear panels are attached to two
points at the bottom of the Explore 100 PCB.
the case (eg, if a bug is discovered or
there’s an upgrade), fixing any hardware issues would probably require
you to partly disassemble the case. It
wouldn’t be a disaster but it’s easier
to test it at this stage.
The first thing to do is power it up
and check that the display comes up
and updates properly. Power consumption of the complete unit should
be very close to 1A so verify that if you
can. Then check the upper-left hand
corner of the screen and make sure that
ONLINESHOP
you have a sensible TCXO frequency
reading (close to 16.368MHz).
If you have a GPS unit fitted, you
should be able to see the reflection of its
status LEDs at the rear of the unit. For
the VK2828U7G5LF, red indicates power and green flashes indicate satellite
lock. Place the unit somewhere where
it has a good view of the sky (eg, on a
windowsill) and wait a few minutes.
You should see green flashes from
the GPS unit and the top-right corner
of the screen will update to show the
. . . it’s the shop that
never closes! 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week
. . . it’s the shop that has all recent SILICON CHIP PCBs – in stock
. . . it’s the shop that has those hard-to-get bits for S ILICON C HIP projects
. . . it’s the shop that has all titles in the SILICON C HIP library available!
. . . it’s the shop where you can place an order for a subscription (printed
or on-line) from anywhere in the world!
. . . it’s the shop where you can pay on line, by email, by mail or by phone
Browse online now at www.siliconchip.com.au/shop
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 89
time, date, number of satellites, your
location and give a flashing green circle pulsing at 1Hz, in time with the
1pps signal from the GPS unit.
You can now connect a signal source
with a known frequency to the two
inputs at the left side of the unit and
verify that you get sensible readings.
That will verify that pretty much all
the functions of the unit are working
properly. We’ll go into more details
of the software operation next month.
Case assembly
The case is made up of six pieces of
clear 3mm laser-cut acrylic, forming
the front, back, top, bottom and side
panels. Peel off the protective coating from each piece as you assemble
the case. You will need to remove the
screws from both ends of each space
between the Explore 100 board and the
LCD panel before you can proceed. Use
Fig.4 as a guide to help you with the
following assembly procedure.
Start with the front panel, which
has the large cut-out for the LCD. Try
to avoid bending it too much since
it could potentially snap. This has a
small notch for the LCD ribbon cable
to fit through, so figure out which way
around it goes using this notch.
Now feed a 32mm M3 machine
screw through one of the two lower
corner holes in the front of the panel and do up a Nylon hex nut tight,
holding the screw in place. Repeat for
the other lower corner. Attach 10mm
machine screws to the other two (top)
mounting holes in a similar manner
and hold in place using Nylon nuts.
Now unplug the LCD from the Explore 100 and feed the screen through
the hole on this panel, then screw
the original 12mm spacers onto each
screw shaft until it’s holding the LCD
in place firmly in all four corners. You
can then plug the Explore 100 board
back into the LCD panel after feeding
the protruding screw shafts through
its mounting holes.
Use two 8mm machine screws to
attach it to the two top spacers and
screw two Nylon hex nuts onto the two
remaining screw shafts after placing
Nylon washers under each. Do them
up tightly.
Next, feed two 6mm or 8mm M3
machine screws through the two
mounting holes on the main Frequency Counter board from the underside
and attach them using Nylon nuts and
washers, done up well.
90
Silicon Chip
Fig.4: this diagram shows the view looking into the left-hand side of the unit and
clarifies how the various screws, spacers and washers hold the case together.
The side, top and bottom panels are held in place by the front and rear panels.
Note that if you can’t get 8mm machine screws, you may be able to get
away with 10mm screws. You can also
use 6mm screws (which are also commonly available) but you may need
to reverse the order of spacers in the
last step.
The next step is to feed the two
25mm tapped spacers over the screw
shafts in the lower part of the assembly.
Once those are done up, you can place
the rear panel on top of the spacers
and check that the 3mm holes line
up properly.
If you’re wiring up the GPS module,
now is a good time to attach it to the
rear panel using double-sided tape and
plug it into its header. There should
be just enough room in the case with
the rear panel fitted for the connector.
Make sure you tape the GPS receiver
in a position where it won’t foul any
other components. We recommend
that it’s fitted near the top of the case
for better signal reception.
Now remove the nuts and washers
from the BNC connectors and then slot
the tabs of the top panel into the front
Celebrating 30 Years
and rear panels. Do the BNC connector
nuts back up loosely (with the washers
underneath) to hold the top panel in
place. The bottom panel is held in similarly, between the front and rear panels.
Orientate it so that the small cut-out
gives access to the serial header pins.
Now it’s just a matter of slotting the
left and right panels into the holes in
the front and rear panels and over the
tabs on the top and bottom panels. The
only difference between the left and
right panels is that the left panel has a
cut-out to access the mini USB socket.
With all the panels in place, feed
the four 10mm M3 machine screws
through the holes in the rear panel
and do them up loosely. Then, having
checked that all panels are properly
positioned, do them up properly and
tighten up the BNC socket nuts.
Conclusion
That’s all we have space for this
month. In the next and final instalment, we will show screen grabs of
the unit in operation and explain how
to use it.
SC
siliconchip.com.au
Banggood's $30
100kHz-1.7GHz
build-it yourself
SDR kit
B
ack in the November
2013 issue of Silicon Chip,
in an article explaining how to use
our SiDRADIO SDR project to receive
DRM30 broadcasts, I had a sidebar on
pages 70-71 discussing the "direct sampling" approach to adapting a DVB-T
dongle for MF and HF radio reception.
A number of readers had asked why
we hadn't used this approach as an alternative to the up-converter approach
we had used in the SiDRADIO.
In the sidebar, I tried to explain not
only how a DVB-T dongle could be
modified for MF and HF reception using direct sampling, but also the shortcomings of this approach with regard
to reception performance, compared
with the use of a preselector and an
up-converter.
I concluded by suggesting that the
direct sampling approach would be
fine if you just wanted to use a spare
DVB-T dongle for SDR reception of
local AM radio signals.
But for proper reception on the LF
or shortwave bands, we believe that
our LF-HF Up-Converter (June 2013)
or the SiDRADIO (October/November
2013) would be preferable.
92
Silicon Chip
Review by
JIM ROWE
This low-cost
Software-defined
Radio uses a standard DVT-B USB
dongle to provide wide-range radio coverage
from 100kHz to 1.7GHz. How do they
manage it at such low cost?
It turns out that they use a
“direct sampling” approach
which eliminates some of
the circuitry which would
otherwise be required.
So how good is it?
Read on. . .
The new Banggood low-cost SDR kit
reviewed in this article (siliconchip.
com.au/l/aag8) uses (you guessed it)
the direct sampling approach for reception below 30MHz. And they've
worked out a way to do this in addition to the standard no-mods-to-thedongle VHF and UHF reception so that
switching between the two bands is
achieved entirely in software.
In short, they've taken advantage of
the direct sampling approach to come
up with a very neat little DVB-T dongle
based SDR solution, in kit form and at
a surprisingly low price.
It does have a few tricky aspects in
terms of kit assembly and also some
limitations in terms of performance.
But it would still make a very good introduction to Software Defined Radio.
The assembled kit is claimed to
tune from 100kHz to 1.7GHz, in two
overlapping ranges: 100kHz to 30MHz
using the direct sampling input and
25MHz to 1.7GHz using the regular
dongle antenna input.
Celebrating 30 Years
And it all runs from the 5V DC from
a PC's USB port, which is also used for
communications between the dongle
and PC. In operation, it draws around
280mA.
The complete, assembled SDR is
housed in a neat little metal case measuring only 83 x 50 x 20mm, finished
in matte black enamel.
What you get in the kit
As shown in the photo, the kit comes
with pretty well everything you'll need
to build it: a very compact DVB-T dongle, a PCB for the rest of the circuitry,
the parts for the metal case (including
the M2 assembly screws), two edgemounting SMA sockets for the RF input connectors, a mini USB socket and
all of the minor passive components.
This includes the SMD capacitors
and resistors, three small electrolytic
capacitors and two LEDs. There's also
a tiny ferrite toroid (5mm outer diameter) for winding the coupling balun,
plus a length of very fine (0.06mm
siliconchip.com.au
A quick look at the circuit
The Banggood SDR kit comes with everything needed to build it. However, you
may find an external and/or active antenna improves its performance.
outer diameter) enamelled copper
wire to wind it. There's also a length
of 0.5mm outer diameter enamelled
copper wire to wind the two small
low-pass filter coils.
You also get a 1m USB cable to hook
up the finished SDR to your PC, plus
a 250mm-long loaded whip antenna
with a 2.9m cable fitted with an SMA
plug for connecting it to either of the
SDR input sockets.
You can download a 7-page PDF
from the Banggood website which includes the kit assembly instructions.
The text is a bit sketchy in places and
doesn't explain some things particularly well but there are quite a few
photos which help clarify things.
The kit comes with one spare component for each of the SMD
capacitors and resistors, in
case one of any of these tiny
parts is lost. There's also one
additional M2 screw along
with the eight needed to assemble the SDR case. Very
helpful!
One thing you don't get,
though, is the software
needed to run the SDR on
your PC. For this,
you need to download an SDR application like SDR#
(available from
www.airspy.com).
siliconchip.com.au
If you haven't played with donglebased SDR before it's also a good idea
to go to the RTL-SDR website (www.
rtl-sdr.com) and download their Quick
Start Guide file, which explains a lot
about installing SDR# and the drivers
it needs in order to communicate with
a dongle-based SDR.
We published an article which explained the process of setting up SDR#
starting on page 12 of the May 2013
issue. We have also reproduced the
series of steps required to install SDR#
in a panel in this article and even if
you're referring to the May 2013 article, you should read that as some
things have changed slightly to suit
newer versions of Windows.
Just before we discuss assembling
the kit, take a look at the circuit diagram, Fig.1. This is much clearer and
easier to follow than the one included
in the instructions from Banggood.
The circuitry of the dongle itself
is shown in simplified form inside
the light green filled rectangular area
in the centre. As you can see, it uses
two main chips: a Rafael Micro R820T
VHF-UHF tuner chip and the Realtek
RTL2832U digital demodulator chip
with its inbuilt USB interface. The latter is really the heart of the dongle and
also that of the overall SDR.
Notice that by using a dongle with
the R820T tuner chip ahead of the
RTL2832U, Banggood's designers have
made it easier to use the direct sampling approach. That's because the
R820T has only one pair of differential outputs, rather than the two pairs
used by other popular tuner chips like
the Elonics E4000 or the Fitipower
FC0013.
Since the outputs from the R820T
only use the I+ and I- inputs of the
RTL2832U, this leaves its Q+ and Qinputs free for feeding in the LF-HF
input signals for direct sampling.
The components and wiring outside the green rectangle in Fig.1 is
the additional circuitry used in the
Banggood SDR kit, to extend its frequency range downwards to 100kHz
and also to improve its performance
and flexibility.
The circuitry at lower left is used for
direct sampling of lower frequencies,
and as you can see is fairly straightforward. The signals first pass through
a two-stage low pass filter comprising
coils L1 and L2 plus their associated
capacitors; then balun transformer T1
The first step to take when assembling this kit is
to remove the case on the DVB-T dongle as shown.
After the two connectors are removed (they aren’t
reused), the board is then attached to the main SDR
board. The two photos shown here are of the top
(left) and bottom (right) of the dongle’s PCB.
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 93
Fig.1: the heart of this software-defined radio (SDR) is the DVB-T dongle shown in the centre, it uses a multi-band tuner
chip and the Realtek RTL2832U COFDM digital demodulator chip which also provides the USB interface.
is used to change them into differential
form to feed into the Q+ and Q- inputs
of the RTL2832U.
Finally, note that the kit designers
have also made provision for both of
the SDR inputs to be provided with
5V DC "phantom" power, by using
the A setting of link header CON2 (at
upper right). This makes it easy to
use active antennas with the SDR, or
to use a preselector with gain in the
case of the direct sampling LF-HF input. It's a nice feature which doesn't
seem to be explained in the Assembly
Instructions.
To make things easier for myself,
I first used a jeweller's saw to cut off
both connectors level with the ends of
the PCB, leaving only their inner portions to be desoldered and removed.
Once the connectors have been
removed and their holes in the PCB
cleaned up, it is ready to be fitted inside the main SDR PCB, in the rectangular cut-out in the centre. But before
you do so, it's a good idea to fit most of
the other components to the main PCB.
Assembling the kit
The first step in building the kit is
to prise open the DVB-T dongle's plastic case to reveal the tiny PCB assembly; the PCB itself measures only 28 x
17mm and is shown on the preceding
page. The next steps are to remove the
USB type A plug from one end of the
PCB and the Belling-Lee RF socket
from the other end.
These steps turn out to be a little
tricky because you have to do them
with a fairly high-powered soldering iron while at the same time being
careful not to damage the many tiny
SMD components already fitted to both
sides of the PCB.
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Silicon Chip
A close-up of the assembled PCB showing the various connections required
between it and the dongle. The most important thing of note is the connection
from toroidal transformer T1 to pins 4 & 5 of the RTL2832U micro.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
The photos above show the top (left) and bottom (right) of the completed SDR board. There are a reasonable number of
through-hole and SMD components that need to be soldered to the board along with securing the dongle PCB in the cutout. It’s best to solder many of the smaller components to the board before attaching the dongle PCB as there isn’t a lot of
space to work with.
I added the SMD capacitors and
resistors first, followed by the 4.7µH
SMD inductor and SMD LED2. By the
way, these are all 0805 parts (2.0 x
1.2mm), so you need a soldering iron
with a fine and well-tinned tip.
Next, I fitted the two edge-mounted
SMA sockets at the input end, followed by the SMD mini USB connector
at the output end. Then I decided to
solder the dongle PCB in place.
This needs to be done carefully; it's
attached to the main PCB using short
lengths of 1mm diameter tinned copper wire or tiny pieces (3 x 4mm) of
thin brass shim, soldered to each corner of the smaller PCB.
I found the easiest way to do this
was to first solder these pieces to the
ground copper on each corner of the
top of the dongle PCB.
Then I could lower the assembly
into the main board cutout, so the
added pieces held it in place while I
soldered the outer ends of each to the
earth copper on the top of the main
PCB. The kit designers have left these
areas unmasked and pre-tinned.
Next came the really tricky steps: first
winding the tiny balun transformer T1,
then fitting it to the main PCB in the
location shown and finally soldering
the ends of its outer secondary wires to
pins 4 (Q+) and 5 (Q-) of the RTL2832U
demodulator chip on the dongle PCB.
Winding T1 isn't too hard but because it's wound as a trifilar (three
wires at once) coil using very fine
wire (0.063mm diameter) on a very
tiny (5mm OD, 3mm ID) toroidal ferrite core, it ain't easy either.
You first need to straighten the wire,
then fold it into three, twist together
and then thread the twisted wire trio
through and around the miniature
toroid eight times.
siliconchip.com.au
Then you need to cut them apart at
each end and use a multimeter or DMM
to carefully identify the start and finish of each wire.
One of the wires becomes the transformer's primary, with its ends cut
short and soldered to the pads between
T1 and the board edge after you have
attached T1 to the main PCB using a
5 x 6mm piece of double-sided adhesive tape.
The start of one of the remaining
wires is then twisted together with the
finish of the other wire and after cutting them short, they are then soldered
to the centre pad between T1 and the
dongle PCB.
The really tricky step is soldering
the two remaining wire ends to pins
4 and 5 of the RTL2832U chip.
This is because the wire is extremely
fine; the pins of the chip are spaced
less than 0.4mm apart and there are
tiny SMD components mounted on the
top of the dongle PCB only about 1mm
away from the body of the RTL2832,
very close to pins 4 and 5. See the
close-up photo of the finished job directly left.
Frankly, I found soldering these
wires to the chip pins very difficult,
even using a binocular microscope
and soldering iron with a very slim
tip. I ended up having to use a drop
of epoxy cement (Araldite) to hold
the ends of the wires in position over
pins 4 and 5.
Then when the cement had cured, I
was finally able to solder them to the
pins without any solder bridges.
Once these steps had been done
(whew!), assembling the rest of the kit
was fairly straightforward. Completing
the board assembly was mainly a matter of fitting the three small RB electrolytic caps plus the blue power LED
Celebrating 30 Years
and six additional wires making the
connections between the two PCBs.
Five of these wires go on the top,
with one of them being a short length
of 0.8mm diameter tinned copper wire
connecting the input of the dongle PCB
to the track on the main PCB coming
from the VHF-UHF input connector
(labelled "UV", for some reason).
Three of the others are 7mm lengths
of insulated hookup wire making the
power and USB connections at the
other end of the dongle PCB.
The remaining wire is another 7mm
length of insulated wire, used to connect one of the 22µF electrolytics (near
the 1000µF electro) to the output pin
of 3.3V regulator U2, at the end nearest the RTL2832U.
The final wire goes under the PCB
assembly, being a 14mm length of insulated wire used to connect the other
22µF capacitor on the main board in
parallel with the SMD capacitor C52
on the dongle PCB (see photo at upper right).
The very last components to fit on
the main PCB are the two hand-wound
low pass filter coils L1 and L2. These
are each wound from the 0.5mm enamelled copper wire, with eight turns
wound on a 5mm diameter former like
the shank of a 5mm drill bit. Then the
wire ends are bent out radially and
tinned, to allow them to be soldered
to the pads provided to the left of T1
(see photo at left above).
Once these final components and
wires have been fitted, the SDR board
assembly is essentially complete and
ready to be fitted into the lower part
of the case.
This is done by sliding it into one
of the channels in the sides until the
SMA input sockets are protruding out
at the far end. Then you attach that end
November 2017 95
Installing SDR# and the required drivers on your PC
If you are using our instructions for installing SDR# from the May 2013 issue, please note that we published a follow-up
on page 82 of the November 2013 issue. This points out that you may need to install the latest Microsoft .NET framework
before you can install SDR# (SDR# since 2015 has required .NET 4.6 minimum to run). Having said that, most modern
Windows machines (ie, Windows 7/8/10) should already have the .NET framework installed.
Also, the latest versions of SDR# will not run on Windows XP. XP is no longer supported and its users should upgrade
to a newer version to avoid security problems. Similarly, while it will likely run on Vista, the operating system is no longer
supported.
The other package that you may need on your system is the Visual C++ Runtime. The download locations for both
packages are listed in the steps below.
The steps to install SDR# on a Windows PC are as follows (based on the RTL-SDR quick start guide):
1) Install the Microsoft .NET 4.6 redistributable, available from www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.
aspx?id=48130 This is not required if it’s already on your PC, which should typically be the case for Windows 10 users.
2) Install the Microsoft Visual C++ Runtime redistributable, available from www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.
aspx?id=8328 Again, this is not necessary if you already have it; the installer should tell you if you are not sure.
3) Click on the downloads button at the top of www.airspy.com and download the x86 version of sdrsharp.zip, next to
the heading titled “SDR Software Package”.
4) Unzip the contents of sdrsharp.zip but don’t run anything yet.
5) Double click install-rtlsdr.bat within the extracted files. This should download the files “rtlsdr.dll” and “zadig.exe” into
the same directory (you may need to run this batch file as an administrator).
6) Plug in the dongle and wait for Windows to attempt to install the drivers (it will likely fail).
7) Right-click zadig.exe and select “Run as administrator”.
8) Make sure “List All Devices” is checked in the Options menu.
9) Makes sure either “Bulk-In, Interface (Interface)”, “RTL2832UHIDIR” or “RTL2832U” is selected in the drop-down list.
10) Ensure that WinUSB is selected in the box to the right of the green arrow.
11) Click the Replace Driver button. You may get a warning that the publisher cannot be verified; if so, select “Install this
driver software anyway”. Note that you may need to run zadig.exe again if you move the dongle to another USB port.
12) Open SDRSharp.exe. Note that the first time you do this, you may get a message indicating that Windows has protected your PC. This is a false alarm, so click on “more info” and then “run anyway”.
13) Set the drop-down box in the “Source” tab at upper left to “RTL-SDR (USB)”.
14) Press the Play button.
15) Press the Configure button (looks like a gear) up the top, next to the Play button. By default, the RF gain is set at
zero, so adjust it upwards until you start seeing the expected RF signals being picked up in the SDR display.
That’s it, your SDR# software is ready to go.
plate, with the sockets passing through
the matching holes.
After this, the front plate can be secured to the lower half of the case using two of the M2 screws.
The rear plate is fitted in the same
way, after bending the leads of power
LED1 so its body lines up with the
matching 3mm hole. The mini USB
socket will also protrude slightly
224µV 20MHz AM test waveform in SDR#.
96
Silicon Chip
through its matching hole.
All that remains is to attach the top
half of the case, which simply involves
lowering it into place (with the correct orientation, since the two halves
5µV 1GHz NFM signal in SDR#.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
have complementary ridges and slots)
and then fitting a pair of M2 screws at
each end.
Trying it out
I installed SDR# and its drivers (using Zadig, which comes with the SDR#
package) on a couple of different Intel
machines running Windows 7, 64-bit.
I did strike a bit of trouble initially
because I had downloaded and installed the 64-bit version of SDR# and
it didn't seem to be able to find the
SDR device and its driver on either
machine. Happily, this problem was
solved by downloading and installing
the 32-bit version.
Once I had SDR# up and running, I
ran some tests on the 25MHz-1.7GHz
tuning range, to verify the performance
of the dongle. The results were quite
promising.
For example, a 5µV NFM (narrowband FM) signal could be received
clearly at various frequencies from
30.1MHz to 1.5GHz, with peak carrier
amplitudes and SNR (signal to noise
ratio) figures as shown in Table 1.
Then I ran some similar tests on
the direct sampling 100kHz-30MHz
tuning range, this time using a 224µV
AM signal with 30% modulation. The
results are shown in Table 2.
These are still quite respectable, although the sensitivity on this range is
understandably rather lower than that
on the 25MHz-1.7GHz range because
of the lack of front-end gain. There
siliconchip.com.au
were rather more spurious "birdies"
too, because of the lack of any frontend tuning or preselection.
Note that I went beyond the nominal upper-frequency limit of 30MHz,
just to see what the effect of the SDR's
input low-pass filter might be. As you
can see, the performance is still quite
respectable up to 36MHz, so the filter
doesn't seem to be too savage.
Since the performance with a signal level of 224µV was so promising,
I decided to do a couple more tests at
15.02MHz (roughly in the centre of the
tuning range), one with a signal level
of 22.4µV, and the other with a signal
level of 12.6µV. The results were still
quite respectable, as shown in Table 3.
The bottom line
So here are the good points about
Banggood's dongle-based SDR kit:
• its very low price
• quite respectable performance
over most of the claimed tuning
range, from about 100kHz to over
1.5GHz
• quality and completeness of the
kit, right down to those extra SMD
components and the additional M2
case assembly screws
On the other hand, here are the notso-good points:
• there are some aspects of kit assembly that present quite a challenge, like winding the balun transformer T1 and then soldering the
fine wires from its secondary to pins
Celebrating 30 Years
4 and 5 of the dongle's RTL2832U
chip
• the sensitivity and selectivity of
the finished SDR does leave a bit to
be desired, especially on the LF/HF
direct sampling range. For serious
listening, you'd be advised to use
either a very long external antenna
with a good earth and/or (preferably)
an active antenna to provide both
some gain and some preselection.
Actually, I can verify that the kit's
performance does benefit from the use
of an active indoor loop antenna because I tried it out with the low-cost
SinoRadios TG34 antenna I reviewed
back in the June 2013 issue of Silicon
Chip (pages 32-33).
It worked quite well, and when I
looked on eBay to see if it was still
available, I found it at: www.ebay.com.
au/itm/130392486862
Banggood also had a very similar
unit called the Degen DE31MS, which
you'll find at: siliconchip.com.au/l/
aag5
One final suggestion: although the
extruded metal case of the Banggood
kit does provide some shielding for the
SDR circuitry, this could be improved
by adding some short wires between
the PCB earth copper and solder lugs
attached firmly to the inside of the upper and lower parts of the case.
This ensures that the case is reliably
connected to PCB earth, and so is able
to provide full shielding, resulting in
significantly lower interference.
SC
November 2017 97
Vintage Radio
By Ian Batty
Pocket Radio, 1940s Style:
The 2-valve Privat-ear
This little portable radio looks like it
might be an early transistor radio but
it was produced in 1949, well before
“trannys” became ubiquitous. In fact,
it used subminiature valves and
permeability tuning, which eventually
became the standard in pushbutton
car radios almost 20 years later. It was
the ultimate in 1940s portability.
Valve technology experienced a
technological revolution with the release of all-glass B7G miniature valves
just prior to 1940. The initial release
of a “superhet kit” of pentagrid, RF/
IF pentode, diode-audio pentode and
output pentode featured famously in
Galvin’s BC611/SCR536 “handie talkie” squad radio.
Civilian uptake was rapid, with
4-valve and 5-valve B7G portables
dominating the postwar market and
lasting almost up to the release of Regency’s all-transistor TR-1 in 1954. Almost? Yes. There was a brief-and-brave
interregnum fuelled by the development of subminiature battery valves.
To set the scene, consider an antiaircraft shell. It has to go off near the
enemy aircraft to have any effect, but
how? You might try to set the fuse
for a certain time, but you’d have to
know how long the shell would take
to approach the target. You might try
98
Silicon Chip
an altitude setting but it’s a bit hard
to predict what the atmosphere might
be doing at, say, 6000 metres altitude.
If only you could get the shell to go
off near your target. A proximity fuse
would do nicely. Put a small, expendable transmitter/receiver in the nose
of the anti-aircraft shell, design it to
go off when it detects a large metal
object, and you would have an ideal
solution.
Except that the radio has to survive
an acceleration up to 20,000g (!) as the
shell is fired. And so the subminiature
valve was born. Building on the metallurgy and glass-making technology of
the B7G, subminiature design eventually offered pentagrids, RF pentodes,
diode-pentodes and output pentodes.
As well as a triode-hexode, a VHF
triode that rivalled the “firecracker”
3B4 used in US-designed VHF backpacks, twin-triode equivalents of the
12AU7/12AX7,and even a subminiaCelebrating 30 Years
ture version of the well-regarded 6AC7
video pentode.
Few all-subminiature valve sets
were ever offered, as transistor technology took over in the late 1950s.
And you’ll find even fewer hybrid
sets, using valve “front end” converter/IF/demodulator/audio designs
and push-pull audio transistors in the
output stage.
Frank Stuck’s Privat-ear
Having developed subminiature
valves during WWII, Raytheon acquired Belmont Radio to design and
market subminiature valve equipped
radios. The Belmont Boulevard, a
complete, 5-valve superhet using the
earphone cord as the antenna, was released in 1945.
Despite its outstanding design and
miniaturisation, sales only reached
some 5000 and the set was discontinued.
siliconchip.com.au
Frank L. Stuck, having previously
registered US Patent 2521423 for a
3-valve radio, released the 2-valve
Privat-ear through Electronics Systems Corporation in 1949. Obviously
an economy design, it sold for as little as one-third the price of Belmont’s
Boulevard.
Being a 2-valve, non-superhet
pocket radio and lacking a ferrite rod,
you’d have to wonder whether the
Privat-Ear could have worked at all.
But ever the optimist, I got this little
set off the shelf, fitted some batteries
and gave it a try.
Few comparable sets exist. There’s
Belmont’s Boulevard (mentioned
above), the Pocket-Mite (a 3-valve
kit released in 1948), and the 2-valve
Tiny-Tooner. Other subminiature sets
were released but these were scaleddown versions of conventional battery
superhet portables.
You might mistake it for a hearing
aid of the day but for its two controls
and the striking red colour of the set I
successfully tested. Other colours included maroon and white; distinctly
different from the black cases commonly used for hearing aids.
First oddity: no power switch? Instead, you just pull out the telescopic
antenna to turn it on; collapse it fully
to turn off. It’s not a superhet but a
classic reflex design, albeit with a few
wrinkles.
Consider that Regency’s TR-1 (still a
few years down the track) had to use a
bulky air-spaced tuning gang but Frank
Stuck decided to continue the use of
permeability tuning as first described
in his US2521423 patent.
Permeability tuning varies the inductance rather than the capacitance
of the adjustable tuned circuits. It does
this by moving the slug cores inside
the inductors. Years later, most car radios would have permeability tuning
to provide five preset stations with a
preselect pushbutton mechanism.
What’s unusual in this Privat-ear
design is the two-“gang” design, with
tuning slugs in both the grid and anode circuits. The mechanical arrangement is a bit agricultural but properly
adjusted, it’s effective and totally fit
for purpose. It’s also smaller than the
2-gang tuning capacitors of the day.
There are two versions of this tiny
set, with both versions using just two
subminiature pentodes in a reflex (regenerative) circuit. Fig.1 shows the
first version, using 2E31s.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: this unusual reflex radio used just two pentode valves which were
subminiature types. Apart from being compact they also enabled the use of a
very low HT voltage of only 22.5V. Another unusual feature of the Privat-ear was
the use of permeability tuning which varied inductance rather than capacitance.
In essence, the first pentode is an RF
amplifier which feeds a diode demodulator and that demodulated audio is
fed back into the grid of the first valve
into what is then a two-stage audio section. So in other words, it is a reflex
design, as mentioned above.
In more detail, both valves are described as pentodes but with the data
sheet stating that “grid 3 is composed
of two deflector plates, one connected
to lead 3 and the other to lead 5”.
The envelope is the T2X3 (2/8” x
3/8”) favoured by Raytheon, with a
flattened glass (ie, oval) cross-section
and the connecting leads exit via the
flattened section on the bottom. This
was made by heating the glass to melting point and compressing the envelope to flatten and seal the leads; it’s
known as the “press”.
I guess the assembly is so tiny that
it made sense to omit a wound spiral
construction for the suppressor grid
and use the proven beam tetrode alternative.
This sees the screen winding accurately aligned to the control grid. This
creates intense, flat beams of electrons
whose density overcomes the lowerdensity nature of secondary electrons
attempting to return from anode to
screen. The “deflector plates” are
added to condition electron flow on
either side of the grid structure, where
Celebrating 30 Years
Below: the Privat-ear uses two knobs,
one for volume and the other for
tuning. Tuning was not precise so
the frequency indications are fairly
vague.
November 2017 99
“beaming” is less effective.
And the valve numbering? It’s the
Radio Manufacturers Association
(RMA), a pre Radio, Electronics Television Manufacturers Association
(RETMA) type. RMA number-letternumber codes were actively used for
some two years from 1942 until they
were superseded by the “5500” series
which simply allocated sequential
numbers. Reason took over with the
RETMA coding beginning in 1953.
Under RMA’s 1942 number-letter
system, the first number is the heater/
filament power: “1” for cold-cathode,
“2” for power up to 10W and so on.
The first letter designates the number
of electrodes or type: B for a diode, C
for a triode, D for a tetrode, E for a pentode and so on. The remaining numbers are allocated in registration order.
Thus a 1B23 is a cold-cathode radar
Transmit/Receive tube (a diode) with
a 20kW rating, the 2E31 is a subminiature pentode with a maximum anode
dissipation of 45mW, and the 2J30 is
a 300kW magnetron.
RETMA coded for heater/filament
voltage and (more or less) number of
electrodes but lost the indication of
valve type. Thus the 1J6 was a 2V twin
triode, while the 1H6 was a duo-diode
triode, also with a 2V filament and the
1S5 was a 1.5V diode-pentode.
The set being reviewed here used
the 6007 pentodes, as shown in Fig.2.
As well as using a cylindrical T3 envelope rather than the 2E31 “flat” types,
the 6007 gives about the same performance for only about 25% of the filament current; 13.5mA versus 50mA
in the 2E31.
It’s also a conventional pentode with
a wound suppressor grid. One of my
sets used a handmade spiral of wire
to shield V1 to prevent regeneration
and oscillation; unnecessary with the
spray-shielded 2E31.
The Privat-ear is assembled into a
plastic chassis, a bit like the previously-reviewed Deutscher Kleinempfänger DKE38 set featured in the
July 2017 issue (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/10728).
I found the Privat-ear difficult to
work on. The valve leads were protected by plastic sleeving to prevent
shorts and many component connections onto the plastic chassis were
buried under the actual components.
In detail, the telescopic antenna rod
connects directly to the RF amplifier’s
grid tuned circuit comprising capaci100
Silicon Chip
Fig.2: the second version of the Privat-ear circuit diagram used 6007 valves. The
other major difference in this version is that the earphone is piezoelectric and is
coupled to the pentode plate via a capacitor.
tor C1 and variable inductor L1. The
direct connection doesn’t attempt to
compensate for the electrically “short”
antenna or its considerable capacity.
Since the antenna connects directly
to C1/L1, I would have expected the
wearer’s body capacitance to have
some effect on grid tuning. We’ll find
out later on.
C1 is only 65pF and about one-fifth
the value you’d find in a capacitancetuned circuit at the 535kHz end of the
broadcast band. This also implies a
high inductance value for L1, and if L1
This photo shows the construction of the two subminiature valves employed
in the two versions of the Privat-ear. At left is a T2X3 6088 hearing-aid output
pentode, with its connecting leads exiting the envelope via the flattened section
on the bottom. At right is a subminiature version of the landmark 6AC7, with a
cylindrical T3 envelope.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
is a low-resistance coil, this implies a
very high Q (selectivity factor) for both
tuned circuits. Since it lacks a highselectivity IF stage, the Privat-ear will
need all the Q it can get from its two
tuned circuits so that it can separate
stations adequately.
The signal from the tuned antenna
circuit connects to RF amplifier V1 via
a 15pF coupling capacitor, C2. Having
just finished a series on transistor sets,
I’m reminded of the very much higher
input impedances of valves and the
much lower values of coupling capacitors they can utilise.
RF amplifier V1 gets its grid bias, via
resistors R1 & R2, from demodulator
diode D1. I’d expected to see the diode’s anode as the active connection,
as this would give a negative-going
output signal and would supply conventional AGC (more negative bias
with stronger signals). But in this set,
it’s just the opposite.
According to the diagram, D1 (since
it will conduct on negative-going
peaks) will produce a positive-going
signal, with V1’s grid going less negative/more positive on stronger signals;
more on this the point later.
V1 develops an amplified version of
its grid signal across the anode tuned
circuit comprising capacitor C5 and
variable inductor L2 (ganged with
C1/L1). This amplified signal is fed
to demodulator diode D1 via 100pF
capacitor C4. The diode rectifies the
applied signal to produce a positive DC
voltage proportional to signal strength,
and would appear to also produce a
positive-going DC voltage.
D1, being a point-contact germanium diode, will need some 100-150
millivolts before it conducts, which
means it would need a lot of signal.
But D1’s cathode connects via R1-R2
to V1’s grid and V1 will produce a
weakly negative grid voltage due to
its “Edison effect”.
In practice, D1 gets some forward
bias, helping it to conduct with signals
well below its normal forward voltage. So this circuit is very similar in
principle to transistor radio demodulators, where the diode is also given
weak forward bias.
Privat-ear interior details
The internal view confirms the set’s
simplicity. The two tuning coils appear at top left (anode circuit) and lower right (antenna), with the telescopic
antenna just beneath the lower coil.
The RF/1st audio valve appears just
above the antenna coil and the audio
output valve is above the RF/1st audio
and slightly behind it.
The dark maroon disc on the left
is the top of the tuning capstan, and
the black tuning cord runs from the
capstan to each tuning slug on their
left-hand ends. Another cord joining
their right-hand ends and passes over
a tensioning spring about half-way up
the battery cover on the right.
The CK705 demodulator diode
(looking like a ceramic fuse) sits just
above the tuning capstan, with the audio choke used as the anode load for
the second pentode, V2, being at the
top right of the component section.
This choke is in the same place for
both models. Other components are
scattered about in the compartment,
comprising flat disc and tubular ceramic capacitors and common quarterwatt resistors.
The volume control sits above the
tuning dial capstan, with its two securing nuts just visible. The battery
compartment carries two AA cells connected in parallel for the filament supply and a type 412 22.5V HT battery.
The copper strip of the on/off switch
lies beneath the 22.5V HT battery.
Cleanup
Both of my sets showed cracking in
the battery compartments but surprisingly there was no battery corrosion. A
spot of superglue on each repaired the
cracks, and a clean and polish brought
them both up nicely.
The maroon set was dead, and testing showed the audio choke on the
output valve to be open circuit. It’s
the type commonly used in hearing
aids, but I’m reluctant to wreck any in
V2 Output
(Behind V1)
Volume Control
Terminals
RF Tuning
Output Choke
Earphone Cord
Demodulator Diode
2 x A Batteries
B Battery
Tuning Dial Capstan
Antenna Tuning
Telescopic Antenna
Tuning Cord
On/Off Switch
V1 RF/1st Audio
The Privat-ear utilised a quite large telescopic antenna (as seen fully extended in the lead photo), especially compared
to other subminiature valve radio sets that were being produced in that period. To switch the set on, the antenna
needed to be extended to operate the on/off switch lever located next to the 22.5V B battery.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 101
my collection, so I’ll just leave that set
and look out for a replacement choke.
How good is it?
Its performance was better than I
expected. While its selectivity can’t
match that of a superheterodyne radio, it pulls in eight local Melbourne
stations just fine down here on the
peninsula.
Injecting a signal for testing presented some difficulty. Lacking a ferrite rod
antenna, I couldn’t rely on my usual
method of inductive coupling from the
radiating ferrite antenna that I’ve used
successfully for many previous sets.
So I used the method previously
tried on Sony’s TR-63 when I was unable to inject a signal directly onto its
converter base. Here, I used a 4.7pF
capacitor (labelled CT on Fig.1) and
jiggled the antenna circuit’s slug for
maximum gain.
While I can’t guarantee my signal
voltage to translate directly to a V/m
figure, the method does allow anyone
else to reproduce my results and judge
whether their set is working correctly.
Measuring the audio output level
presented another problem. I couldn’t
find any standard that I could apply, so
I set up my signal generator with program audio modulation and just went
for “a good listening level”.
Sensitivity? Using my series 4.7pF
capacitor into the antenna, it was
around 1.5mV at 600kHz and 1400kHz.
More objectively, –3dB selectivity is
±4kHz and ±20kHz at 600kHz and
1400kHz, respectively. These figures
imply combined-circuit Q factors of
75 and 35 respectively.
Importantly, bandwidths are around
±70 and ±170kHz at –20 dB. The broad
selectivity was borne out in use, with
strong stations flooding the space between them and obvious instances of
the 9kHz “whistle” caused by adjacent
stations. I’d wondered whether hand/
body capacitance would affect the an-
tenna circuit tuning, and found that it
does, to some extent.
As expected, the demodulator’s DC
output was positive-going, overcoming V1’s Edison effect bias of around
-130mV and sending the grid positive.
The test set, with low DC resistance
from anode to supply, showed no significant voltage change with signal
strength.
The other set (using resistancecapacitance coupling) did show a
change in anode voltage from 7.5V to
9.5V on strong signal, despite its grid
voltage going slightly positive. That’s
opposite to what I’d expected and if a
reader can offer an explanation I’d be
happy to know of it. On test, I could
not identify any AGC effect.
Its audio performance was adequate
for the purpose. With such close coupling into the ear canal, “some tens”
of microwatts translates into a good
listening level.
So would I buy another one? I’ve
already done so. You may like to add
one of these unusual sets to your collection. It’s more on the “enthusiastic
amateur” side than the “engineer employed by mega-corporation” side of
electronics, but I think that’s a large
part of its charm.
Two Privat-ear versions
Besides the different valve types
used in the original DL-101 (2E31) and
the later 5-DS-001 (6007s), there are
some other subtle circuit differences.
Anode current for the first audio
stage (V1) in the DL-101 flows from the
battery through choke L3. This gives
maximum gain with a much lower
voltage drop than a load resistor.
The output stage (V2) drives the
magnetic earphone (E1) directly, ie,
it’s between the anode of V2 and the B
battery. This earphone has a DC resistance of only a few kilohms, so there’s
little voltage across it.
By contrast, the 5-DS-001 uses a
crystal (piezo-electric) earphone,
which has a high DC resistance so
this can not be connected in the same
manner.
So the first audio stage load is resistor R3, giving a lower V2 anode voltage
in this set. Choke L3 is the DC load for
V2 with C10 providing DC blocking,
to prevent V2’s anode voltage appearing across earphone E1. R7 shunts any
leakage via C10 to ground.
Note that the move to 6007s improved battery life considerably due
to their lower filament current. Allowing for carbon-zinc AA cells of the day
with capacity of some 500mAh, the
two paralleled cells used would run
a pair of 6007s for around 40 hours.
While it’s not the hundred-plus
hours of later transistor sets, this is
about double the battery life of the
first transistor radio, Regency’s TR-1.
HT battery drain is similar across all
models and, I’m guessing, well over
80 hours of B battery life.
Both my sets suffered a broken corner just below the B battery. It seems
that the plastic case had become brittle with age, so gentle handling is recommended. As well, one had suffered
a stress break in the opposite corner
caused by excessive spring tension in
the A battery positive connection leaf –
I’d recommend easing the tension off.
The Privat-ear’s “throw stuff down
and solder it in” construction makes
it a challenge to work on. If you do
intend to fix a Privat-ear, apply lots
of care and patience with your existing skills.
Further reading
For a very fine and detailed description, with history and photos, see:
www.jamesbutters.com/privatear.htm
For an exceptional catalog of
American valves of all kinds, refer to:
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Transmitting TV to
another room
Is there any wireless way to transmit
a TV signal from one room to another
if no aerial socket is available in the
other room? I’d imagine an RF signal
does not lend itself to be “carried” to
another room.
I have seen AV and HDMI transmitters which seem to be the only other
option. Have you had much experience with these? (G. B., via email)
• The RF signal from the room that
has the RF antenna socket could be
split (using a TV antenna splitter) with
one output for the TV in that room. The
second output can then be connected
to a masthead amplifier suitable for
digital TV transmissions and small
basic wire antenna used to transmit
to the other room.
The other room can use a similar
basic wire antenna (or rabbit ears) to
receive the RF signal for the second
TV. The possible range using this
method will depend on the wall type
between rooms.
We published an article in the December 1991 issue titled “TV Transmitter For UHF VCRs” that may be of
interest; it was designed specifically
to do this job. You can order a photocopy of this article at siliconchip.
com.au/Shop/2/115 or a PDF scan at
siliconchip.com.au/Shop/5/2904
Alternatively, you could use a settop box in the room with the antenna
socket and then transmit its video
output to the TV in the other room
using transmitter/receiver units such
as Jaycar AR1913 (analog) or AR1915
(HDMI). These both include IR remote
control extenders so that you can
change channel from the remote room.
Building a DIY mains
isolation transformer
I have found myself with a requirement for a 240V mains isolation transformer but the commercially available
units are too expensive for me.
I have several identical toroidal
104
Silicon Chip
transformers and I am wondering if
two of them can be used in a back-toback configuration. The transformers
have an untapped primary winding for
240VAC and two secondaries of 12V
each. They are rated at 200VA.
I assume that the two secondary
windings would be connected in
series and the pairs of secondaries
would then be connected together,
giving both an input and an output
of 240VAC.
Can you please advise if this would
be a suitable arrangement? Other than
the obvious precautions to be observed
when working with mains voltages,
can you see any problems with this
approach? (B. D., Hope Valley, SA)
• Have look at the Salvage It article on page 82 of the May 2014 issue
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/7649).
This is about making an isolation
transformer with two standard power transformers. However, one point
which must be made is that the output must not be earthed and this was
the subject of correspondence in the
Mailbag pages of the subsequent July
2014 issue.
Solar panel wiring
polarity
The circuit diagram (Fig.1) for the
Arduino Data Logger on page 28 of
the August 2017 issue (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/10749) shows the solar panel wired + to Mini Solar LiPO
Charger + and same for the – terminals
of both devices.
However, the photo of the actual devices on page 29 shows a black (negative?) wire from the solar panel connecting to a red (positive?) connection
to the LiPO charger (and vice versa).
So is it + to + as per the circuit diagram or – to +? (C. K., Oxley, Qld)
• Follow the circuit diagram and
connect + to + and - to -. Despite the
connectors being polarised, there’s
no standard for wire colours on JST
cables. So sometimes you get wires
which when plugged in give red for +
and black for - and sometimes you get
Celebrating 30 Years
black for + and red for -. The wires we
used were the latter type.
In fact, if you look closely at the
photo on page 29, you can see that the
terminal labelled + on the battery goes
to the black wire which then connects
to the terminal labelled + on the Solar
Charger PCB.
Similarly, you can see that the red
and black wires which are soldered to
the solar panel connect to the black
and red wires respectively on the JST
cable, which then go to the + and –
terminals on the Solar Charger board.
It’s a pity that the wire colour codes
don’t match the PCB; we are trying
to source suitable cables (which we
know exist) but vendors rarely provide
enough information to determine in
advance which polarity they will be
supplied with.
Induction Motor Speed
with a 0-3.3V signal
I want to build the Altronics kit for
the 1.5kW Induction Motor Speed
Controller (Cat K6032), based on your
articles in the April and May 2012 issues (siliconchip.com.au/Series/25).
I see that it uses a 0-3.3V signal for
speed control.
Can this signal be fed in from an external board or is this voltage adjusted
using a potentiometer on the PCB? Can
you send me a datasheet/documentation for this product? (I. M., Gauteng,
South Africa)
• The 3.3V signal could be fed in
from an external board if you wished,
provided its ground reference is tied
to the GND terminal of the connector
CON4. A list of Features and Specifications is provided on page 17 of the
April 2012 issue. You can view this
on our website at: siliconchip.com.
au/Article/704
Adapting DDS software
to run on Plus Backpack
I purchased the Micromite Plus
Backpack kit by accident. I had intended to purchase the standard Micromite
siliconchip.com.au
Backpack kit to make the DDS Signal
Generator project as described in the
April 2017 issue (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/10616).
I have found the Micromite Plus
Backpack has a different pin-out and
the DDS software “almost works” on
it. Is there somewhere in the BASIC
code that can be modified to change
the pin assignments to suit the Plus
Backpack?
Pins 16, 17 & 18 on the standard Micromite are easily re-assigned to other
pins on the Micromite Plus. The problem pins are 3 and 25, as they do not
appear to be specifically mentioned in
the code. (W. S., Lake Cathie, NSW)
• We tried to make the Plus BackPack as compatible as possible with
the original BackPack but the pin capabilities of the chips are different, so
it couldn’t be made 100% compatible.
Part of the difficulty was that we had
to choose between keeping the Micromite pin numbers on the I/O header
the same or keeping the functions the
same but not both. We decided on the
latter since pin number assignments
are not normally difficult to change.
You are right that the references to
pins 16, 17 and 18 are easily changed
in the code, near the top of the file.
These should be changed to 51, 44
and 43 respectively. The other two
pins, 3 and 25, are SPI OUT and SPI
CLK on the original Backpack. On the
Micromite Plus LCD Backpack, these
same pins on the I/O header are connected to pin 8 (SPI1 OUT) and pin
50 (SPI1 CLK).
The SPI command in MMBasic uses
the SPI1 channel by default so you
shouldn’t need to change those pin allocations at all. But there is one other
thing you need to do, besides changing
the three pin assignments.
Because the original Micromite
lacked a touch interrupt function,
Geoff has used the following “hack”
to provide this feature:
SetPin Peek(byte Peek(word
&H9D000090) + 23), INTL, MyInt
The problem is that the Peek() function reads a specific location in RAM
to determine the pin which is used
for the touch interrupt function. This
location will be different for the Plus
Backpack so this line (which appears
twice in the code) will fail. The solution is to use the proper touch interrupt function that was introduced
with the Micromite Plus. Change both
lines to read:
GUI INTERRUPT MyInt
The software should then run OK
on the Plus Backpack.
Increasing EEPROM
programming voltage
In the last year, I have finished building the EPROM Programmer from the
November and December 2002 and
January 2003 issues (siliconchip.
com.au/Series/110). I have been able
to read 2716 EPROM chips OK using
the adaptor.
Now I would like to program a 2716
chip as I have a Tait UHF Transceiver
that uses the 2716 for its channel frequencies. My question is whether the
power supply of the programmer will
be able to handle this, as the 2716
requires 25V for Vpp (programming
voltage). I don’t want to burn out the
programmer after all the work building it. (K. M., Grovetown, NZ)
• You should be able to increase Vpp
in this project to 25V without any problems. All you need to do is change the
3.9kW resistor from the ADJ terminal of
REG3 to ground to 4.7kW and remove
the parallel 150kW resistor.
The 12VAC power supply should
provide enough voltage to REG3 to allow its output to be increased in this
manner. That should give you a Vpp of
about 25.5V. We suggest checking this
before plugging in the chip to be programmed. All the other components
can handle a Vpp of 25V.
Two SC480 modules
with a valve preamp
I emailed you a few years ago and
you published my letter regarding
home-made phase changers; I’m writing today as I purchased two SC480
amplifier kits at a market.
I’ve started constructing them but
I’m wondering if I were to use a stereo valve preamp (www.ebay.com.au/
itm/192176319933), would this allow
me to use it as a regular amplifier with
volume control from sources such as
TV, CD, turntable, etc? (D. E., via email)
• Yes, it will do what you want but
we doubt whether that preamp would
match the performance of the SC480
modules. If you really want to use a
valve preamplifier, why not use our
own Stereo Valve Preamplifier design,
described in the January & February
2016 issues.
You can view previews of the arti-
Using USB-serial bridge with November 2009 GPS Analog Clock
I built the GPS Synchronised
Clock for Sweep Hands, as published in the November 2009 issue
(www.siliconchip.com.au/Article/
1632) but I never got it going properly.
The updated version in the February 2017 issue (www.siliconchip.
com.au/Article/10527) rekindled
my interest so I got it out and had
another go.
I got a new clock motor and modified it. The clock starts but skips a
second here and there so I want to
lengthen the pulse. I connected to a
USB-serial bridge and used the casiliconchip.com.au
ble connections from Geoff Graham’s
website to make sure they were correct. But all I get is garbage.
I have been using a Micromite
for many years so am familiar with
using TeraTerm. I tried another PIC
chip and have tried the software
from both the Silicon Chip website
and Geoff’s site.
The serial bridge is OK as it echoes back characters when TX and
RX are shorted. Do you have any
suggestions? (P. C., Balgal Beach,
Qld)
• The 2009 design is not directly
compatible with a USB/serial inverter
Celebrating 30 Years
since it used RS-232 signalling (ie,
inverted compared to TTL serial).
We had to modify the software for
the February 2017 version to produce TTL-compatible signals, so that
we could interface it directly with a
USB/serial adaptor.
You either need to fit something
like a MAX232 between the USB/
serial adaptor and the PCB, to invert the signals, or use a USB/serial
adaptor with RS-232 compatible
outputs, such as a PICAXE programming cable.
Or simply add inverters between
the two devices.
November 2017 105
cles via this link: siliconchip.com.au/
Series/295
We have a range of hard-to-get parts
for this project on our website, including the acrylic case and PCB. Or
for even lower noise and distortion,
you could consider building our Ultra-LD Stereo Preamplifier and Input
Switcher and mounting it in a small
instrument case; see siliconchip.com.
au/Series/34
40V battery pack with
2014 Voltage Switch
I recently visited our local Jaycar
outlet to purchase a voltage switching circuit. Your Threshold Voltage
Switch design from the July 2014 issue, kit code KC5528 was suggested
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/7924)
but some alterations would have to be
made. I wish to switch a relay to turn
a charging circuit off when terminal
voltage of a battery reaches 40V DC.
The charger that I am using produces
45V 3A. Is this possible and how can
it be done?
The reason for this that I am using
battery packs from a hybrid vehicle to
power a 36V eBike that I have built. It
works well except batteries don’t han-
dle being overcharged well. I hope you
can help. (G. L., Dunedin, NZ)
• You will need to provide a suitable
supply voltage to run the Threshold
Voltage Switch, in the range of 5-24V.
You should be able to adjust the
Threshold Voltage Switch to switch
at a threshold of 40V.
Just set VR3 fully clockwise (the
threshold adjustment) to the maximum, 3.3V. Then with LK1 inserted
to divide the monitored voltage, adjust
VR1 (the divider) so that at 40V, the
relay is switched.
Automotive Sensor
Modifier voltage range
I purchased the December 2016 issue as I am interested in the function
of the Sensor Modifier (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/10451). The problem
is I actually need a 4.5-9V input signal to calibrate a fuel tank setup after
installation of a larger auxiliary long
range tank, rather than a 0-5V signal.
I understand the December 2009/
January 2010 Voltage Interceptor design (siliconchip.com.au/Series/6) had
a 0-12V mode which with 255 load
points would work fine for my application (extreme accuracy not essential).
Can the Sensor Modifier be altered to
work in a similar manner? Is it just a
case of resistor changes to change the
reference voltage? You will have to
forgive me as I am not an electronics
expert. (A. C., West Lakes, SA)
• You could connect the fuel level
sensor to a 5V supply so that it produces a voltage in the range of 0-5V
instead. That would give a more accurate result as its output would not
vary with the vehicle’s 12V supply that
can vary over a wide range from below
12V up to at least 14.4V.
If that is not suitable, you could alter the Sensor Modifier to work with
an input and output range of 0-10V, as
follows. First, solder a 100kW resistor
from pin 12 of IC1 to ground (pin 11).
This will reduce an input of 0-10V to
a range of 0-5V, to suit IC2.
Next, cut the supply track to pin 4 of
IC1 and wire pin 4 up to the cathode of
ZD1 instead, so that the op amps run
off a higher supply voltage. Note that
you will need to cut both tracks to this
pin (top and bottom layer) and run a
second wire to replace the connection
which is lost when you do this.
You will then need to replace the
1kW resistor between VR1 and GND
with a 2.2kW resistor and solder a 56kW
Radio, Television & Hobbies: the COMPLETE archive on DVD
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This remarkable collection of PDFs covers every issue of R & H, as it was known from
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in March 1965, before it disappeared forever with the change of name to EA.
For the first time ever, complete and in one handy DVD, every article and every issue 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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into the amazing breakthroughs made in radio and electronics technology following the
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
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106
Silicon Chip
62
$
00
+$10.00 P&P
Exclusive to:
SILICON
CHIP
ONLY
Order now from www.siliconchip.com.au/Shop/3 or call
(02) 9939 3295 and quote your credit card number.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
resistor between pins 2 and 7 of IC1, in
parallel with the existing 100kW resistor. These changes will allow the unit
to alter the output voltage over the full
range 0-10V.
normal “bed of nails” QC test and so
any accidental shorts should have
been picked up. Power it up and see
how you go. If your module is indeed
faulty, let us know and we will send
a replacement.
VS1053 module appears
to have dodgy soldering Small design flaw in
Hello, I recently purchased a Battery Lifesaver
Geeetech VS1053B MP3/audio shield
for Arduino from your online shop.
Before using it, I noticed two solder
bridges on the VS1053 IC. Please see
the photo below. Can you send me a
replacement board? (R. McE., Ringwood North, Vic)
• While the soldering on some of
these modules may look dodgy, they
should all work OK. In fact, if you have
a look at the module in the photo on
page 76 of the July issue, you will note
that it has some of the pins bridged in
the same way as in your photo.
Pins 20, 21 and 22 on this IC all connect to ground and they have done this
by simply running a track between the
three pads. This is not a practice we
recommend since with pads this close
together, this tends to cause solder
bridges to form (we prefer to run tracks
out from the ends of the pads and then
join them away from the pads).
Of course, solder bridges between
pads which are intentionally joined
will not cause any problems but they
do make it harder to inspect the IC for
accidental bridges.
Since you’ve pointed it out, we also
noticed that unused pins 9, 10, 11 and
12 are all joined together on the PCB
and so we would expect some boards
to have these bridged too. We showed
them not connected to anything in our
circuit diagram on pages 74 and 75 of
the July issue since those pins don’t
go anywhere, but for some reason they
have decided to join them together.
We would expect that all of these
modules have been subjected to a
siliconchip.com.au
Regarding the Lifesaver for Lithium/
SLA Batteries published in Silicon
Chip in September 2013 (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/4360), I note that there
is a design error with the connection
of the common cathode of the D1/D2
(BAT54C) and the non-inverting input
to comparator IC1 (pin 3).
Surely if the A1 diode in D1/D2 was
to clamp pin 3 of IC1 to about 5.2V,
the cathode (K) must be connected to
the 5V output of the linear regulator
and not the input (which can go as
high as 16V).
It would seem that there need to be
two separate diodes, ie one for reverse
polarity protection to the linear regulator and one from the non-inverting
input (pin 3 of IC1) to the 5V rail.
The way the circuit is presented in
Fig 2 of the article, I can’t see how D1/
D2 will clamp the input to the comparator – potentially destroying the
comparator input, although the resistor dividers limit the current significantly. (K. N., Kingston, Tas)
• You are right that there was a mistake with the diode clamp in that
design. We discussed this in the Ask
Silicon Chip pages of the January 2014
issue (pages 102-104). The comment
there was: “As for the diode clamp,
you are right [that it was a mistake]
but luckily it isn’t critical. The divider
resistors limit any current that might
flow into the comparator’s input clamp
diode to a safe level.”
Therefore, we agree with your assessment. We haven’t heard of any
problems resulting from this error.
You’re right that leakage current
through the reverse-biased diode junction will cause a shift in the threshold
voltage. This can be adjusted out using VR1, however, it will cause the
threshold to change slightly with
temperature.
If you’re concerned about that, you
could just use a regular BAT54 in its
place (which lacks the redundant diode) or else cut the track between pin
2 of D1/D2 and trimpot VR1, on the
top side of the PCB.
Celebrating 30 Years
Want to work
for Australia’s
Electronics Magazine
If you live, breathe and sleep electronics you could be just the person we’re
looking for. While formal qualifications
are well regarded, don’t let a lack of letters
after your name put you off, if you have
the experience we’re looking for.
The right person will certainly have
skills in the following areas:
Analog and digital circuit design from
concept to completion
Circuit analysis and debugging
PCB layout (we use Altium Designer)
PC software development and
embedded programming
Operating electronic test
equipment
Mechanical design
But most of all, you’ll have the ability
to write interesting articles (in English)
describing what you’ve built and how
SILICON CHIP readers can reproduce what
you’ve done. You will have seen the style
of SILICON CHIP articles – you’re almost
certainly an existing SILICON CHIP reader.
If you have skills in other areas which
would help SILICON CHIP appear each
month, tell us about them too: skills such
as sub-editing, desktop publishing/layout, circuit drawing, photography, image
processing, technical support/customer
service (via telephone), project management, parts ordering and management,
database administration, website design/programming and operating CNC
equipment.
We don’t expect you to have all these
skills – but we’ll help you to develop them
as required.
You’ll need to be highly self-motivated
and able to work well by yourself as well
as in a small team. Being able to work
to the rigorous deadlines of a monthly
magazine is vital.
Candidates will be given a six-month
trial with a permanent position at the successful conclusion.
If you think you have what it takes,
email your resume/CV (along with contact
details!) to silicon<at>siliconchip.com.au
November 2017 107
SILICON
CHIP
.com.au/shop
ONLINESHOP
Looking for a specialised component to build that latest and greatest SILICON CHIP project? Maybe it’s the PCB you’re after?
Or a pre-programmed micro? Or some other hard-to-get “bit”? The chances are they are available direct from the SILICON CHIP ONLINESHOP.
As a service to readers, SILICON CHIP has established the ONLINESHOP. No, we’re not going into opposition with your normal suppliers –
this is a direct response to requests from readers who have found difficulty in obtaining specialised parts such as PCBs & micros.
•
•
•
•
•
PCBs are normally IN STOCK and ready for despatch when that month’s magazine goes on sale (you don’t have to wait for them to be made!).
Even if stock runs out (eg, for high demand), in most cases there will be no longer than a two-week wait.
One low p&p charge: $10 per order, regardless of how many boards or micros you order! (Australia only; overseas clients – email us for a postage quote).
Our PCBs are beautifully made, very high quality fibreglass boards with pre-tinned tracks, silk screen overlays and where applicable, solder masks.
Best of all, those boards with fancy cut-outs or edges are already cut out to the SILICON CHIP specifications – no messy blade work required!
HERE’S HOW TO ORDER:
4 Via the INTERNET (24 hours, 7 days): Log on to our secure website –
All prices are in AUSTRALIAN DOLLARS ($AU)
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 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 EADST, 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
PIC16F1455-I/P
PIC16F1507-I/P
PIC16F88-E/P
PIC16F88-I/P
PIC16LF88-I/P
PIC16LF88-I/SO
PIC16LF1709-I/SO
PIC16F877A-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), Driveway Monitor Receiver (July15)
Hotel Safe Alarm (Jun16), 50A Battery Charger Controller (Nov16)
Kelvin the Cricket (Oct17)
Microbridge (May17)
Wideband Oxygen Sensor (Jun-Jul12)
Hi Energy Ignition (Nov/Dec12), Speedo Corrector (Sept13),
Auto Headlight Controller (Oct13), 10A 230V Motor Speed Controller (Feb14)
Automotive Sensor Modifier (Dec16)
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)
Nicad/NiMH Burp Charger (Mar14), Remote Mains Timer (Nov14)
Driveway Monitor Transmitter (July15), Fingerprint Scanner (Nov15)
MPPT Lighting Charge Controller (Feb16), 50/60Hz Turntable Driver (May16)
Cyclic Pump Timer (Sep16), 60V 40A DC Motor Speed Controller (Jan17)
Pool Lap Counter (Mar17), Rapidbrake (Jul17)
Garbage Reminder (Jan13), Bellbird (Dec13), GPS Analog Clock Driver (Feb17)
LED Ladybird (Apr13)
Battery Cell Balancer (Mar16)
6-Digit GPS Clock (May-Jun09), Lab Digital Pot (Jul10), Semtest (Feb-May12)
PIC16F2550-I/SP
Batt Capacity Meter (Jun09), Intelligent Fan Controller (Jul10)
PIC18F4550-I/P
GPS Car Computer (Jan10), GPS Boat Computer (Oct10)
PIC32MX795F512H-80I/PT Maximite (Mar11), miniMaximite (Nov11), Colour Maximite (Sept/Oct12)
Touchscreen Audio Recorder (Jun/Jul 14)
PIC32MX170F256B-50I/SP Micromite Mk2 (Jan15) – also includes FREE 47F tantalum capacitor
Micromite LCD BackPack [either version] (Feb16), GPS Boat Computer (Apr16)
Micromite Super Clock (Jul16), Touchscreen Voltage/Current Ref (Oct-Dec16)
Micromite LCD BackPack V2 (May17), Deluxe eFuse (Aug17)
Micromite DDS for IF Alignment (Sept17)
PIC32MX170F256B-I/SP
Low Frequency Distortion Analyser (Apr15)
PIC32MX170F256D-501P/T 44-pin Micromite Mk2 (Now with Mk2 Firmware at no extra cost)
PIC32MX250F128B-I/SP
GPS Tracker (Nov13), Micromite ASCII Video Terminal (Jul14)
PIC32MX470F512H-I/PT
Stereo Audio Delay/DSP (Nov13), Stereo Echo/Reverb (Feb 14)
Digital Effects Unit (Oct14)
PIC32MX470F512H-120/PT Micromite PLUS Explore 64 (Aug 16), Micromite Plus LCD BackPack (Nov16)
PIC32MX470F512L-120/PT Micromite PLUS Explore 100 (Sep-Oct16)
dsPIC33FJ128GP802-I/SP Digital Audio Signal Generator (Mar-May10), Digital Lighting Controller
(Oct-Dec10), SportSync (May11), Digital Audio Delay (Dec11)
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
Thermometer/Thermostat (Mar10), Rudder Position Indicator (Jul11)
ATTiny2313
Remote-Controlled Timer (Aug10)
When ordering, be sure to nominate BOTH the micro required AND the project for which it must be programmed.
SPECIALISED COMPONENTS, HARD-TO-GET BITS, ETC
PARTS FOR THE 6GHz+ TOUCHSCREEN FREQUENCY COUNTER
Explore 100 kit (Cat SC3834; no LCD included)
one ERA-2SM+ & one ADCH-80A+ (Cat SC1167; two packs required)
(OCT 17)
P&P – $10 Per order#
DDS MODULES
(APR 17)
$69.90
AD9833 DDS module (with gain control) (for Micromite DDS) $25.00
$15.00/pack AD9833 DDS module (no gain control) (El Cheapo Modules, Part 6) $15.00
3-WAY ADJUSTABLE ACTIVE CROSSOVER
(SEPT 17)
- set of laser-cut black acrylic case pieces $10.00
LOGGING DATA TO THE ‘NET USING ARDUINO
(SEPT 17)
- WeMos D1 R2 board $12.50
DELUXE EFUSE PARTS
(AUG 17)
IPP80P03P4L04 P-channel mosfets $4.00 ec
BUK7909-75AIE 75V 120A N-channel SenseFet $7.50 ec
LT1490ACN8 dual op amp $7.50 ec
POOL LAP COUNTER
(MAR 17)
two 70mm 7-segment high brightness blue displays plus logic-level Mosfet $17.50
laser-cut blue tinted lid, 152 x 90 x 3mm
$7.50
STATIONMASTER
(MAR 17)
DRV8871 IC, SMD 1µF capacitor and 100kW potentiometer with detent $12.50
ULTRA LOW VOLTAGE LED FLASHER
(FEB 17)
kit including PCB and all SMD parts, LDR and blue LED
$12.50
ARDUINO MUSIC PLAYER/RECORDER
(JUL 17)
Geeetech Arduino MP3 shield $20.00
SC200 AMPLIFIER MODULE
(JAN 17)
hard-to-get parts: Q8-Q16, D2-D4, 150pF/250V capacitor and five SMD resistors
$35.00
ARDUINO LC METER
(JUN 17)
1nF 1% MKP capacitor, 5mm lead spacing
$2.50
60V 40A DC MOTOR SPEED CONTROLLER
$35.00
MAX7219 LED DISPLAY MODULES
COMPUTER INTERFACE MODULES
(JAN 17)
TOUCHSCREEN VOLTAGE/CURRENT REFERENCE
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK KIT (programmed to suit) PLUS UB1 Lid
LASER-CUT MATTE BLACK LID (to suit UB1 Jiffy Box)
(DEC 16)
8x8 LED matrix module with DIP MAX7219
8x8 LED matrix module with SMD MAX7219
8-digit 7-segment red display module with SMD MAX7219
(JUN 17)
$5.00
$5.00
$7.50
MICROBRIDGE
(MAY 17)
PCB plus all on-board parts including programmed microcontroller
(SMD ceramics for 10µF) $20.00
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK V2 – COMPLETE KIT
(MAY 17)
includes PCB, programmed micro, touchscreen LCD, laser-cut UB3 lid, mounting hardware,
SMD Mosfets for PWM backlight control and all other on-board parts $70.00
EFUSE
(APR 17)
two NIS5512 ICs plus one SUP53P06 $22.50
(JAN 17)
hard-to-get parts: IC2, Q1, Q2 and D1
CP2102 USB-UART bridge
microSD card adaptor
SHORT FORM KIT with main PCB plus onboard parts (not including BackPack
module, jiffy box, power supply or wires/cables)
$5.00
$2.50
$70.00
$10.00
$99.00
PASSIVE LINE TO PHONO INPUT CONVERTER - ALL SMD PARTS
(NOV 16)
$5.00
MICROMITE PLUS EXPLORE 100 *COMPLETE KIT (no LCD panel)* (SEP 16) $69.90
(includes PCB, programmed micro and the hard-to-get bits including female headers, USB and microSD
sockets, crystal, etc but does not include the LCD panel)
THESE ARE ONLY THE MOST RECENT MICROS AND SPECIALISED COMPONENTS. FOR THE FULL LIST, SEE www.siliconchip.com.au/shop
*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
11/17
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS
NOTE: The listings below are for the PCB only – not a full kit. If you want a kit, contact the kit suppliers advertising in this issue.
For more unusual projects where kits are not available, some have specialised components available – see the list opposite.
NOTE: Not all PCBs are shown here due to space limits but the SILICON CHIP ONLINESHOP has boards going back to 2001 and beyond.
For a complete list of available PCBs, back issues, etc, go to siliconchip.com.au/shop Prices are PCBs only, NOT COMPLETE KITS!
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD TO SUIT PROJECT:
PUBLISHED:
PCB CODE:
Price:
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
1.5kW INDUCTION MOTOR SPEED CONTROLLER (NEW V2 PCB)DEC 2012 10105122 $35.00
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])
LED Party Strobe (also suits Hot Wire Cutter [Dec 2010])
JAN 2014
16101141
$7.50
Bass Extender Mk2
JAN 2014
01112131
$15.00
Li’l Pulser Mk2 Revised
JAN 2014
09107134
$15.00
10A 230VAC MOTOR SPEED CONTROLLER
FEB 2014
10102141
$12.50
NICAD/NIMH BURP CHARGER
MAR 2014
14103141
$15.00
RUBIDIUM FREQ. STANDARD BREAKOUT BOARD
APR 2014
04105141
$10.00
USB/RS232C ADAPTOR
APR 2014
07103141
$5.00
MAINS FAN SPEED CONTROLLER
MAY 2014
10104141
$10.00
RGB LED STRIP DRIVER
MAY 2014
16105141
$10.00
HYBRID BENCH SUPPLY
MAY 2014
18104141
$20.00
2-WAY PASSIVE LOUDSPEAKER CROSSOVER
JUN 2014
01205141
$20.00
TOUCHSCREEN AUDIO RECORDER
JUL 2014
01105141
$12.50
THRESHOLD VOLTAGE SWITCH
JUL 2014
99106141
$10.00
MICROMITE ASCII VIDEO TERMINAL
JUL 2014
24107141
$7.50
FREQUENCY COUNTER ADD-ON
JUL 2014
04105141a/b $15.00
TEMPMASTER MK3
AUG 2014
21108141
$15.00
44-PIN MICROMITE
AUG 2014
24108141
$5.00
OPTO-THEREMIN MAIN BOARD
SEP 2014
23108141
$15.00
OPTO-THEREMIN PROXIMITY SENSOR BOARD
SEP 2014
23108142
$5.00
ACTIVE DIFFERENTIAL PROBE BOARDS
SEP 2014
04107141/2 $10/SET
MINI-D AMPLIFIER
SEP 2014
01110141
$5.00
COURTESY LIGHT DELAY
OCT 2014
05109141
$7.50
DIRECT INJECTION (D-I) BOX
OCT 2014
23109141
$5.00
DIGITAL EFFECTS UNIT
OCT 2014
01110131
$15.00
DUAL PHANTOM POWER SUPPLY
NOV 2014
18112141
$10.00
REMOTE MAINS TIMER
NOV 2014
19112141
$10.00
REMOTE MAINS TIMER PANEL/LID (BLUE)
NOV 2014
19112142
$15.00
ONE-CHIP AMPLIFIER
NOV 2014
01109141
$5.00
TDR DONGLE
DEC 2014
04112141
$5.00
MULTISPARK CDI FOR PERFORMANCE VEHICLES
DEC 2014
05112141
$10.00
CURRAWONG STEREO VALVE AMPLIFIER MAIN BOARD
DEC 2014
01111141
$50.00
CURRAWONG REMOTE CONTROL BOARD
DEC 2014
01111144
$5.00
CURRAWONG FRONT & REAR PANELS
DEC 2014
01111142/3 $30/set
CURRAWONG CLEAR ACRYLIC COVER
JAN 2015
- $25.00
ISOLATED HIGH VOLTAGE PROBE
JAN 2015
04108141
$10.00
SPARK ENERGY METER MAIN BOARD
FEB/MAR 2015
05101151
$10.00
SPARK ENERGY ZENER BOARD
FEB/MAR 2015
05101152
$10.00
SPARK ENERGY METER CALIBRATOR BOARD
FEB/MAR 2015
05101153
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Ask Silicon Chip: issues with the Arduino Data Logger
I have built the Arduino Data
Logger described in the August and
September issues (siliconchip.com.
au/Series/316). I used your custom
PCB and it all works well, including
the GPS unit. I did have to overcome
a few minor hurdles to get it working, though.
Firstly, I noticed in your photos
that the wires from the GPS module
were wired to the socket on the PCB
in the same order as they emerge
from the GPS unit.
Instead I found that I had to swap
the TX and RX lines (green and
blue) on my logger to get it to work.
I also couldn’t get the serial console to work at first, until I realised
that I had to change the baud rate to
115,200 in the Arduino IDE.
I also had problems getting a
DS18B20 temperature sensor to
work at first. I wired it up to Arduino
pin D2, as shown in Fig.1 on page
28 of the August issue but I got an
error message from the software that
the sensor wasn’t found.
I had to change the line in
the code which read “OneWire
ds(DS18B20_INPUT+2);” to “OneWire ds(DS18B20_INPUT);” and
then it worked, although the temperature readings showed up in the
wrong location in the log file (in
place of the third digital input, rather
than the first).
I also connected a GY-68 Barometric Pressure Sensor to my Data Logger and used the supplied example
sketch. It all appears to work correctly and the temperature reading
is correct.
But the pressure reads in bar, for
example, “1.002” which is not particularly accurate. Is it possible to
change the sketch so that it outputs
the pressure in millibars or hectopascals to the log file?
This would give a reading like
1024.5 which is more like what is
available from weather stations or
off the web. If possible, the sketch
could be updated for download.
Thanks for a fine magazine. (C. W.,
Leumeah, NSW)
• Thanks for your feedback. Chances are, other readers will run into
similar issues.
It looks like we accidentally con110
Silicon Chip
nected the GPS TX pin to the micro’s
serial TX pin and RX to RX on our
PCB for this project, rather than TX
to RX and RX to TX like we did on
our initial protoboard version.
Swapping the order of those wires
in the header plug is the simplest
solution.
We probably should have mentioned that you need to set the
Arduino serial monitor baud rate
to 115,200.
This was used as it’s the highest
baud rate which is commonly supported and it minimises the amount
of time the Arduino spends transmitting data to the PC. We forgot that the
default for the IDE was 9600.
You can usually determine the
baud rate required for a given sketch
by looking in the setup() routine for
the call to Serial.begin().
We realise now that naming the
four digital inputs for the Data Logger D0-D3 means they can easily be
confused with the Arduino’s digital
pins D0-D3.
As explained in the article, we had
to use inputs D2-D5 because D0 and
D1 are reserved for use by the main
USB serial port.
While we show the DS18B20 connected to digital input #0 (Arduino
pin D2) in Fig.1, we actually had it
connected to digital input #2 (Arduino pin D4) on our prototype for
testing, hence, the sample sketch
contains the line:
//#define DS18B20_INPUT 2
If you’re using the DS18B20 as
shown in Fig.1, you should change
this to:
#define DS18B20_INPUT 0
We suggest you do this and change
the OneWire definition back to its
original version. You will then find
the DS18B20 temperature will be
in the correct place in the log file.
Sorry about that. Our sample sketch
should have probably set up the
DS18B20 input as #0 from the start,
to match Fig.1.
Regarding the pressure reading,
only a few lines of the code need to
be changed to give a pressure reading in hectopascals with one or two
decimal places.
Note that while the BMP180 sensor gives readings with a resolution
Celebrating 30 Years
of around one pascal, the absolute
accuracy is only around one hectopascal (depending on temperature,
altitude, etc); see the data sheet for
more details.
The first line to change reads:
// in bar
BMP180buf[log_ram_filled][1] =
bmp085GetPressure(
bmp085ReadUP()) / 101325.0;
change this to:
// in pascals
BMP180buf[log_ram_filled][1] =
bmp085GetPressure(
bmp085ReadUP());
This stores the pressure in pascals
rather than bar. Next, we change
the very end of the log format line
which reads:
static const char
LogEntryTemplate[]
PROGMEM = “%02d/%02d/
%04d,%02d:%02d:%02d,%d.
%02d,%d.%02d,%d.%02d,%d.
%02d,%d,%d,%d,%d,%d.
%01d,%d.%03d”;
to this:
static const char
LogEntryTemplate[]
PROGMEM = “%02d/%02d/
%04d,%02d:%02d:%02d,%d.
%02d,%d.%02d,%d.%02d,%d.
%02d,%d,%d,%d,%d,%d.
%01d,%d.%02d”;
This sets the number of decimal
places for the pressure reading to
two.
Then where it writes the pressure into the log, we change these
two lines:
,(int)BMP180buf
[log_ram_filled - 1][1]
,(int)((int)(BMP180buf
[log_ram_filled - 1][1] * 1000))
% 1000
to this:
,(int)(BMP180buf
[log_ram_filled-1][1] / 100)
,(int)((long)BMP180buf
[log_ram_filled-1][1] % 100)
This converts the value in pascals
to hectopascals by dividing by 100
for the integer portion and computes
the modulus 100 for the two decimal places.
We’ve tested this program and it
works well. This new example script
will be available for download from
our website.
SC
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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
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siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
November 2017 111
Next Month in Silicon Chip
Electromagnetic Launchers and Rail Guns
Dr David Maddison takes a look at these devices which are starting to
take over launch duties on aircraft carriers and may eventually replace the
guns on navy ships. They offer significant advantages for aircraft launching
compared to steam catapults and as weapons, offer the possibility of
a potent weapon with a much smaller weight and size compared to a
traditional gun.
Super-7 AM Radio part two
We’ll present the PCB design for the Super-7 AM radio and go through the
assembly, testing and set-up/alignment procedure for this radio. We will
also show you how to assemble the custom-made Acrylic case.
nRF24L01+ 2.4GHz Wireless Data Transceiver Modules
Jim Rowe describes the operation of these 2Mbps digital radio modules with
software that lets you communicate with a pair of Arduino or Micromite modules.
This article was held over from last month due to space constraints.
WiFi Water Tank Level Meter and Weather Station
This project uses a commercially available pressure sensor and ESP8266
controller board to upload water tank level, temperature, humidity and
barometric pressure periodically to “the cloud”. You can check the data and
plot it in graphs from a smart phone, tablet or PC from just about anywhere.
It’s solar powered and easy to build and set up.
Temperature-based Proportional Fan Controller
This design is simple and compact yet very useful. It can control a small or
large fan to cool a computer, automobile or even house - whatever you need
to force air through. It switches the fan on and adjusts its speed depending
on a temperature reading and also includes a low-battery switch-off feature
with extremely low quiescent current.
Note: these features are prepared or are in preparation for publication and
barring unforeseen circumstances, will be in the next issue.
The December 2017 issue is due on sale in newsagents by Thursday, November
23rd. Expect postal delivery of subscription copies in Australia between
November 23rd and December 15th.
Advertising Index
Accelerated Concepts.................... 8
Altronics................................ FLYER
Dave Thompson......................... 111
Digi-Key Electronics....................... 5
element14...................................... 7
Embedded Logic Solutions.......... 16
Emona Instruments.................... IBC
ERNTEC Pty Ltd.......................... 14
Freetronics................................... 13
H K Wentworth / Electrolube........ 12
Hare & Forbes............................. 2-3
Jaycar............................... IFC,53-60
KCS Trade.................................... 79
Keith Rippon Kit Assembly......... 111
Keysight Technologies.............. OBC
LEACH Co Ltd.............................. 15
LD Electronics............................ 111
LEDsales.................................... 111
Master Instruments...................... 23
Microchip Technology.............. 17,91
Mouser Electronics....................... 11
Ocean Controls............................ 10
Pakronics..................................... 16
PCBcart...................................... 81
Rohde & Schwarz.......................... 9
Sesame Electronics................... 111
SC Online Shop.................. 108-109
SC Radio, TV & Hobbies DVD.... 105
Silicon Chip Subscriptions........ 103
Tronixlabs................................... 111
Vintage Radio Repairs............... 111
WAGO.......................................... 63
Notes & Errata
GPS-Synchronised Analog Clock Driver, February 2017: another bug has been identified in the sweep hands versionSC
of the software. Its output drive waveforms were not always correct and this caused weak output drive and potentially
slow operation. A new version of the firmware, v1.4, is now available for download from the Silicon Chip website which
solves this.
Deluxe Touchscreen eFuse (July, August & October 2017): a couple of changes need to be made to prevent false
tripping and rebooting. First, change the two 4.7kW resistors to 100kW. Then, add two 220pF capacitors. The first one
goes between the base (middle pin) of Q2 and the nearby ground point, where the adjacent 30kW resistor connects to
the large ground trace. This can be mounted on the underside of the PCB. The second 220pF capacitor is similarly connected between the base of Q4 and ground; the top end of the nearby 100nF bypass capacitor for REG3 can be used
(it’s connected to the middle pin of REG3 by a track on the top side).
Li-ion and LiPo Charger Modules, August 2017: on page 44, the article refers to red LED2 and green LED1. It should
instead refer to red LED1 and green LED2, to be consistent with the circuit diagram (Fig.1) on the following page.
3-Way Active Stereo Crossover for Loudspeakers, August-September 2017: 38 1kW SMD resistors are required,
not 37 as stated in the parts list on page 34 of the September issue.
0.01Hz - 6GHz+ Touchscreen Frequency Meter, Part 1, October 2017: on pages 28 & 29 timer 2/3 and timer 4/5 should
be swapped with regards to their explanation. The block and circuit diagram are both correct.
112
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
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