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Celebrating 30 Years
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Contents
Vol.31, No.2; February 2018
Features & Reviews
14 Turning your garbage into useful electricity
Most garbage still goes to landfill – but in many cities around the world, it’s used
as fuel for boilers to generate power. There are at least two firm proposals to do
so here in Australia, if the NIMBYs don’t scuttle the plans – by Ross Tester
30 We review: Navman’s DriveDuo – Satnav AND Dashcam
SILICON
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Thousands
of cities
around the
world are
generating
power from
rubbish –
Page 14
After a less-than-stellar performance with our last Satnav, we were more than
pleasantly surprised by the DriveDuo. It combines a state-of-the-art Satnav with
a very high performance Dashcam – and does both very well – by Leo Simpson
44 El Cheapo Modules 13: sensing motion and moisture
Two very different modules this month: first is a motion sensor that uses
microwaves instead of the normal infrared; second is a soil moisture
measurement system for pot plants, gardens, etc – by Jim Rowe
Constructional Projects
20 A Water Tank Level Meter with WiFi and More!
Got a water tank? Want to know how much water is in it? This one not only
tells you (anywhere on Earth, via WiFi) it can also log all the details for you.
But wait, there’s more: it also has inbuilt weather reporting – by Nicholas Vinen
Using
low-cost
modules,
this water tank depth
gauge relays its data via WiFi, along
with current weather – Page 20
36 6-Element VHF TV Yagi to kill UHF 4G interference
If you’re still using a VHF/UHF antenna in metro areas, chances are you’re also
picking up a lot of unwanted 5ubbish from the now-vacated UHF TV bands. This
VHF-only TV antenna is what you need! – by Leo Simpson
64 Highly versatile & accurate dot/bar 10-LED Bargraph
With the venerable LM391X series now getting difficult (if not impossible) to
obtain we developed this 10-LED display module to take their place. It can
display log, linear, VU or PPM signals in dot or bar form – by John Clarke
The Navman DriveDuo is more
than a SatNav; it’s more than a
dashcam. It’s both – in one highperformance package – Page 30
83 The Arduino Mega Box Music Player revisited
The Mega Box concept (Dec17/Jan18) has proved popular, but we thought
it needed some refinement. So we added a music player, made provision for
remote control and updated the software. Now it really sings! – by Bao Smith
Your Favourite Columns
57 Serviceman’s Log
Smart TVs can be pretty dumb sometimes – by Dave Thompson
78 Circuit Notebook
Old-style multi-band (VHF/UHF)
TV antennas can be plagued by
annoying 4G interference on UHF
– if you’re in a metro area (VHF only)
build this Yagi Antenna – it simply
won’t receive UHF! – Page 36
(1) Vintage car logbook reminder with temperature and clock display
(2) PICAXE roulette wheel simulator using 7-segment displays
(3) Active probe uses switched capacitor charge pump
(4) OLED clock gets its time from the internet using NTP
87 Vintage Radio
A more detailed look at the 1919/20 Grebe Synchrophase – by Ian Batty
Everything Else!
2
4
94
100
Editorial Viewpoint
103 Market Centre
Mailbag – Your Feedback
104 Advertising Index
Ask SILICON CHIP
104 Notes and Errata
SILICON CHIP Online Shop
The Grebe Synchrophase
is so exceptional that it
warrants a detailed analysis, with
its performance rivalling some of
the finest superheterodyne sets
of the period – Page 87.
www.facebook.com/siliconchipmagazine
SILICON
SILIC
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Publisher
Leo Simpson, B.Bus., FAICD
Yet another threat to surfing the net
Derby Street, Silverwater, NSW 2148.
Just as this issue was going to press, news broke about a
number of related vulnerabilities in Intel and compatible
CPUs. Known as “Spectre” and “Meltdown”, they allow
untrusted programs to read sensitive data.
These vulnerabilities exist in pretty much every desktop and laptop PC in use today and some tablets and
phones may also be affected. And there’s a problem with
the timing of this news because companies like Microsoft
had hoped to release fixes before these problems became
public knowledge. But now the cat is out of the bag.
While it should be possible to change operating systems to prevent malware
from exploiting these flaws, those changes are likely to degrade overall system
performance. Some estimates are that this could slow down your computer as
much as 30% but recent bulletins from companies like Apple suggest that this
won’t be the case.
So what can you do? Well, if you’re paranoid or dealing with top-secret information, you could stop using your computer until updates are available. However, at any given time, it’s virtually guaranteed that someone, somewhere knows
about a flaw in your operating system (whether it’s Windows, Linux, Mac OS or
something else) that could be exploited to access your private data.
These do eventually come to light and eventually they are patched. But there
may be a window of days, months or even years during which malicious parties
can take advantage of them to create viruses, worms, trojans and other assorted
nasties.
Unless you become a hermit and live in a cave in the mountains, I’m not sure
that you can ever be be completely safe from such flaws. You could keep a separate computer to use only for sensitive tasks (banking and so on), and keep it unplugged from the internet most of the time. That may not make you 100% safe
but it would probably help. But you would still need to keep the software on that
machine up-to-date.
So why didn’t anybody discover Spectre or Meltdown before? Apparently these
problems have existed in Intel CPUs as early as 1995 and possibly even earlier
but they are quite subtle flaws and difficult to exploit.
I do not think it’s very likely that we will see actual malware taking advantage
of these, especially now that operating systems are being desperately patched.
But I could be wrong.
Explaining the actual mechanism behind these flaws is difficult for all but the
most advanced programmers to understand. In brief, they take advantage of the
fact that you can get the processor to execute instructions which occur after accessing restricted memory, even though that access will trigger a fault interrupt.
This is due to the “speculative execution” mechanism built into modern CPUs
in order to speed them up.
While the CPU correctly discards the results of these invalid instructions, it
still has to spend time executing them and by arranging for them to have a certain
delay, then measuring that delay, it is possible to infer the contents of memory
that a process does not actually have permission to access. That memory could
belong to any process, including the kernel, and could contain sensitive data
such as passwords.
Researchers have created software which takes advantage of this to read normally inaccessible memory. However, as I said above, I still think (or is that hope?)
it’s too difficult to use in actual malware. Time will tell if I am right.
More than anything else, these revelations indicate just how easy it is for a potentially serious security flaw to escape notice for many years. For most people,
the best they can do it make sure that their computer always has the latest updates
– and don’t ever click on attachments in emails from people that you don’t know.
ISSN 1030-2662
Recommended & maximum price only.
Nicholas Vinen
Editor
Nicholas Vinen
Technical Editor
John Clarke, B.E.(Elec.)
Technical Staff
Ross Tester
Jim Rowe, B.A., B.Sc
Bao Smith, B.Sc
Photography
Ross Tester
Reader Services
Ann Morris
Advertising Enquiries
Glyn Smith
Phone (02) 9939 3295
Mobile 0431 792 293
glyn<at>siliconchip.com.au
Regular Contributors
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PhD, Grad.Dip.Entr.Innov.
Geoff Graham
Associate Professor Graham Parslow
Ian Batty
Cartoonist
Brendan Akhurst
SILICON CHIP is published 12 times
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Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
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”.
Rapid changes in electronics leave
newcomers behind
After working in the electronics industry for more than 25 years I have
seen massive changes and in people’s
attitudes as to what an electronics
whiz actually is.
I have been lucky to progress as a
technician, from working on the bench
repairing Apple computers to component level (yes here in Australia with
Triad/AWA-TES) to now installing and
servicing underground voice communication systems in mines.
Some of our older guys may regard
this as simply being a “board jockey”. I
now spend very little time now on the
bench with a multimeter and scope, to
repair the odd bit that no one else can
or dare do, as repairs aren’t what they
used to be; that’s for sure!
After looking up Google and reading articles in other magazines, it
seems that today’s “electronics whiz”
thinks that they can get a Raspberry
Pi, whack a few modules together,
then just tap on the keyboard to code
up some XOR and AND algorithms
(I/Os to keep things simple for them)
and make a useless toy car move across
the floor.
Yet people may see this as an amazing achievement of an electronic whiz!
This is where I have concerns for the
future of actual electronics. These keyboard tappers that make things move
and flash don’t understand how electronics work and the small number of
real electronics technicians are shrinking, as these ‘’electronics whiz” kids
don’t actually learn and understand
how to fix a bench power supply, apart
from replacing a blown fuse.
I understand people must start
somewhere and we are in a disposable world today. We still need to keep
things in perspective though, to try to
keep this hobby and/or trade alive.
I would like to thank my father for
my development in the electronics
hobby and working career. That has
developed further with Silicon Chip
over the last 30 years and I’m so glad
that you have evolved for the true
4
Silicon Chip
hobbyist, technicians and keyboard
tappers alike, with greater depth and
understanding.
You keep explaining why and how
analog and digital circuits work with
real applications; much better than
Googling through 1000s of rubbish
pages just to find one good application.
To sum it all up, thank you Silicon
Chip, for keeping it real for all of the
real electronics whizzes out there.
Mats Nilsson,
Blaxland, NSW.
Comment: Thanks for your enthusiastic endorsement, Mats. It is much
appreciated.
You are right in that many of today’s hobbyists often do not have the
detailed insights into electronic components that older readers will have
obtained from their fathers or local
technicians or from dabbling with old
radios and other electronic bits and
pieces. It is also true that very few
schools today give any insight into the
wonderful world of electronics.
However, electronics has always
been subject to rapid changes and we
regard the apparent preoccupation of
today’s younger readers, with Arduino,
Raspberry Pi and other single-board
computers such as our own Micromite/
Maximite designs, as an opportunity.
So Silicon Chip can and does provide detailed information on the very
cheap modules which are now available and which can be combined with
Arduinos etc in really useful applications rather than simply flashing a
few LEDs, sounding a buzzer or operating a relay.
And in providing this information, it
gives readers the potential to become
much more knowledgeable in their
electronics hobby. After all, these very
cheap modules are really just a step up
from integrated circuits, aren’t they?
The Publisher’s Letter in the October
2016 issue covered this theme.
Superhet patent situation is complex
My letter is regarding Peter Hadgraft’s comment “Superheterodyne
principle was developed by multiple
Celebrating 30 Years
people” (Mailbag, January 2018 issue,
page 11).
In Armstrong’s paper “A NEW SYSTEM OF SHORT WAVE AMPLIFICATION” (presented before the Institute
of Radio Engineers, New York, December 3, 1919), Armstrong specifically acknowledges the work of Levy
and others:
“The new practice of this method
involves the use of many known inventions, but in connection with the
production of a superaudible frequency by heterodyning I wish to make
due acknowledgment to the work of
Meissner, Round, and Levy, which is
now of record.
The application of the principle to
the reception of short waves is, I believe, new and it is for this reason that
this paper is presented.”
“Heterodyne” reception, that is,
generating an audible signal from an
inaudible CW Morse transmission by
means of using a separately generated carrier to produce a beat tone, was
already a well-established technique.
For all their inherent vices, spark
transmitters had the virtue of producing a clear and pleasant “note” in the
receiver earphones.
Later continuous-carrier devices
such as Alexanderson alternators and
Poulsen arcs gave far more bang for
the buck (efficiency-wise) but Morse
transmissions from those, consisting of
bursts of unmodulated carrier, could
only be heard as feeble clicks.
Various techniques were devised to
overcome this problem. Some Alexanderson alternators were constructed
with two generators on the same shaft
producing carrier frequencies about
3kHz apart which produced an audible “heterodyne” in the receiver. Others attempted to use miniature Poulsen
arc generators in the receiving station
to generate the heterodyne.
Later, when practical valve receivers became available, the familiar Beat
siliconchip.com.au
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Take the dive at www.scope-of-the-art.com/ad/all
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Multi
Domain
Frequency Oscillator (BFO) made
these techniques obsolete.
Operators already knew that if the
BFO frequency was moved too far from
the carrier frequency, the heterodyne
became “supersonic” and no longer
audible.
However, it was Armstrong who realised that if a standard low-frequency
TRF receiver was connected in place
of the receiver headphones, it should
be possible to achieve useful amplification of so-called “short-wave” signals (meaning anything above about
200kHz).
You have to remember that a lot of
what we now see as major technological breakthroughs were not really appreciated at the time they were
patented. It’s only when a technology
becomes profitable years later that
competitors start sniffing around for
ways to invalidate potentially inconvenient patents.
Also, many dubious decisions about
patent validity have been made by
non-technical judiciary in ordinary
courtrooms. Patents eventually expire
and are forgotten but the imaginative
stories spun in courtrooms seem to
have no such expiry date!
In particular, at the time of Armstrong’s invention, “Short Waves”
were considered practically useless
for “serious” communication work;
the broadcasting blitzkrieg to come
lay five years in the future.
www.americanradiohistory.com
has a huge collection of early radio
magazines, some dating back to the
early 20th century, all available for
free download.
In particular, there’s an almost complete collection of “Wireless World”
dating back to 1912 but none of the
major technological advances that
took place between then and the 1920s
seems to rate a mention!
Keith Walters,
Riverstone, NSW.
Don’t power Graphic Equaliser from
same transformer as amplifier
I have completed the 10-Octave
Stereo Graphic Equaliser you published in the June and July 2017 issues (siliconchip.com.au/Series/313).
I put it in an enclosure together with
the LED VU Meter from the June and
July 2016 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/301).
The input of the Equaliser is coming
from my AV amp pre-out. The output
6
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
of the equaliser is feeding my Ultra-LD
Mk.4 Amplifier (July-October 2015;
siliconchip.com.au/Series/289) which
drives my KEF speakers.
The equaliser power supply comes
directly from the 15-0-15 output of the
toroidal transformer in the amp; the
same winding that feeds the power
supply module.
The connection between the two
enclosures uses three non-shielded
wires. The reason I have done it this
way is so that the Equaliser and VU
Meter are switched on and off with the
amplifier and I do not need a separate
plugpack or DC supply.
When everything is connected per
described, I noticed some kind of continuous noise in the speakers with no
input signal (and volume at the minimum). If I disconnect the VU Meter
from the output of the 7815 regulator
on the Equaliser board, I notice a significant reduction of the noise in the
speaker. However, I still hear a lowfrequency noise.
I noticed that regardless of which
of the three inputs are selected on the
Ultra-LD Mk.4 amplifier, the noise remains the same. This makes me think
it’s some kind of ground loop or bad
connection. If I play some music it becomes inaudible but I want to get rid
of it totally.
I tried powering the Equaliser from
the 20V DC output of the Ultra-LD
Mk.4 power supply but it made no difference to the noise. If I use a separate
AC plugpack to power the Equaliser,
it almost totally eliminates the noise
(I can still hear it if I press my ear up
to the speaker but it’s more than acceptable).
I also tried unplugging the two RCA
cables from the pre-out of my AV receiver that feeds the Ultra-LD Amplifier and the remaining noise completely disappears! In that case, no
matter what the volume is set at, my
speakers are absolutely dead silent
with the Equaliser on. It works perfectly when I feed some music via the
CLASSiC DAC.
So we can conclude that the Equaliser should be powered from a separate
supply, not from the same transformer
that is powering the amplifier.
However, I clearly have still some
kind of ground loop involving my AV
receiver. There is an earth connection
at the back of its enclosure which I do
not use. Perhaps I need to connect it
to something.
siliconchip.com.au
The AV receiver power supply plug
only has two pins (ie, no earth). I will
try connecting the receiver earth to
the amplifier chassis. But for now, the
problem is solved.
Olivier Aubertin,
Singapore.
Monitoring electricity consumption
using Beaglebone
Regarding the letter on page 98 of the
December 2017 issue, about an energy meter to monitor the whole house;
I am doing this using a Beaglebone
Black as it has analog inputs, unlike
the Raspberry Pi.
I am running Linux on it and using
a Python script to monitor the output
of a 50A to 5V DC split core current
transducer. A plot showing the usage
is reproduced below.
In this, you can see the power drawn
by my kettle (tall spikes), spa pump
(between 12:00 and 14:30), oven (17:45
to 18:45), plus two fridges (which look
like oscillations in the baseline).
From my perspective, the disturbing
component is that the current never
falls below 1A. That’s 5.8kWh each
day, nominally a third of the day’s usage, doing what? My guess is that it’s
my laptops, internet modem, chargers,
central heating on standby, security
system and other appliances drawing
phantom power.
I do not monitor the phase of the current with respect to the supply voltage
so I apply a small fudge factor so that
the integral of the graph approximates
the electricity meter readings.
Andrew Goss,
Northcote, Vic.
The Ultra-LD Mk.4 amplifier as a school
project
My name is Christopher Morton
and I am the Electronics Technician at
Scotch College in Melbourne, Victoria.
Part of my job role at Scotch College
is to find and develop items for the
school curriculum specifically relating to electronics.
We currently purchase and make
a number of kits (which incorporate
through-hole components) that have
been showcased in your magazine
through various suppliers (Jaycar &
Altronics).
As technology improves, so does the
manufacturing methods involved in
these processes, to which end we are
interested in bringing some of these
“new” technologies into the classroom,
one of these being the use and repair of
SMDs (Surface Mount Devices).
As more and more devices in this
world rely heavily upon this method
of manufacturing, we feel that moving the next generation of thinkers
and doers in this direction is a good
first step in keeping up with emerging
technologies.
We propose to have several hundred
boards made for your Ultra-LD Mk.4
Amplifier, featured in the September
2015 issue of your magazine, along
with solder paste stencils, so that our
students can build them as part of their
coursework next year.
We are also interested in a smaller
project (15 to 18 components 1206 in
size) for some of the junior year groups
(Years 7 & 8) and would appreciate any
recommendations. We currently build
a through-hole flip-flop flasher circuit
and would be interested in developing
this into SMD version.
Christopher Morton,
Scotch College,
Hawthorn, Vic.
Response: we are happy to see that
you want to use one of our projects at
your school. Thanks for supporting
our magazine and the kit set suppliers. Please keep in mind that some of
the transistors for the Ultra-LD Mk.4
project are now difficult to obtain. We
have found possible alternatives but
we have not tested them in the design.
These are the Rohm IMT4T108
(PNP; similar to HN3A51F) and IMX8T108 (NPN; similar to HN3C51F).
They are still available although they
are indicated as “not for new designs”.
We have some HN3A51F and
HN3C51F in our Online Shop but our
stock is not sufficient for your needs, so
we suggest you build an Ultra-LD Mk.4
amplifier using the Rohm transistors
and verify it works before proceeding.
We have produced a few projects
which would suit your year 7 and
8 students. For example, the USB
chargers in the July 2015 and September 2015 issues (siliconchip.com.
au/Series/292), the 2 x 5W mini amplifier from the November 2014 issue
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/8064)
and the Digital Sound Effects Module from the September 2012 issue
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/537).
The MiniSwitcher regulator from
February 2012 also includes a number of large SMDs (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/774) as well as some throughhole components.
We will consider producing more
projects in future which provide a
gentle introduction to SMDs. They
should be good for beginners who may
not be used to working with surface
mount parts.
Incidentally, if you want large quantities of our PCB, we offer significant
discounts for bulk orders on the Silicon Chip Online Store.
Electrolytic corrosion should not occur
in hot water heaters
Regarding the letter titled “Preventing corrosion in solar-boosted hot water systems” in the Mailbag section of
the December 2017 issue (page 5), all
electric storage hot water tanks have
Monitoring electricity consumption using Beaglebone
8
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
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Silicon Chip
Binders
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Are your copies of SILICON
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their heating elements housed within a sealed, non-corrodible metallic
sheath.
Therefore it does not matter what
the nature of the electrical supply is,
provided the appropriate AC or DC element is used.
I do remember porcelain electric hot
water jugs having an exposed wiretype element. However, I do not recall seeing any corrosion of the two
brass conductors supporting the submerged element.
Notwithstanding the above, under
certain conditions for AC (and to a
greater extent, DC), electricity will
cause accelerated corrosion. For example, steel in a corrosive environment
such as an uncoated steel earthing
electrode in moist soil will naturally
corrode over time.
However, if this electrode is connected to an earthing system and is
passing AC current, it will experience
accelerated corrosion.
The rate of this corrosion would be
only of the order of 2% of the corrosion produced by the equivalent direct
current (DC).
Dick Webster,
Port Melbourne, Vic.
Using Raspberry Pi to monitor house
electricity consumption
In the Ask Silicon Chip section of
the December 2017 issue, there was a
question regarding “Energy Meter required to monitor whole house”.
I am running software called “emoncms” (http://emoncms.org) on a Raspberry Pi with emonTx V3 (https://
shop.openenergymonitor.com/sensornodes/) electricity monitor which uses
clip-on current sensors, installed in
the meter box.
I am on a rural property which has
reasonably frequent blackouts, so I
monitor the network feed (to monitor our total draw), the feed to the
house (to monitor the draw from the
house), the feed to the shed (to monitor the draw from the shed) and the
feed from the standby generator (to
monitor generator usage when we
have a blackout).
I have also reserved a current sensor to monitor solar panels (when I get
those installed).
The emonTx measures current every
eight seconds and sends the data wirelessly to the emoncms software running on the Raspberry Pi.
There is heaps of information available, the web interface works well and
there is even an app for your phone.
Lots of documentation is available on
the website and in the general community. I’m a bit of a fan of the Raspberry
Pi and love this practical usage of it.
I have attached a screenshot of the
MyElectric web app that shows current and historical usage (in watts;
there is also a $/hour option). What
more could you need? There are also
apps for MySolar, MyHeatpump and
MySolar&Wind.
These binders will protect your
copies of SILICON CHIP. They
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Silicon Chip Publications
PO Box 139
Collaroy Beach 2097
Order online from www.
siliconchip.com.au/Shop/4
or call (02) 9939 3295 and
quote your credit card number. *See website for overseas prices.
10
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
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It’s definitely worth a look if you
want to measure and monitor your
power usage.
You can see an example screengrab
of the program running below.
Al Lockyer,
Kangaroo Valley, NSW.
Going off-grid not economic at the
moment
Dick Smith, in his email published
in Mailbag in the January 2018 issue
(on page 4), posed two questions in
his first sentence: Is it worth having
solar and batteries? Is it worth going
off-grid (assuming the grid is easily
accessible)?
Where the grid is available, for most
people it is uneconomic to go off-grid
at any typical level of domestic consumption, be that 2kWh per day or
20kWh. All that is saved is the standing charge, say $1/day. This has to pay
for extra batteries to store the energy
for when there is inadequate sunlight,
and for a suitably sized inverter to meet
maximum demand.
Assuming 2kWh/day (ie, minimal
energy use) and five days of storage,
a 10kWh deep discharge battery is required. Currently, this will cost at least
$3650 with a possible lifetime of 10
years – ie, $1/day. Thus there are no
savings and this does not take into account that the $3650 could otherwise
be invested.
For more realistic domestic situations, the battery cost goes up but the
savings don’t. The equation changes if
there is a backup generator but it may
not improve the economics.
A generator can reduce the amount
of storage needed for those overcast
days but a smaller battery capacity
requires increased daily depth of discharge which will reduce the battery
life. Also, there will be fuel costs and
mechanical wear of the generator.
That said, any off-grid system that
doesn’t include a generator is running
a risk. My grid-connected system was
struck by lightning and had to be replaced completely. This would be a
minor inconvenience for a grid-connected house but a big problem with
an off-grid situation.
There is plenty of information about
the economics of installing solar panels
and batteries for domestic use so I don’t
think it is necessary to discuss it here.
A problem exists that some of the
cost of the grid is built into electricity
tariffs. Power stations are generating
siliconchip.com.au
less electricity than previously, so the
grid is costing more per kWh generated and this is passed to the customer.
Customers then have the incentive
to generate more of their own power,
leading to a feedback loop with grid
usage heading downward and cost of
electricity per unit going up.
If the trend continues, a point will
be reached where it is economic to go
off-grid. Those that can will, and the
cost of electricity to those who can’t
will sky-rocket. That would be catastrophic.
A possible solution is the one used
for water and sewerage. If it is available, you are charged for it regardless
of whether you use it or not.
This should increase the standing
charge and reduce the cost of electricity
per kWh and may change the economics of domestic generation and storage.
Economics could then favour the electricity generators investing in solar and
batteries with huge economies of scale
compared to domestic systems.
A possible future base load battery
technology is the liquid metal battery.
It operates at temperatures unsuitable
for a domestic battery but has very
desirable characteristics otherwise.
Because the components are liquid,
there is no deterioration with repeated
charge/discharge cycles and the batteries should have an indefinite lifetime.
The components are cheap, the basic technology is simple and it should
scale well. Unfortunately, due to patents, only one company is developing
these and they don’t seem to be making much progress. Hopefully, this is a
temporary roadblock and MWh-scale
batteries are coming.
I am in the throes of building an offgrid system for a bush block. It can be
done relatively cheaply if one looks
for bargains. I purchased 1kW of second-hand 24V solar panels for a little
over $200.
These charge 9.6kWh of flooded
Nicad batteries that were part of a
backup system 15 years ago and purchased for a few hundred dollars. They
had little use and work well, although
I haven’t tested their capacity.
There is no charge control at the
moment, the panels are manually disconnected when charged. With flooded Nicad, some overcharging is not
a problem and just requires the addition of distilled water. Before buying the 24V panels, I was using several small 12V panels and a 12V 1kW
Celebrating 30 Years
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Prices are subjected to change without notice.
February 2018 11
Latronics inverter made in Australia. I am upgrading to a
24V 3kW inverter.
It took me a while to decide whether to buy a cheaper inverter or one with a good pedigree. I decided to buy
another Latronics inverter despite the cost, based on the
performance of the 1kW unit.
Most inverters I’ve looked at use a switchmode power
supply to generate a high DC voltage, then use PWM and
inductive filters to generate the AC output.
The Latronics inverter switches the battery voltage directly, feeding a transformer that generates the AC. This
is a simpler method and appears to be more robust. It incorporates its own circuit breaker so an external one is
not required, it will withstand 100% overload for short
periods and is unaffected by power factor.
Latronics quote an expected lifetime of over 20 years
and also provide a repair service should it fail. The backup
is a 3500W inverter generator that cost $400 new and has
done good work powering the tools to build the infrastructure for the solar system. Hopefully, in a few months, I’ll
be enjoying a cold beer straight from the fridge.
Alan Cashin,
Islington, NSW.
Comments on September issue
Thank you for another interesting issue of Silicon Chip.
I noticed that the Publisher’s Letter is gone and replaced
with the Editorial Viewpoint from Nicholas. I assume that
this is a permanent change.
I believe that the view of Nicholas Vinen in the Editorial
Viewpoint is rather conservative, to say the least. Without
a massive increase in electricity production and/or a major reduction in domestic and industrial electricity consumption, there will be trouble.
I can understand the problems with pollution but that is
generally a problem in major cities. I would have thought
that the obvious solution would be to ban most internal
combustion engines from the cities and require pedal power, electric vehicles, and public transport.
I am always puzzled by how “intelligent” people come
to stupid decisions. Perhaps I am stupid in assuming that
they are intelligent.
Thank you again for another nice general interest article on Cassini, by Ross Tester. It was interesting and it
reminded me of the extreme effort that goes into designing such a machine and its operation. I always wonder
if even technical people have any idea of the complexity. To quote a saying from an ex-POW camp prisoner, “If
you haven’t supped from the same cup, you cannot know
the taste of it.”
The article prompted me to have another look at the
control of Cassini. In the process, I stumbled across a book
by Nils Nilsson titled “The Quest For Artificial Intelligence” (2010) which is published as both a physical book
and a free PDF. The link to the PDF is: http://ai.stanford.
edu/~nilsson/QAI/qai.pdf
It is a fascinating book but be aware that there is some
heavy mathematics in parts. Even so, Nils Nilsson does
try to make it readable for most people. The most noticeable thing in the book is the number of ideas, techniques,
and theories that were discovered before computers became readily available.
Not wishing to diminish the value of those discover12
Silicon Chip
ies, it must be stated that they were of little use generally
until electronics made modern computers possible. Currently, there is an emphasis on the ability to write software. It has been forgotten that electronics is as important
if not more so.
I was surprised to see a letter I wrote late last year published in the August issue (in Mailbag, on page 10-11). I
thought that it had been discarded. I still dislike the idea of
the “Internet of Things”. But I must admit there are a few
of things around the house that I wouldn’t mind being able
to check remotely and I do not mean away from my home.
If I am not in my laundry, I can only guess the state of
the washing machine and the same applies to the microwave cooker when I am not in the kitchen. And occasionally I forget to close and lock the side door of my garage.
It would be nice to be able to check it when I am in bed in
winter without having to get up and look. In fact, it would
be nice to have several doors and windows fitted with the
appropriate sensors.
One problem with many appliances is that they have
no status port. It may be possible to hook into their internal circuitry but there is the obvious danger of mains
voltages being present.
The alternative is to mount external sensors that either
detect the state of indicator LEDs or can identify the beeps
that indicate cycle end and faults. That is what I did some
years ago when I was working at the university.
I had bought some measuring equipment which I wanted to integrate into an automatic scanning system. I could
easily trigger the start of a measurement but there was no
signal available to indicate completion.
But then I noticed that completion was indicated by
the activation of a small square on the screen of the
computer that controlled the measuring equipment. So,
I mounted a phototransistor in front of the square and
was able to detect the measurement completion and
start a new cycle.
Considering, the awkwardness of mounting a phototransistor, I think that the easiest solution would be to
detect beeps. Using an LM567 tone decoder and setting
it to the frequency of the beeps, detection and decoding
would be simple operations. All I have to do is get motivated and do it.
George Ramsay,
Holland Park. Qld.
Response: thanks for your feedback. As you can see in the
November issue, Leo will still be writing the occasional
Publisher’s Letter. We sometimes have to hold on to letters
for a couple of months if we don’t have space to fit them
in the magazine. We try to avoid delaying them for many
months, especially if they are topical.
Maximum theoretical efficiency for Class-A amplifier disputed
In the September 2017 issue on page 103, Ian Batty
made a claim for “Class A’s theoretical maximum of 50%
efficiency”.
If you want maximum undistorted output, sine or square
wave, the DC quiescent point of the output must be 0.5VCC.
Assuming 50% duty cycle for the square wave, and that
the output can swing rail-to-rail, without a great deal of
maths, the maximum power output can be shown to be
VCC2 ÷ (8 × Rload).
If you want maximum power transfer (Jacobi theorem),
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
the output impedance of the amplifier must equal Rload.
Then, ignoring currents flowing in the base and the base
biasing chain, input power = VCC2 ÷ (2 × Rload). So, maximum efficiency = 2 ÷ 8 = 25%. If you design the transistor base bias resistor string to carry 10% of the collector
current, then maximum efficiency falls to ~23%.
In the early days of germanium transistor amplifier design, for distortion and power supply regulation reasons,
achieving rail-to-rail output voltage swing was considered
impossible. Fritz Langford-Smith makes a similar statement about Class A valve amplifier design.
So, the 13% averaged efficiency Ian Batty found is not
all that bad, although had he taken the current flow in the
base bias string into account (5% of collector current),
he would have found efficiency = 12%, ie, a little lower.
Still, a commercial set achieving around 50% of theoretical maximum was pretty good in those days.
If you worship the Jacobi maximum power transfer notion, regulation is 50%. If you want better regulation, then
the amplifier’s output impedance must be much lower, resulting in higher collector, base and base bias string currents and hence, even lower efficiency.
Classes B and AB achieve higher efficiency because
there is almost zero quiescent collector current; and in
these classes, lower output impedance does not result in
raised base or biasing string currents.
The way electricity distribution authorities achieve low
regulation is via very low generator impedance compared
with the load impedance. However, what is the maximum
power distribution efficiency?
I find this claim for 50% efficiency of Class A amplifiers proliferates all over the internet and was repeated in
one of Fred Swainston’s books, with absolutely no support whatever. I think it’s a furphy.
Brian Clarke,
BE, PhD, AOCP, BOCP, CPEng, Fellow IEAust,
via email.
Comment: we don’t agree with this analysis for a number
of reasons. Firstly, maximum power transfer theory is not
applicable in the case of an audio amplifier.
In fact, it isn’t applicable in any real-world situation
that we know of. The reason is that if your source impedance equals your load impedance, by definition 50% of
your power is dissipated in your source and that’s an unacceptable inefficiency in virtually any real-world situation.
For this reason and to provide a reasonable damping
factor, if you look at virtually any audio (or RF) amplifier,
you will find the source impedance is very much lower
than the load impedance.
Our 20W Class-A amplifier module design, published
in the May-September 2007 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/58), will deliver a low distortion sinewave of up to
25W into an 8W load with a quiescent power of just under
50W (1.12A from a ±22V supply).
That’s pretty close to the 50% theoretical efficiency that
Ian Batty mentioned; clearly, the limit is not 25% or else
our amplifier would not work.
Yes, our design is significantly more complex than the
audio amplification section of the Philips MT4 Swingalong. But simulations of that circuit show that under the
right conditions and with modern components, the exact
circuit configuration Philips used is capable of efficiency
in excess of 25%.
SC
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Celebrating 30 Years
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February 2018 13
MAKING POWER
FROM RUBBISH
What do you do with a city’s garbage and refuse? You send it off to landfill, of course.
Well, until now that has been what most cities have done. But landfills fill up – and
these days, can be politically incorrect. But (and it’s a big but!) that could all be about
to change, with many cities using garbage as fuel for electricity generation.
T
he photo above shows the Isséane refuse station in
the heart of Paris, France, just 5km from the Eiffel
Tower. You can see only about 21m of the building’s
height – the remaining 31m are underground.
In some ways, it’s not too dissimilar to those waste transfer stations you’d find in Australian cities: somewhere that
garbage trucks pull in, empty their loads of rubbish which
is then transferred, well, somewhere else.
But in the Isséane centre, the rubbish isn’t transferred
anywhere. Instead, it’s used as the fuel for a four-pass horizontal boiler, which produces steam – some 200 tonnes
per hour of it.
About half of this steam is used to drive a turbine, which
in turn drives a generator producing 52MW of power each
year – enough power for around 5,500 homes and businesses.
The remaining steam is fed into the district heating network that serves 80,000 households, saving them around
110,000 tons of heating oil each year. The waste produced
by seven households can heat one family’s home. The
electricity tapped from the turbogenerator
is used primarily for plant power; the rest is
by Ross
14
Silicon Chip
exported to the French grid.
The Isséane energy-from-waste plant consists of two process trains with a rated capacity of 30.5 tonnes per hour
each, for a total of 460,000 tonnes per annum.
The waste receiving area and the combustion system
are subterranean, so the plant produces neither noise nor
odor emissions.
In fact, when the building was being planned, local authorities made sure that no plume would rise from the
stack of the plant in Issy-les-Moulineaux, one of the most
densely populated conurbation communities in Europe.
The plant meets or exceeds the tough EU standards for
pollution.
The waste is incinerated on two five-zone Hitachi Zosen Inova grates. An integrated combustion control system
with an infrared camera makes it possible at all times to
quickly and reliably adjust the combustion parameters to
rapidly changing waste compositions.
The very hot incineration gases, (the high temperature
essential to prevent dioxins and other “nasties”being produced when plastics are burned), are routed
Tester through a secondary combustion chamber to
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
a four-pass boiler where they are cooled from 1100°C to
180°C.
Some 460,000 tonnes of rubbish is disposed of this way
each year.
Apart from the electricity produced, the plant then processes the incinerated ash, washing and cleaning it for recycling into building materials after first separating any
metals it contains.
Another benefit of the process is the reduction (by half)
of any remaining chlorine, which is then evenly dispersed
throughout the ash.
That’s just a brief introduction to the French process,
developed by Hitachi. We’ll return to other overseas processors shortly.
It’s more than a load of garbage!
Around the world, the disposal of bulk rubbish has become a major headache. We could bore you with statistics
but just consider how much you throw away each week.
Sure, you diligently sort your “recyclables” into different
coloured bins for the local council or contractor to pick up
in special trucks for recycling – though that has an ever-increasing question mark over it according to recent reports
(they say most “recycling” ends up as landfill anyway!).
But what’s left, the rubbish we humans generate simply
by consuming, is staggering. If you live in an urban area,
think of the number of compacting rubbish trucks you see
on collection days or nights.
Our local “tip” here on Sydney’s Northern Beaches
(woops – they like to be known as a Resource Recovery
Centre these days!) receives almost a quarter of a million
TONNES of waste annually.
Around 70% of that IS recycled – mainly in the area of
concrete, ashphalt, aggregate and so on. Now that’s a very
worthwhile and laudable objective – no-one argues with
re-purposing good stuff – but that still leaves 30% – or the
best part of 100,000 tonnes to dispose of.
Multiply that by an almost infinite number of areas
around the world and you start to get an idea of the magnitude of the problem.
And, traditionally, what hasn’t been sorted into recyclables has mostly gone straight into landfill.
The latest figures suggest that around 20 million tonnes
of garbage (about 40% of the 52 million tonnes of waste
generated each year in Australia) makes its way into landfill sites each year. Around 75% of waste goes into just 38
landfill sites, mostly around our capital cities.
Many landfill sites around major cities have already
closed – they’re full – and many more measure their life
expectancy in just a few years.
It’s amazing how quickly a large landfill site can fill. When
I started working in 1970, there was a huge brick pit just
down the road from where I lived. It had just closed – they’d
exhausted all the clay – so the several-acre and rather deep
hole was then converted into a rubbish tip (and it stank!).
But it only took a couple of decades to be filled to the brim.
These days, there are beautiful playing fields and parks
covering the area . . . so where does the rubbish go now?
Other landfill sites have of course been opened – but
as they fill, as they will, the authorities will find it more
and more difficult to find new sites. That’s due not only
to much tighter laws restricting how, where and who but
just as importantly (perhaps more importantly) the modern city trait of “NIMBY”ism.
In times past, many coastal cities disposed of their garbage by taking it way offshore in barges – they called them
garbage scows – and dumping it in the sea (some didn’t
even worry about the offshore bit!). Today, that’s almost a
hanging offence. . .
Lately, we’ve seen large-scale transportation of waste
from states with very high waste disposal charges (eg,
NSW) to states with lower (or minimal/even no) charges
(eg, Queensland). Officially they moved 670,000 tonnes
last financial year; the industry believes it’s closer to one
Waste receiving
and storage
Combustion and boiler Flue gas treatment
Energy recovery
1: Tipping hall
5: Feed hopper
13: Primary air distribution
6: Ram feeder
14: Secondary air fan
7: Hitachi Zosen Inova grate
15: Secondary air/recirculated
8: Infrared camera flue gas injection
9: Start-up and support burners
16: Recirculation fan
10: Burner fan
17: Bottom ash transport
11: Primary air fan
18: Ash conveyor
12: Primary air preheater
19: Four-pass boiler
28: Turbine and generator
2: Waste pit
3: Waste crane
4: Loader control cabin
20: Electrostatic preciptator
21: Sodium bicarbonate silo
22: Flue gas entrainment duct
23: Fabric filter
24: SCR Catalyst
25: Induced-draft fan
26: Silencer
27: Stack
The basic operation of a waste-to-energy plant. Long before any rubbish reaches the combustion furnace it is sorted to
remove any non-combustibles which, where possible, are reused or recycled.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 15
The giant Woodlawn open-cut mine near Tarago, between
Canberra and Sydney, is now Australia’s largest tip and is also
producing electricity from landfill methane. The long-term goal is
200,000MWh each year. Notice the wind turbines on the horizon?
million tonnes. It’s mainly moved by semi-trailers.
That has a three-fold effect: (a) it puts a lot of trucks on
the road with attendant accidents and slowing of traffic; (b)
that creates an incredible amount of diesel pollution and
(c) it simply moves the problem from one place to another.
Incidentally, despite what some media (and some politicians) may tell you, it’s not illegal – section 92 of the
Australian Constitution allows free “trade” between states
(even if the trade is in rubbish!). But legislators are said to
be looking for some means of stopping it.
So landfill is frowned upon – up to a point! Dumping at
sea is out. Interstate transport is not the answer. Even recycling is questionable (see panel). What to do?
Methane power generation
As an aside, even in a landfill tip, it is possible to generate power. The average domestic rubbish bin contains about
60% organic material, which breaks down over time. And
as the material breaks down, it generates methane.
The now-closed Belrose tip in northern Sydney has 93
gas wells collecting this methane, providing up to 680 cu-
Fancy a bite to eat . . . in an incinerator? The Willoughby
incinerator in Sydney is one of several designed by Walter
Burley Griffin – this one is now an art gallery and restaurant.
16
Silicon Chip
bic metres per hour.
Onsite generators fueled by this gas produces around
4MW of electricity – part of the 160MW being produced
by landfill methane around Australia.
The generation, commenced in 1994, is ongoing despite
no more garbage being dropped at the site. A secondary benefit is the reduction of odours from the tip – again, caused
by the breaking down of the buried garbage.
The Woodlawn tip, about 200km southwest of Sydney,
collects more waste than any other in the country. An old
open cut mine, it’s reckoned to be about one quarter full
and receives waste, mainly from Sydney, by the trainload.
It too is generating methane-powered electricity – a
network of pipes built layer on layer as the tip fills, so far
collecting between 400 and 700 cubic metres of methane
power hour, with a goal of generating up to 200GWh each
year. Up to 24 generators will be built, depending on the
project’s success.
Incineration
Again back in history (the best part of a century ago),
many councils built large-scale incinerators to dispose of
(particularly) household garbage, which had previously
been dumped into waterways.
Several notable incinerators were designed and built by
Walter Burley Griffin, the same architect who designed Canberra (wags have claimed the purpose of both was similar).
But there are very few left these days, as councils face
mounting public opposition and much stricter anti-pollution laws than were in existence in decades previous.
The Moonee Ponds (Melbourne) incinerator which
opened in 1930 closed in 1942, while the Willoughby (Sydney) incinerator opened in 1934 and burnt its last garbage
in 1967. Both have since been converted to art galleries and
even (Willoughby) into an upmarket restaurant!
In the 21st century, however, incinerators are starting
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Recycling? Or perhaps not?
Many people – most, even – refuse to believe this account when I tell it, as I have done several times. But I
swear this is true because it is first hand!
Some years ago, I was involved in a bottle clean-up
around a local club and we had almost filled a box
trailer near the end of the day. Realising that the closest tip would close in half an hour, I called “enough”
and drove the trailer to the tip and into the bottle recycling area.
This had an area for white bottles, an area for brown
bottles and an area for green bottles.
I said to the attendant “I suppose you want me to
sort the bottles into their colours”. It was about ten
minutes before closing.
“No mate, just dump them anywhere you like”
“But don't they have to be sorted for recycling?”
He guffawed and said “Recycling? This is all for show
for the public and to appease the greenies. As soon as
we close the gates, we pick up all the bottles with the
front-end loader and take them down to bury them. We
can't even give them away to the glass recyclers and
even if we did, they won't come and pick them up because it costs them more in fuel than they’re worth.”
We can tell you that this has not changed one iota!
to make a comeback, due to the fact that the pollution
restrictions, even tighter today than when the old incinerators closed, have been largely overcome with modern
technology.
There is also the fact that authorities are now starting to
treat rubbish, garbage, refuse, waste . . . whatever you like
to call it, as a resource, not a problem. That’s where the
plant we opened this story with – and many more like it
around the world – come into their own.
Mitsubishi’s SMASH in Japan
Japan has a gargantuan waste disposal problem – in the
twenty years between 1960 and 1980, it increased by five
times, to more than 44 million tonnes per annum – with
precious little land available for landfill.
Faced with mountains of trash, the Japanese Government revised and enforced its Waste Management Act.
As a result, standards in waste management at both corporate and local government level had to improve – with
the result that some of their procedures are now the most
advanced in the world.
The refuse centre in Iwate-Chubu, in north-eastern Hon-
The Iwate-Chubu plant in north-east Japan which
burns 56.000 tonnes each year and as well as producing
electricity, its SMASH technology recycles most of its ash.
siliconchip.com.au
shu, Japan, is typical; a showcase of modern waste management – and the technology is now used in many similar
installations in operation, or being built, around the world
(except, regrettably, in Australia!).
It utilises both advanced resource recycling systems and
the SMASH system to re-purpose as much of the incoming
waste as possible, even using the ash produced by the incineration process as one of the raw materials for cement.
To achieve a high level of heat recovery during incineration, an advanced technology called Internal Gas Recirculation (IGR) is employed as a secondary combustion
air supply. It combines recycled combustion gas from the
furnace with a rich supply of oxygen to feed the furnace
during combustion.
This enables the furnace to operate with a lower ratio of
air, not only improving efficiency but reducing the amount
of exhaust gas.
In addition, the higher level of heat recovery increases the
amount of electricity generated from each tonne of waste by
two or three percent compared to conventional furnaces.
And Hamm in Germany
The waste plant in the city of Hamm, Germany, was designed for the incineration of municipal waste. It mainly
handles domestic waste but also commercial waste and
bulky refuse.
Originally commissioned in 1985, the Hamm plant has
had several extensions, which have increased the incineration capacity to 295,000 tonnes/year.
Each of the four identical combustion lines has a throughput of 10 tonnes per hour. Normally, combustion is completely self-sufficient, without the need for supplementary
fuels such as paper, etc.
The heat of the flue gas produced during combustion
is used to generate steam, which is fed to the three turbogenerators for power generation (approximately 26MW
installed capacity).
With the aim of maintaining the waste disposal operations at a high technical level and to meet tighter environmental regulations, the plant was retrofitted and upgraded
in several stages.
In the USA
In 2015, the last year for which data is available, there
were 71 waste-to-energy power plants and four other power
plants in the United States which burned what they term
MSW: Muncipal Solid Waste. There are obviously many
more now.
These plants burned about 29 million tons of MSW in
The Hamm, Germany waste-to-power plant with an
installed capacity of 26MW. It burns almost 300,000 tonnes
of waste each year.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 17
An energy-from-waste plant for Sydney?
Architect’s impression of the Eastern Creek plant
In 2015, then again in 2017, the CEO of Dial-a-Dump industries, Ian Malouf, proposed the world’s largest power-generating
incinerator to be built on land (actually an existing landfill site) the
company owned at Eastern Creek, in Sydney’s western suburbs.
The facility would be co-sited with its existing “Genesis” recycling facility and would, in fact, take all of its input from that facility.
He has formed a company called TNG: The Next Generation,
to develop and operate the plant, the first in Australia.
Their aim is to dramatically reduce the generation of greenhouse gases and to help solve the energy needs of Western Sydney over the next fifty years.
The $700 million plant would take mainly building and construction waste, separate it into fully recyclable materials (eg, road base,
aggregate, etc) and then incinerate the remainder, using stateof-the-art furnaces which almost eliminate any smoke exhaust.
This plant would initially treat about 530,000 tonnes of waste
each year, rising to more than 1.1 million tonnes after proving
itself. Along the way, it would produced the steam for turbines
which would generate enough energy to power 100,000 homes
(rising to 200,000).
However, despite growing concerns about power prices, power
station closure and the possibility of blackouts, it has had a very
loud “anti” backlash from the community. Much of the opposition
appears to have been fed by deliberate misinformation campaigns.
Project stalled against local opposition
The local Blacktown and Penrith councils, Western Sydney’s
Local Health District, Labor, the Greens and even the Government’s Environmental Protection Authority have all come out in
opposition to the proposal.
It must be said that the EPA’s arguments were more along the
“insufficient evidence” line than the sometimes spurious reasons
other groups gave.
NSW Health’s main objection was that it was twice the size of
any similar plant anywhere in the world, while the Greens claimed
18
Silicon Chip
that it would “reduce recycling rates, spew out air pollution and
impact on the health of residents.”
The attitude of the Greens is puzzling, given their party’s antilandfill policy. The TNG proposal would reduce landfill by between
eighty and ninety percent. . . yet they oppose it!
Some community groups, as might be expected, have even displayed placards reading NIMBY – Not In My Back Yard.
However, Mr Malouf told Fairfax Media that despite the objections, he remained confident “that the project represents a positive environmental outcome”.
“The facility will process only residue building, commercial and
demolition waste that is currently being landfilled,” he said. “It will
provide a secure, long-term supplement to western Sydney’s energy demands.”
He said that more than 2200 facilities in urban areas, alongside homes, schools, shops and businesses across 35 countries
are already using the same safe and efficient thermal technology,
to generate power.
These facilities have all passed rigorous approval processes
and for many years have been producing clean, cheap energy,
with less harm to the environment, compared with coal fired stations or by dumping waste into landfill.
Dial-a-Dump has commissioned independent research into the
proposal, which found that 69% of respondents supported the
concept of energy from waste.
The future
The proposal is currently back before the State Government,
probably for a decision early this year.
Even with a “sweetener” by TNG of free solar power panels
for 1000 homes closest to the site (bear in mind that the closest
house is more than 800m away), there is no guarantee that the
locals’ NIMBY attitude or the “object to anything” philosophy of
the Greens will change.
Time will tell!
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
And another one for Mt Piper?
As we went to press (late December 2017) a proposal was released for another energy-from-waste scheme, this time for the
1400MW Mt Piper power station, located about 100km west of
Sydney near the town of Lithgow.
The proposal, named Refuse Derived Fuel (or RDF) called for
the conversion of part of the Mt Piper plant to burn selected materials, including paper, plastics, disused linen, etc which would otherwise go into landfill. It would have the capacity to generate about
27MW and use an estimated 200,000 tonnes of refuse annually.
Energy Australia, owners of Mt Piper, were conducting the study
in conjunction with the recycling management company Re.Group.
The project would cost around $60 million, take 12-18 months
to build and originally claimed could be generating its first power
as early as 2019, although this appears to have blown out to 2021.
Energy Australia claimed there were significant environmental benefits in the project, as materials that would be used in the
energy recovery project would otherwise go to landfill.
While having a nominal life until the middle of the century, the
future of Mt Piper has been under somewhat of a cloud since the
green activist group “4nature” successfully launched action in the
NSW Land and Environment Court against the NSW Government’s 2015 planning consent for the extension of the Springvale
Colliery (one of Mt Piper’s main coal sources) on the basis that it
could contaminate water catchments in the Blue Mountains area.
Without an assured supply of coal, Mt Piper faced cutback
or even closure, which would take a further 15% of supply out
of the east coast electricity market. This came not long after the
news that AGL’s 2000MW Liddell power station will close in 2022.
The Energy Australia/Re.Group study, due to be completed
about now, would be looking at the project from the economic viability and benefits side (eg, the extra power produced) but also
the negative side (environmental impact in particular).
Even before the study was complete, environmental groups
were condemning the proposal, with bodies such as the Colong
Foundation saying it was the “wrong step for diversifying sources
of power”. The Colong Foundation has a “zero waste” policy so
burning refuse to produce power goes counter to their code. They
also claimed the plant would give off “highly toxic pollutants” and
the ash produced would pose a risk to waterways, including the
Coxs River, part of the Sydney water supply catchment.
2015 and generated nearly 14 terrawatt-hours of electricity (1012 Watts!).
The biomass materials in the MSW that were burned in
these power plants accounted for about 64% of the weight
of the MSW and contributed about 51% of the energy. The
remainder of the MSW was non-biomass combustible material, mainly plastics.
As we mentioned earlier, many large landfills are also
generating electricity by using the methane gas that is produced from decomposing biomass.
Where to from here?
The rest of the world is forging ahead with garbage-topower plants, alleviating three problems: avoiding landfill, generating power and using up resources for building
materials.
In Australia, the future is not so rosy, with obstacles being placed at every turn for the proponents of garbage-topower plants.
Many of the arguments put forward are spurious in the
extreme. Many appear to represent the current view of “if
it moves, object to it”. Of course, in amongst the garbage
(no pun intended) there may be some elements of truth,
which from our reading the company has tried to answer.
But for the rest, the old adage applies: “why let the facts
get in the way of a good story.”
Only time will tell.
Further media
There is a considerable amount of information on the
internet regarding energy from waste. Some of these are
obviously “puff pieces” written by PR companies and/or
newspaper journalists with very little knowledge of the
subject they are writing about.
But they at least give some interesting facts, which you
might like to peruse.
All of the URLs are shown here in the form of SILICON
CHIP ShortLinks, which will take you direct to the URL in
question. If you’re looking at SILICON CHIP OnLine, simply
clicking on any of them will do the same thing.
For a start, the Isséane (Paris) transfer station shown at
the start of this report is featured in some TV commercials
by NextGen – you may have seen them on late-night TV:
siliconchip.com.au/link/aahy
The Japanese plant mentioned here is featured in a report by Mitsubishi: siliconchip.com.au/link/aahz
If you really have plenty of time on your hands (!), read
through Nextgen’s almost 400-page environmental impact
statement answering many of the questions raised by the
authorities and by objectors: siliconchip.com.au/link/aai0
And there are various media and newsletter reports which
also give interesting background:
The 1400MW coal-fuelled Mt Piper power station near
Lithgow, NSW faces a somewhat uncertain future.
siliconchip.com.au
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai1
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai3
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai4
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai5
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai6
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai7
http://siliconchip.com.au/link/aai8
Celebrating 30 Years
SC
February 2018 19
Solar Powered
Water Tank
Level Meter
and
Weather Station
by Nicholas Vinen
The level in some water tanks is easy to check – but others, especially if
they’re high up, or remotely located, or have difficult access, can be the
proverbial pain in the *#<at>^! Here’s a great way to check your tank level(s),
and you don’t even need to be on the same planet (OK, slight exaggeration)
to do so. Just call this unit up from anywhere and get an instant reading . . .
and a weather report into the bargain!
20
20 S
Silicon Chip
Celebrating
Years
Celebrating
3030
Years
siliconchip.com.au
The final version
of our Water Tank
Level Meter and Weather Station with the sensor (on 6m cable)
at left and the box containing the PCBs (left side of box), 3.7V
Li-ion phone battery (right side) and the two solar cells on the
lid. We’ve also fitted a higher-performing WiFi antenna.
T
his Arduino-based unit runs what the local weather is like at any ming skills, you could even make it
from solar power and periodi- time – even when you aren’t any- switch a pump on or off, depending
cally uploads your water tank where near your tank/home/office . . on the water level.
level and outdoor temperature, hu- . anywhere!
Circuit description
midity and barometric pressure to a
More
than
one
tank
to
check?
The circuit for the Water Tank Me“cloud” service.
Lucky you . . . but if you have mul- ter/Weather Station is shown in Fig.1.
You can check the data at any time
from anywhere, using a mobile phone, tiple water tanks to check, that’s no It’s based on an ESP8266 Arduinotablet or PC. It even provides graphs to problem. Just build multiple units, set compatible board. This incorporates
show you how these readings change up a separate “channel” for each one the WiFi transceiver and it’s very easy
and Bob’s your uncle.
to get it connected to the internet.
over time.
And because we’ve based it on
The waterproof pressure sensor conWe’ve published numerous water
tank level meter projects in the past but an Arduino-compatible module, the nects across terminal block CON1.
this one has to be the easiest to build, software is nice and simple and you These are available from eBay and Alcould modify it if you have any spe- iExpress and can measure water levset up and use.
els up to about 6m (that may vary beThat’s because it takes advantage of cial needs.
For example, you could change the tween products).
an off-the-shelf pressure-based water
They simply need to be dropped
level sensor which comes already wa- interval at which the water level is
checked. If you have some program- into the tank (eg, through a hole in
terproofed, with a long lead attached.
the top) so that they sit
So you just need to
on the bottom and can
drop it down into the
monitor the water prestank, hook it up to the
sure there.
Arduino-based unit and
These sensors operate
it will automatically
using the 4-20mA curupload the tank levrent loop principle and
el to “the cloud”. You
require a 24V DC power
can then check it anysupply.
where in the world, at
Basically, the sensor
any time.
will draw between 4mA
We figured that while
and 20mA from the powwe were going to the
er supply, depending on
trouble of doing this, we
the sensed pressure (and
might as well also measthus water level).
ure the local temperaIf exposed to air, at
ture, humidity and barnormal atmospheric
ometric pressure too.
pressures, the current
This adds very little
to the project cost but A screen grab of the ThingSpeak website, showing real data from our will be around 4mA and
under the maximum ratit means you can check test unit monitoring a rain water tank.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 21
Fig.1: the complete circuit for the Water Tank Level Meter, minus the
pressure sensor which is connected via CON1. The WeMos Arduinocompatible board has onboard WiFi and it switches on the power
supply to the sensor when necessary, then measures its output via op amp LM358 at analog input A0. The digitised
value is sent to a cloud database host service.
ed depth of water, the current will be
around 20mA.
This means that the sensor needs
only two wires and these provide
power to the unit and also carry the
output signal.
And because the output signal is a
current, the resistance of the long wires
or any connections along the way will
not affect the reading.
It does lead to two problems though:
One is how to provide 24V to the sensor when the Arduino board runs from
3.3V/5V and do it in a manner which
doesn’t drain the small battery too
quickly. And the other is how to measure the sensor’s supply current using
the ESP8266.
The first problem is solved by using
a low-cost MT3608 voltage boost mod22
Silicon Chip
ule. This is quite small at 50x21mm,
costs just a few dollars and can produce an output of up to 38V with a
3.2-32V input at up to 2A.
Its efficiency under load is quite
good, around 90%. But to save battery power, we will only power up the
MT3608 when making the periodic
water level measurement.
We chose to measure the current
using a simple method. We insert a
10Ω resistor in series with the sensor’s ground connection. With 4-20mA
flowing through that portion of the
circuit, the voltage across this resistor will be 40-200mV. This reduces
the sensor’s supply voltage but it will
still work fine at 23.8V and we can easily compensate by adjusting the boost
module to produce 24.2V anyway.
Celebrating 30 Years
Those voltages are a little low to
measure directly using the Arduino
module, so we provide 16 times amplification using op amp IC1b.
This is a standard LM358 singlesupply op amp which will happily
run off the 5V supply. The gain is set
by the ratio of the 15kΩ and 1kΩ feedback resistors.
Its output is 600-3000mV, ie, 0.6-3V
and this is fed to analog input A0 on
the Arduino via a 1kΩ resistor.
This resistor isn’t absolutely necessary but since the LM358 op amp
runs off 5V and the Arduino’s supply
is 3.3V, there is a remote possibility
that the Arduino input could be overdriven. In this case, the resistor limits
the current to a safe level.
However, LM358 outputs normally
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.2: PCB overlay for
the Water Tank Level
Meter Arduino shield
PCB with a matching
same-size photo at right.
Fit the components
where shown, starting
with the lowest profile
parts and working your
way up to the taller
ones.
can only vary up to 1.5V below the
positive supply rail, which in this case
is nominally 3.5V and thus likely safe.
Andthe op amp’s output current is
internally limited to around 40mA.
Still, the 3.3V and 5V rails can vary
by a few hundred millivolts either
way so the 1kΩ resistor is a worthwhile and cheap measure to ensure
reliable operation.
The ESP8266 ADC has a 10-bit
resolution (the same as most Arduinos) and so this 0.6-3V level will normally translate into digital readings
of around 186-930 for 0-100% of the
pressure sensor’s range.
That will give a resolution of around
0.13% to the readings [ie, 100 ÷ (930
– 186)].
But keep in mind that a typical water
tank is not 6m high, so the resolution
will be reduced proportionally. Still,
you can expect it to be no worse than
half a percentage point.
By the way, note that the ESP8266
only has one analog input (A0), compared to the normal six on an Arduino Uno – one of its few weaknesses.
Remainder of the circuit
As mentioned earlier, the power
supply for the water level sensor is
only powered up when the sensor is
actually being used.
This is done by driving digital output pin D7 of MOD1 high, which
drives the gate of N-channel small signal Mosfet Q1 high.
This is a 2N7000 logic-level Mosfet so the 3.3V at its gate is sufficient
to switch it on, pulling the gate of Pchannel Mosfet Q2 low.
Q2 is a high-current logic-level
device and its gate is normally held
at +5V by a 100kΩ pull-up resistor,
keeping it off. But when Q1 switches
on and pulls its gate low, current can
flow from the 5V supply to the VIN+
siliconchip.com.au
terminal of MOD4, the boost regulator.
It will then generate 24V to drive the
water level sensor.
Note that there are two voltage level translations occurring with this arrangement; from the 3.3V swing of the
output of MOD1 up to a 5V swing at
the gate of Q2, and then a 24V change
in the output of MOD4.
If the sensor is drawing 4mA (ie, the
water tank is empty) then you can expect at least 19.2mA (4mA x 24V ÷ 5V)
additional drain on the battery.
In practice, it will be closer to 25mA.
With a full water tank and the sensor
drawing 20mA, this will increase to
over 100mA.
So it’s a good thing that it only needs
to be powered up for a second or so
each time a measurement is made or
the battery would be flat in a few hours.
When the power supply for the sensor is off, there is no current flow and
so no voltage across the 10Ω resistor.
Therefore output pin 7 of IC1b is at 0V
and so is analog input A0 of MOD1.
The ESP8266 has a built-in WiFi
transceiver so we don’t need to add
anything extra to the circuit in order
to transmit the water tank level over
the internet.
Weather station
Since this unit is likely to be placed
outdoors, we thought we might as well
add a couple more low-cost components to allow it to monitor ambient air
temperature, pressure and humidity.
ESP8266 Arduino pin numbering
One of the most challenging aspects of
But even more confusing is the fact that
developing the software for this project was the digital pins are not connected to pins
dealing with the strange way the digital pins with a matching number on the IC while
are numbered on the WeMos D1 R2 board. others have built-in pull-up or pull-down
If you plan on modifying the software, you resistors.
will need to be aware of this.
And it appears that some of the digital
For a start, there’s the incorrect label- pins are not usable at all!
ling on some PCBs that was mentioned in
The following table indicates which pin
the text. On some WeMos boards, the TX numbers you actually need to use in the
and RX pins are labelled “0” and “1” (de- software (ESP8266 pin) to access one of
spite not being usable as such) and con- the Arduino digital pins. It also shows which
sequently, the actual D0 pin is labelled 2, pins have special functions or pull-up/pullD1 is labelled 3 and so on.
down resistors.
Arduino ESP8266 Additional
pin pin functions
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
16
5
4
0
2
14
12
13
15
Celebrating 30 Years
SCL
SDA
10kΩ pull-up
10kΩ pull-up, BUILTIN_LED
SCK
MISO
MOSI
SS, 10kΩ pull-down
February 2018 23
Parts list – Water Tank Level Meter +
1 4-20mA water level (pressure) sensor with cable [SILICON CHIP Online Shop Cat
SC4283]
1 double-sided PCB, coded 21110171, 68.5 x 53.5mm
1 set of four long-pin Arduino stackable headers (included with PCB)
1 WeMos D1 R2 ESP8266-based Arduino board (MOD1) [SILICON CHIP Online Shop Cat
SC4414]
1 DHT-22/AM2302 temperature/humidity sensor module (MOD2) [SILICON CHIP Online
Shop Cat SC4150]
1 GY-68 temperature/barometric pressure sensor module (MOD3) [SILICON CHIP Online
Shop Cat SC4343]
1 MT3608-based 2A boost regulator module (MOD4) [SILICON CHIP Online Shop Cat
SC4437]
1 2-way mini terminal block (CON1)
1 2-way pin header with jumper shunt (LK1)
1 4-pin header (for MOD3)
1 M3 x 6mm machine screw and nut
2 small solar panels, around 1W each, 6V open-circuit, approximately 100 x 70mm
(SILICON CHIP online shop Cat SC4339)
1 Elecrow mini solar charger module (MOD5) [SILICON CHIP Online Shop Cat SC4308]
1 JST-2.0 2-pin plug with flying leads (included in SC4308)
1 short USB Type A to micro Type B cable
1 single Li-ion cell, 2-4Ah
1 IP65 sealed case with clear lid [eg, Jaycar HB6248 (171 x 121 x 55mm) or Altronics
H0330 (186 x 146 x 75mm)]
1 cable gland to suit 7mm diameter cable [eg, Jaycar HP0724, Altronics H4312A]
1 chassis-mounting 2.4GHz WiFi antenna with cable and U.FL/IPX connector (optional)
[SILICON CHIP Online Shop Cat 4522 or 4523]
1 small piece open-cell foam (eg, 25 x 25 x 10mm)
1 150ml or 300ml cartridge of clear neutral cure silicone sealant
a few short lengths of light-duty hookup wire
Semiconductors
1 LM358 dual op amp, DIL package (IC1)
1 2N7000 N-channel Mosfet (Q1)
1 IPP80P03P4L-04 P-channel logic-level Mosfet (Q2) [SILICON CHIP Online Shop Cat
SC4318]
2 1N5819 schottky diodes (D1,D2)
Capacitors
1 100nF MKT or ceramic
Resistors (all 0.25W, 1% metal film)
1 100kΩ 1 15kΩ
2 1kΩ
1 10Ω
These are be logged to “the cloud”
along with the water tank levels, so
you can see what the weather is like,
even if you aren’t at home (or on the
farm, or wherever your water tank is
located).
MOD2 is a DHT-22 temperature/hu-
(Left) the
DHT22 digital
temperature and
humidity sensor, with the
Barometric Pressure/Altitude/
Temperature I²C Sensor board at right.
24
Silicon Chip
midity sensor. We described the operation of this device in the El Cheapo
Modules 4 article, published in the
February 2017 issue.
It uses a single wire protocol for
communications and this goes to digital I/O pin D3 of MOD1.
MOD3 is a GY-68 barometer module
based on the BMP180 temperature/
pressure sensor.
This has also been described in one
of our El Cheapo Modules articles, this
time part 11 in the December 2017 issue. Its communication is via I2C so
the clock (SCL) and data (SDA) lines
are hooked up to the I2C interface pins
on MOD1.
The ESP8266 chip can query these
Celebrating 30 Years
sensors immediately before taking a
water tank level measurement and
sends the measurements to the remote
database at the same time. This has a
minimal effect on battery life and network traffic.
The electronics will need to be
mounted in a weatherproof enclosure
and/or sheltered position to protect it
from rain, etc.
But for MOD2 to measure humidity and MOD3, atmospheric pressure,
they can’t be in a completely sealed
box. We’ll go over some potential solutions to this apparent contradiction later.
Note also that, given that the unit is
powered by solar panels which need to
be in the hot sun, and given that there
is some dissipation from the unit itself,
the temperature readings are likely to
be on the high side on a sunny day.
There are some steps you could
take to mitigate that, such as installing a small fan to ensure air movement
through the enclosure, but we won’t
go into great detail on this aspect of
the design as the weather data is not
meant to be at a BoM level of accuracy.
Power supply circuitry
We’re using a similar power supply
as we did with our Arduino Data Logger (August-September 2017).
As with that design, we’re using the
Elecrow Mini Solar Charger module
(MOD5) which provides a regulated
5V supply for the Arduino at its USB
output socket.
This is derived from a single Lithium-ion cell (3-4.2V).
Once again, we’re using a battery
salvaged from an old mobile phone –
but you could just as easily buy one
from a hobby store or online vendor.
The higher the amp-hour (Ah) capacity, the better, provided it will fit in a
reasonably-sized enclosure.
Our test battery is just under 3Ah
which should give around 100 hours
of operation (3Ah ÷ 30mA) or around
The Elecrow Mini Solar Li-ion Charger
module, reproduced same size.
siliconchip.com.au
The two individual PCBs which were piggy-backed into the form shown
below – note that the board on the left is an early prototype which was
changed in the final version.
four days. The battery is charged from
two small (<1W) solar cells, with an
open-circuit output voltage of around
6V. They are effectively paralleled
using a pair of schottky diodes, D1
and D2.
These are included so that if one
panel has sun while the other is shaded (eg, due to the shadow of a tree,
the water tank etc), there will still be
enough voltage supplied to the charger
module for it to operate.
The forward voltage of these diodes
will slightly reduce the available power when both panels are in full sun but
we think there’s a good chance they
will increase the total power available
over the course of a day in a typical
installation.
If we get an average power of say 1W
from the panels for an average of eight
hours a day in winter, that 8Wh translates into around 1.5Ah at 5V. Given
the ~30mA average current drain of
the unit, that should allow it to operate for around 50 hours.
While that’s around twice the actual power required, of course, there
will be cloudy days and so on, so the
excess capacity can go into recharging the battery.
Hence, we would not recommend
using a smaller set of solar panels
than shown here (in fact, more/larger
would be better).
If you have access to a mains supply
near your water tank, you could connect
a USB charger to the “USB IN” socket on
MOD4 and this will then run the circuit
and keep the battery charged.
The battery would then run the unit
during blackouts and the solar panels
would not be necessary.
siliconchip.com.au
Link LK1, labelled “DEEP SLEEP”,
is connected between the RESET input
on MOD1 and digital output pin D0.
See the separate panel explaining the
purpose of this link and what you need
to do to be able to use it. Most constructors will probably leave it open.
Optional but recommended
external antenna
While we said earlier that the
ESP8266 doesn’t need any extra com-
ponents to operate over a WiFi network, given that the unit will almost
certainly be located outdoors and
possibly some distance from your
network, there’s a chance that the onboard PCB track antenna simply won’t
be good enough to pick up your WiFi
signal.
Fortunately, the WeMos board has
provision for attaching an external
2.4GHz antenna via a tiny onboard
U.FL/IPX RF connector.
This shows
how the two PCBs
are assembled before
mounting in the case – again,
the top board is changed in the
final version (for a start, it’s green!). Use the
component overlay and pic overleaf for assembly.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 25
This end-on view also
shows the method of
construction. On the
bottom is the Arduino
WeMos ESP8266
Arduino board, with
the top board a shield
designed specifically
for the project.
There are various different antennas
available that suit the 2.4GHz band
and while they typically have an SMA
plug at their base, many of them are
supplied with an adaptor cable consisting of a chassis-mount SMA socket
at one end and a U.FL/IPX connector
at the other.
Two suitable antennas are available
from the SILICON CHIP Online Shop (see
parts list).
One has 5dBi gain and is vertically
polarised, and is able to be rotated and
bent at an angle for optimal reception.
The other has 2dBi gain but is smaller
and omnidirectional.
Both are supplied with suitable
adaptor cables that will plug right into
the ESP8266 board.
Or you could source a suitable antenna yourself.
And both of our antennas are waterproof so can be mounted on the outside
of the case and the connectors sealed
with silicone sealant to prevent water
from getting inside.
Construction
As you can see from the photos,
our prototype was wired up on a protoboard shield. The circuit is certainly simple enough to do this, involving only about a dozen components,
and it only takes a couple of hours to
wire it up.
But it’s much easier if you build it
on a printed circuit board, which is
why we’ve designed one and had it
manufactured. The overlay diagram
for this PCB is shown in Fig.2.
Fit the five resistors in the positions
shown. Even though we’ve shown
Deep Sleep Mode
If link LK1 on the board is bridged,
changing the line at the top of the code
from “//#define USE_DEEPSLEEP” to “#define USE_DEEPSLEEP” should theoretically
reduce overall power consumption. However, the effect is quite small and doing so
has some disadvantages.
With LK1 in circuit, the ESP8266 IC is
able to completely shut down its CPU while
in sleep mode. A special timer is included
in the ESP8266 IC which drives pin D0 low
after a certain time has elapsed, which resets the chip, waking it up and allowing the
software to start again.
The reason that this doesn’t save a whole
lot of power is that the regulators and other circuitry onboard the ESP8266 Arduino
module remain powered up, even though
the chip itself is in deep sleep mode. And
IC1, MOD2 and MOD3 continue to draw
power too, albeit not very much (under
1mA total).
26
Silicon Chip
The actual reduction in current is just a
few milliamps, increasing battery life by a
few percent.
But because the chip is reset each time,
it can’t keep anything in RAM during the
sleep time and this affects the code’s ability
to reliably determine the water tank minimum and maximum levels.
The software feature intended to prevent
sensor glitches from affecting the detected
minimum and maximum levels is automatically disabled if deep sleep mode is used.
Also, if deep sleep is enabled, you need
to fit a pull-down resistor at the gate of Q1
as the I/O pin states are no longer under
the control of the ESP8266 micro in deep
sleep mode. This resistor can be plugged
into the header sockets on the board, between D7 and the nearby ground pin.
We don’t think the small power saving is
worthwhile but you can perform the steps
mentioned above if you want to try it.
Celebrating 30 Years
their colour codes in the table, we suggest you check the values using a DMM
before soldering as the colour bands
are easy to misread.
Follow with IC1; use a socket if you
want to but make sure its pin 1 dot is
orientated as shown.
Next, bend the leads of Q2 so they
fit through the board and its tab hole
lines up with the corresponding hole
in the PCB. Then fasten the tab to the
PC using a 6mm M3 machine screw
and nut before soldering and trimming
the leads.
Follow with the 100nF capacitor and
then Mosfet Q1. Its flat face must be
orientated as shown in Fig.2.
Next, fit terminal block CON1 with
its wire entry holes facing towards the
nearest edge of the board. Then solder
modules MOD2 and MOD3, with the
orientations shown. You will need to
fit a 4-pin header to MOD3 before soldering it to the board.
MOD4 can then be mounted to the
board, using component lead offcuts (or tinned copper wire). Solder
the four wires to the board, then feed
them through the holes on the module and push it down before soldering it in place.
Finally, fit the four long-pin headers in place along the edge of the PCB,
with the socket parts on the top of the
board and the pins projecting from
the bottom. To do this, you need to
solder around the bases of the pins,
where they emerge from the bottom
of the board.
Setting the sensor voltage
Before programming the Arduino
board, it’s a good idea to adjust MOD4
to give a sensor supply voltage of
around 24.2V.
It’s easier to do this before the software is loaded because that software
will shut down the sensor supply most
of the time, to save battery power.
Plug the finished shield into the WeMos Arduino board and then connect a
spare resistor between pin D7 and 5V.
You can do this by plugging the resistor leads into the sockets on top of the
shield board.
We must caution you that pin D7 is
not correctly labelled on all WeMos D1
R2 boards. It’s the ninth digital pin, ie,
the second one located on the second
8-pin header on that side of the board.
Our WeMos board incorrectly labelled
the digital pins 0, 1, 2, 3, ... rather than
the correct labelling, which should be
siliconchip.com.au
TX, RX, 0, 1, 2, 3, ...
Having done that, plug the board
into your PC’s USB port and measure
the voltage between VIN+ and VINon MOD4. You should get close to 5V.
Now measure the voltage at the output and adjust the onboard trimpot
until it’s close to 24.2V. Note that you
will need to turn the trimpot screw
anti-clockwise to increase the voltage
(counter-intuitively).
When finished, remove the extra resistor you plugged in earlier.
Should you need to re-adjust this
output voltage when the software is
loaded, MOD4 will be powered up for
a few seconds each time the unit boots
up, so you can press the RESET button
and quickly measure the output voltage
before tweaking the adjustment screw.
Or alternatively, unplug the shield
and apply 5V via its interface pins,
with the extra resistor connected as
described above.
Loading the software
Now unplug the shield from the
WeMos ESP8266 Arduino board and
re-connect it to your PC using a USB
cable, so you can load the software.
The Arduino sketch is a .ino file and
it can be downloaded from the SILICON
CHIP website (free for subscribers).
The download package (zip) also includes the required libraries to build
it but you will also have to download
and install the ESP8266 board files
onto your PC.
First, install the latest version of the
Arduino IDE, if you don’t already have
it. This can be downloaded free from
www.arduino.cc/en/Main/Software
Next, install the ESP8266 board files.
This is also a free download but it’s
quite large and will take a while. To
do this, open up preferences in the Arduino IDE and under “Arduino Board
Manager URLs”, enter:
http://arduino.esp8266.com/stable/
package_esp8266com_index.json
Hit OK, then go to Tools -> Boards
-> Board Manager, type in “esp8266”
in the search box, click on the entry
The “heart” of
this project is the
purpose-designed
water sensor, as
shown here. It is
rated to measure
up to 5m depth
(so can handle
a pretty large
tank!) and comes
complete with a
6m cable. Like the
other specialised
components in
this project, it is
available from the
SILICON CHIP Online
Shop (Cat SC4283).
which appears below and then click
on the “Install” button. This will result
in around 160MB of compilers and associated files being downloaded and
installed on your computer.
You can now go to the Tools -> Board
menu and select the “WeMos D1 R2 &
mini” entry from the drop-down list.
Next, install the supplied libraries using the Sketch -> Include Library ->
Add .ZIP Library option, if you didn’t
have them already.
Setting up a
ThingSpeak channel
When the unit is operational, the
water tank level, temperature, humidity and barometric pressure will be
logged periodically to a free internet
host called ThingSpeak.com.
They store this data in their database and you can then log in and view
and plot the data from anywhere in the
world. You can also make the plots
publically available.
Before you finish loading the software, you will need to go to www.
thingspeak.com and set up a free account (if you don’t already have one).
You will also need to set up a “channel”, which the data will be associated with.
Basically, channels let ThingSpeak
users track multiple, different sets of
data.
Create a channel via the website,
then click on the “Channel Settings”
Resistor Colour Codes
No. Value
1 100kΩ
1 15kΩ
2 1kΩ
1 10Ω
siliconchip.com.au
4-Band Code (1%)
brown black yellow brown
brown green orange brown
brown black red brown
brown black black brown
5-Band Code (1%)
brown black black orange brown
brown green black red brown
brown black black brown brown
brown black black gold brown
Celebrating 30 Years
tab and enter whatever name and description you want. Then set up the
fields as follows:
* Field 1 – “Water Tank Level (%)”
* Field 2 – “Temperature (C)”
* Field 3 – “Humidity (%)”
* Field 4 – “Atm Pressure (hPa)”
* Field 5 – “Water Tank Level (raw)”
* Field 6 – “Temperature 2 (C)”
* Field 7 – “Min Tank Level (raw)”
* Field 8 – “Max Tank Level (raw)”
You can change these names if you
want to, the above is only a guide as to
what you need. You can enter the elevation, latitude and longitude of your
water tank if you want so that the website can show the location where the
data is coming from on a map.
Having set that all up, click on the
“API Keys” tab and make a note of the
Channel Number and Write API Key.
Next, open up the sketch and modify
it so that it can connect to your WiFi
network.
Near the top of the file, you will see
four lines similar to the following:
//Constants
char WiFiSSID[] = “xxxx”;
char WiFiKey[] = “yyyy”;
unsigned long myChannelNumber = 1234;
const char * myWriteAPIKey = “zzzz”;
Change the WiFiSSID[] and
WiFiKey[] strings (shown as xxxx and
yyyy here) to suit your WiFi network.
Then set the myChannelNumber and
myWriteAPIKey values to match those
you noted earlier when setting up your
ThingSpeak account.
You can then compile/verify the
sketch (CTRL+R) and it’s ready to
be uploaded to the WeMos board
(CTRL+U).
Note that the compile/verify stage
February 2018 27
The solar-powered
charger consists
of a pair of 100
x 70mm solar
cells connected in
parallel, an Elecrow
mini solar charger
module (solar cells
and charger are
available from
the SILICON CHIP
Online Shop) – see
www.siliconchip.
com.au/shop –and
3.7V Li-ion battery
pack (we salvaged
ours from a mobile
phone).
A pair of schottky
diodes in series
with the solar cells
prevent the cells
from loading each
other when in
partial shade.
can take some time (one minute or
longer) and the upload process will
only start if the compile/verify was successful. If it is successful, you should
get a message like the following:
Sketch uses 241,141 bytes (23%) of
program storage space.
Maximum is 1,044,464 bytes.
Global variables use 33,292 bytes
(40%) of dynamic memory, leaving
48,628 bytes for local variables.
Maximum is 81,920 bytes.
If there are any errors during this
process, messages will appear at the
bottom of the Arduino IDE instead,
indicating the problem.
The most common problem would
be if one of the required libraries has
not been installed or you already had
a conflicting library installed (eg, an
old version).
Other possible problems are the
wrong Board selection or an incorrect
change when setting up the WiFi network and channel details.
Assuming the code is successfully
compiled and uploaded, unplug the
ESP8266 board from your PC and plug
the shield into it. You are then ready
for a proper test.
Testing
Initial testing can be done by simply plugging the shield into the pro28
Silicon Chip
grammed WeMos Arduino board and
applying power via the USB cable from
your PC. Not only is this convenient
but it also means you can monitor the
debugging messages in case something
goes wrong
With the Arduino IDE open, plug
the WeMos board into your PC’s USB
port and then open the Serial Monitor
by pressing CTRL+SHIFT+M (in Windows) or via the Tools -> Serial Monitor menu item.
If the Serial Monitor doesn’t open,
eg, you may get a message such as
“Board at COM7 is not available” at the
bottom of the IDE window, you need
to select the correct serial port via the
Tools -> Port menu option.
Then try opening the Serial Monitor again.
Once it’s open, make sure the baud
rate is set to 115,200 and then press
the reset button on the WeMos board.
It’s in the corner, next to the USB
socket. You may see some “garbage”
characters on the Serial Monitor, and
then you should get a display like:
ESP8266 in normal mode
...........
WiFi connected
192.168.0.43
min = 450, max = 450
Uploading data...
Done.
Celebrating 30 Years
If, after the “ESP8266 in normal
mode” message, all you see is an ever-increasing row of dots, that’s a sign
that the unit is unable to connect to
your WiFi network. This could be due
to the SSID or encryption key being
set incorrectly in the sketch, so check
them carefully.
If they are correct, you may need
to change your router settings to allow the unit to connect (eg, by adding
its MAC address to the list of allowed
addresses).
Or it may be that you’ve set up your
router to use an encryption scheme that
the ESP8266 does not support. Our
router is set up for the modern “WPA2PSK (AES)” method and it works fine.
If your device connects to WiFi OK
but you get “Error.” rather than “Done.”
then that means there was a problem
uploading the data to ThinkSpeak.
Check that you have set the correct
channel number and Write API Key.
Assuming it’s working, you can log
into the ThingSpeak website and see
the (for now, incomplete) data. The
charts in your channel will automatically update a few seconds after new
data arrives.
If you wait long enough (around 10
minutes), you should see the device
wake up and then send another set of
data points over your WiFi network.
Note that the water tank level percentage figures will be invalid because
the sensor is not attached and it has
not been calibrated yet. The raw/minimum/maximum water tank level values should be a figure on the order of
500 (out of a maximum 65,535) with
no sensor attached.
Now you can power the unit down
and temporarily connect the sensor to
CON1, with the red lead to the + terminal and the black lead to the – terminal.
Power the unit back up and check
the raw data that was logged to ThinkSpeak.com
With the sensor in open air (ie, not
underwater), our prototype gave a reading of just over 20,000. This should increase if the sensor is put at the bottom
of a bucket of water.
Note that calculations suggest the
reading for a sensor current of 4mA
should be around 12,700 but the sensor could draw more than 4mA even at
atmospheric pressure and there is also
an error due to the input offset voltage
of IC1, so the initial reading could be
anywhere in the range of about 10,000
to 22,000.
siliconchip.com.au
Assuming you’re getting a sensible
reading, power the unit down and you
are ready for the final steps.
Final assembly
Now to mount the unit in a waterproof box for installation outdoors.
We used an IP65 sealed case with
clear lid (available from Altronics or
Jaycar). It measured 170 x 120 x 55mm
which gave us enough room to fit all
the parts, including the battery and
charger board.
We glued the solar panels to the inside of the clear lid, which had just
enough space.
We recommend using neutral cure
silicone sealant to do this. You can
also use the same sealant to hold the
Arduino PCB, battery and charger
module in place.
See the internal shots of our prototype for an idea of how you can arrange them.
Remember to leave room to plug in
the USB cable that goes between the
charger board and the Arduino (and
so that you can still connect the Arduino to your PC in future, should
that be necessary).
The two main holes needed to be
drilled are a 19mm hole for the cable gland and a 6.5mm hole for the
SMA WiFi antenna socket. We placed
these on either side of the internal rib
at the end of the case, making sure
there would sufficient space around
the cable gland hole to allow us to fit
the internal nut.
Remember we mentioned earlier
that the barometric pressure and humidity sensors will need access to the
outside air to give proper readings.
We don’t want rain or other nasties
to get into the box but we can’t have
it completely sealed either.
So we drilled four 3mm holes in the
bottom of the case, near the middle,
and glued a piece of open-cell foam
over them.
That will allow outside air to mix
with the air inside the case while preventing moisture, dirt and dust from
getting in.
The box will be orientated so that
rainwater will not block the holes in
the final installation (ie, with the bottom facing down).
Solar panel wiring
Once the silicone holding the solar panels onto the inside of the lid
had cured, we soldered the anodes
siliconchip.com.au
of schottky diodes D1 and D2 directly
onto the + output pads of the two panels and soldered the cathodes together.
The 2.0mm JST cable was then soldered with the positive lead to the
joined cathodes of D1 & D2 and the
negative lead to the – output pad on
one panel, which was then connected to the – output on the other panel
with a length of hookup wire (see the
photo opposite).
We didn’t apply any insulation to
the diodes nor anchor them (except
via soldered joints) but if you are at
all concerned, a thin bead of silicone
sealant will both hold them in position and also insulate them.
Be careful with the polarity of the
JST cable because unfortunately there
is no standard for which wire is red
and which is black.
You need to plug it into the solar
input on the charger temporarily to
check which wire goes to the + input
and make sure that the wire on that
side goes to the diode cathodes (we
try to supply wires with the correct
colour coding with our modules but
it isn’t guaranteed).
If you haven’t already fitted the cable gland and antenna socket (assuming you’re using one), do so now, then
feed the sensor wire through the gland
and attach it to the terminal block. Do
up the gland tightly to make sure no
water can get in and screw the antenna onto the socket.
You can then plug the battery into
the charger board and the antenna cable onto the Arduino board.
Fit the Arduino shield, connect the
USB cable which carries power from
the charger and plug the lead from
the solar panels into the input on the
solar board.
You can then fit the lid to the case
using the supplied screws and waterproof gasket, which is inserted all
around the channel in the lid before
it is screwed into place.
Drop the sensor into the water tank
and find a location to mount the main
unit where it will receive as much sun
during the day as possible, especially
in winter.
Unfortunately, many water tanks
are right next to a building, making
this difficult. You may need to mount
the unit on a fence post nearby.
If the unit stops transmitting data
in the early morning in winter, you’ll
know the solar panels aren’t getting
enough sun to keep the battery chargCelebrating 30 Years
er and more (or larger) panels, or a
mains power supply, will be required
to keep it going.
Calibration
This is essentially automatic as the
unit keeps track of the highest and
lowest readings and uses these as the
100% and 0% levels.
That means to calibrate the unit,
once it’s powered up and running, the
tank needs to be filled. If it’s a rainwater tank, you could fill it with a hose,
or just wait for a good storm!
It checks the last eight readings and
if the minimum of all those readings
is higher than the maximum value
that’s stored in EEPROM, the stored
maximum value is updated. This prevents a brief glitch from affecting the
maximum value.
So basically, once the tank is full,
that should be recognised as the 100%
level after an hour or so. The same is
true (in reverse) for determining the
minimum level.
But if you powered the unit up for a
while with the sensor attached, before
it was put into the tank, that should
have given the unit time to ascertain
the minimum level anyway.
So it might be a good idea to leave
the unit running for an hour or two
before dropping the sensor into the
tank, just to be sure.
The unit ignores readings with raw
values below 5000 for setting the minimum level so that if the sensor is disconnected, it won’t cause the minimum reading to become incorrect.
If you ever need to force the unit
to recalibrate, you can run a wire between pin D8 (ESP8266 pin 15) and
3.3V and then press the reset button.
That will force it to forget the stored
minimum and maximum values and
calculate them again.
You could just let this happen naturally, as the tank empties and fills,
or take the sensor out of the tank temporarily (for an hour or two) to re-establish the minimum level, then put
it back in and wait for the tank to fill
(yes, it will rain eventually!) so it can
re-measure the maximum value.
The minimum and maximum values are then used to determine the
percentage figure which is logged to
your channel.
The raw values are always logged,
so you can re-calculate the level later
if you have more accurate minimum
and maximum readings on hand. SC
February 2018 29
Hands-on review . . .
by Leo Simpson
GPS Satnav + Dashcam
Given that many cars these days already have built-in satellite navigation,
why would you want to install a separate satnav? There are several good
reasons, including accurate speed display and more up-to-date maps (free!)
– but the main reason with this unit is that it also provides a very good dash
camera recorder with features like speed limit and speed camera alerts.
A
nyone who has used a satnav
in their car probably has a love/
hate relationship with it.
They are so good when they guide
you to your destination without problems but they can be extremely frustrating when they
don’t.
These days
many new cars
come with satnav
as a standard feature but virtually
all OEM car satnavs have two major drawbacks.
First, map updates are infrequent and two,
they usually cost
a lot of money after the first couple
of years of ownership.
And even if
you have just purchased a brand
30
Silicon Chip
new car, as I have recently, its maps
are likely to be one or two years out of
date and may not be updated for another year or so.
This is especially annoying when
most after-market satnavs now come
Celebrating 30 Years
with free life-time updates. The Navman Drive Duo unit reviewed here
comes with free monthly life-time
updates.
Secondly, the in-built car satnav
does not display your current speed, as
measured by GPS
or the on-board
diagnostics (OBD)
system.
This is probably
a consequence of
the Australian Design Rules (ADR)
which means that
car speedos can be
optimistic, ie, they
can show a speed
reading which is
higher than the
actual speed and
often the discrepancy can be quite
large. For example,
at an actual speed
of 100km/h, the
indicated speed
siliconchip.com.au
Features
5-inch LCD Screen
Wide angle, f/ 2.0 1080P lens (full HD)
– mounted on gimbal to aim where
you want it to go
Lane Departure Warning System –
LDWS activated at >60km/h when
you deviate away from your lane.
This not only use the “white lines”
as in many other brands but cleverly
monitors the horizon for changes as
well.
The two modes of the Navman Drive Duo are shown here and below left, in
similar locations on the Warringah Freeway approaching the Sydney Harbour
Bridge. Above is the dashcam mode – regrettably, the printing processes do not
give it justice because the closest the cars’ number plates are quite legible. At left
is the Satnav mode, showing the direction it wants you to take.
could be 110km/h or even higher.
This is ridiculous and unnecessary,
especially when car odometers are
usually quite accurate. (In fact, if you
install an OBD-based head-up display
or a OBD-to Bluetooth dongle linked to
your smart-phone, you can have actual
speed – so the car can do it!
This assumes your tires are at the
right pressure, that they’re not worn,
that you haven’t changed them to a
different size and so on.
(See our September 2013 article on
Head-up Displays at www.siliconchip.
com.au/Article/4391).
These days most drivers want to
travel as close to the speed limit as
possible, especially when they are on
an expressway and want to use their
cruise control. This is desirable because you don’t want to impede the
traffic flow or cause irritation to following drivers who will otherwise
pull out to overtake.
Apart from the advantage of actual
speed indication, an after-market satnav will also provide an indication
of the posted speed limit and give a
warning when you exceed that limit.
Most inbuilt car satnavs don’t do this.
Avoiding just one speeding fine can
easily save double the price of the unit
under review.
Just on the pros & cons of in-vehicle
versus after-market satnavs, Google
maps is a very good navigation system.
You can set it up on your smart phone
while you are still having breakfast and
siliconchip.com.au
then when you get into your vehicle
it links to your phone by Bluetooth,
and in some vehicles you will get the
satnav display on the mains screen –
really good.
Of course, with an app overlay,
Google can also give you the extra stuff
such as live traffic warnings, speed
limits, speed cameras and so on. Mind
you, you do need a smart phone and a
mobile data plan.
Still, most drivers will just make do
with their car’s inbuilt satnav rather
than go to the bother of having the distraction of an extra unit on the windscreen or dashboard.
After all, it can be difficult to find
a suitable place to install it and it has
to have a USB or 12V cigarette lighter
cable for the power connection.
But at the same time, many drivers
now realise the advantages of a dashcam, in the event of a frontal collision
or other accident in front of the car. It
could provide crucial information in
the event of an insurance claim or a
possible charge of traffic rules violation. And having a dashcam means
you do need it installed somewhere on
the windscreen. That being the case,
there is a strong argument to installing a combination satnav (with free
updates and actual speed indication)
and dashcam and this Navman unit is
a great example.
The Navman Drive Duo unit has
a 5-inch screen, which I found quite
adequate, especially given the clarCelebrating 30 Years
Built-in 3-Axis G-Shock Sensor
measures impact and automatically
locks the recorded video footage,
impact location and date/time into an
events vault.
Bluetooth handsfree.
Voice activated.
Following too close Alert – FCWS
This alert warns you when you are
travelling too close to the vehicle in
front, reminding you to allow more
space to brake.
Speed limit alerts.
Speed/Traffic Light Camera alerts.
Free lifetime map updates.
GPS Tracking, Photo Geotagging.
Records the direction, location and
speed travelling as well as capture
still images so you can save and
download EXIF data to assist in
insurance claims.
Still photo mode.
Headlight/low light alert.
Manual recording when you feel
threatened eg, road rage or any other
reason.
Uses standard microSD cards.
ity of the display. There is another
model, the Drive Duo SUV, which
has a 6-inch screen – but this sells for
around $100 more than the Drive Duo’s
$249.00 (rrp).
Incidentally, we note that several
merchants on ebay offer the Drive Duo
– at prices up to $80 more than available direct from Navman: just goes to
prove that buying on line is not always
the bargain you might think!
The biggest negative I found was
that, like most after-market sat navs,
that the display was not particularly
good in either very bright sunlight,
February 2018 31
These two images from the Navman Drive Duo really test
any camera – but the Navman passed with flying colours!
The above shot is looking directly into the sun at 7am . . .
or worse, when the Sun was actually
shining on it through a side window
or sunroof. Wearing sunglasses can
also be problematic.
When you take it out of the box, a
small feature is immediately apparent: its suction cap mounting bracket
is quite compact and not some monstrosity which is difficult to install
on a steeply raked windscreen without creating a major obstruction to the
driver’s view.
So that’s a big tick for Navman.
Then when you go into the installation procedure (in the Drive Recorder
settings), you will find that it has onscreen indicators to help you set up the
unit to properly cover the road ahead.
Of course, you need to connect power to the unit and this is where most
cars are lacking: a suitable connection
close at hand.
Why don’t cars have one or more
12V and USB outlets right on the
dashboard, say close to or within the
speedo binnacle?
I experimented with positioning the
review unit just to the left of the speedo
binnacle, so that it caused relatively
little obstruction and was in easy reach
for the touchscreen.
. . . while the night-time shot easily caters for different
light levels, car headlights and so on. Not too many digital
cameras would handle a scene like this as well!
Some of the pics in this review were
taken with it in this position. Later I
moved it to a more central position
on the dashboard which gave slightly
less blocking of my vision but was still
within easy reach for the touchscreen.
The Navman also has voice control
(similar to the inbuilt unit in many
current model cars) – for many functions, you don’t need to operate it via
the touchscreen.
And that brings up another interesting feature. When I pressed the voice
control button on the touch screen, the
Drive Duo told me to say something
from a displayed list of commands.
At top of the list was “home” and I
duly said that, knowing full well that
I had not yet stored my home location.
After all, in most satnavs, whether they
are original equipment or after-market,
you have to store your home location.
In fact, it might a good idea not to
store your home location, just in the
case your car is stolen and a thief decides on an impromptu after-hours
visit. Many people delete their home
address and put in an address around
the corner or a block away.
But the Navman unit was way ahead
of me and based on a week or so of use,
Looking at the rear of the
Navman Drive Duo and its
f/2.0, 1080P wide angle camera.
Not immediately obvious here
is the fact that the camera lens
can swivel to take into account
the angle of the windscreen
and the direction you want the
camera to face.
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Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
it had worked out my home location.
Hmm, that could be a problem. Anyway, it then proceeded to navigate me
home. Later, I found that it had also
stored addresses such as the SILICON
CHIP premises and others that I had
recently visited.
This is a degree of cleverness that
some people will appreciate but others may not! You might want to delete
automatically stored addresses from
time to time.
Other notable features of the Navman Drive Duo satnav are Landmark
Guidance which draws attention to
petrol stations, churches, cinemas and
other points of interest to help guide
you, as well as realistic junction views
with signage, spoken safety alerts and
Trip Planner which allows you to set
several stops on your journey.
And there is also Handsfree Bluetooth phone operation – very handy
if your car does not have this feature
or is problematic when registering
your phone.
One thing you must do with many
satnavs is to cancel the journey once
you have completed it.
Otherwise, your satnav will think
you have gone batty and will persist
in trying to direct you back to where it
thinks you should be. This comment
applies to both inbuilt car satnavs and
aftermarket units like this Navman
Drive Duo.
I should also note that the in-built
GPS receiver seems to be quite sensitive and quickly acquires the satellites,
compared with other GPS satnavs I
have used in the past.
Another favourable comparison
with other satnavs I have used in the
past involves map updates.
In general, the maps in the Drive
Duo appeared to be quite up-to-date
siliconchip.com.au
Speedo reading versus GPS speed reading: why the difference?
In this article, we referred to the particular Australian Design
Rules which specify the performance of a vehicle’s speedometer.
The relevant rule is ADR14, which in turn is based on a United Nations specification so that (theoretically) speedometers the world
over will read the same way.
The rules used to say that a speedo had to be accurate to within plus or minus 10% when the vehicle was travelling at 40km/h
or over. So at 100km/h a speedo could read anywhere from 90 to
110km/h. Many people believe this to still be the case.
However, ADR14 was changed in 2006 to state that a speedo
must not indicate a speed less than the vehicle’s true speed but
could indicate a speed as much as 10% +4km/h over its true speed.
So if the post-2006 vehicle is travelling at a true speed of
100km/h, the speedo could read anywhere from 100km/h to
114km/h. You’d never cop a speeding fine at that rate!
GPS-derived speeds (as in an after-market satnav) are often
presumed to be very accurate – and in fact, most of the time they
are. However, there are many reasons why they too may be in error – above or below true speed – mainly due to insufficent satellite data at that time (inner city “canyoning” effect or heavy vegetation are two well-known factors).
So you cannot absolutely rely on a GPS-indicated speed to avoid
getting a love letter from the authorities!
One further note: in many vehicle tests, has been widely esand that is commendable.
However, I cannot make the same
comment about speed limits. While
it was pretty good in the suburbs of
Sydney where I did most of my driving during the period of this review, it
was often years out of date in regional
areas west of the Blue Mountains, such
as in Bathurst and Oberon.
And also in common with other satnavs, this unit could be confused and
show speed limits on adjacent roads
or over-passes (and warn about nonexistent “safety cameras” when driving on freeways).
I assume this is linked to the overall dimensional accuracy of the GPS
itself (currently about 4m maximum
horizontally but much worse vertically – eg, when you’re driving under
a freeway overpass).
In general though, the Drive Duo
performs well as a satnav and is clearly
ahead of many OEM in-built satnavs
in most recent model cars.
tab-lished that the more expensive a vehicle is, the more likely its
speedo will indicate closer to the true vehicle speed – ie, it’s more
accurate (although there are many exceptions!).
And it’s also true that most heavy vehicles’ speedometers are
much more accurate than ADR14 would require – most truckies
will tell you that their speedo and their after-market GPS usually
read within 1km/h or so.
That could also be why when you’re travelling at an indicated
speed of 100km/h, all you can see in your rear-view mirror is the
grille of a semi-trailer wanting you to speed up or get out of the way!
However, it is not intended for the
sole source of power for an extended
period. Don’t expect it to last too long,
– we didn’t time the battery life and it’s
not mentioned in the documentation
but we would reckon if it’s typical of
most satnavs you’d measure the life in
minutes, not hours. The Drive Duo is
definitely designed as a plug-in device!
The dashcam
All of the above is combined with
an HD 1080P dash camera and ADAS
(Advanced Driver Assistance Systems)
which provides an audible lane de-
parture alert and spoken front collision alert.
I must say I was surprised at the inclusion of front collision alert since the
Navman Drive Duo does not have the
advantage of a frontal radar system that
is included on cars with radar cruise
control and autonomous braking.
On the Drive Duo, both the lane departure and front collision alerts depend on digital process of the camera images while the lane departure
warning also used accelerometer data.
And this feature only works at speeds
above 60km/h.
Battery backup
The Drive Duo has an internal lithium ion battery which will maintain
settings when, for example, moving
between your car and computer, or
into another car.
Prior to use for the first time, it must
be plugged into a power source for at
least eight hours to fully charge the
internal battery.
siliconchip.com.au
Another still, captured from the Navman Drive Duo vision. You can not only
read the number plate of the car in front but in the moving picture, the Range
Rover on the right AND the car on the other side of the traffic lights!
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 33
How do they work in practice?
Not particularly well! I could not
activate the lane departure alert at
any speed even though I deliberately
crossed over road lane markings. At
the same time, my car’s in-built lane
departure alert was shrieking madly,
so there was little doubt about my driving behaviour.
The front collision alert was more
problematic. It does work but I feel that
most drivers will turn it off since it is
over-protective in normal city traffic;
perhaps it is more useful on freeways
and the open road.
Being a somewhat intolerant driver,
I found that the voice warning quickly became really irritating as it would
trigger when stopped at a roundabout and then triggered by cars going
round it.
It could triggered by cars turning
left or as I turned the corner.
After one such warning “You are
driving too close to the car in front.
Please increase your distance!” I
shouted back “No I’m not, there is no
#&<at><at>% car in front of me!”
It didn’t answer.
Day vision
It is a few years since I have used
a dash cam (on my previous car) and
this HD camera really does represent a
big step forward, performing very well
in most lighting conditions.
For example, driving into the Sun is
a severe test of any dash cam but the
Drive Duo comes up trumps; better
than the driver, I should say. We feature a screen grab of this performance
in this review.
And it must be said that the dash
cam will unerringly record events that
you may simply not have registered, as
you glanced at the dashboard, talked
to a companion or looked away from
the road ahead.
In the event of an accident, the dash
cam records the event as it unfolds,
even though you may not at first realise the potential disaster as it develops.
During the couple of months of driving with this Drive Duo, I have been
fortunate enough not to have any really
close calls but reviewing the footage
after a few days’ driving, it is surprising just how many other drivers have
done “stupid stuff” which thankfully
has not had any bad results. Me? Of
course not!
There is mention made in Navman
promotional material (and online) of
34
Silicon Chip
A combination of a pic of the roadway near the SILICON CHIP office plus a
Google map showing the photo location, the g forces on the car at the time (I
was driving very slowly!) in both graph and instantaneous format, a calendar
showing when the pic was taken and a list of the relevant files. Again, printing
processes really don’t do the photo justice: it’s superb!
the ability to add an optional (~$140)
rear-view camera, the Navman A20.
While this would be a really worthwhile addition, there is only the briefest of mentions in the instructions (ie,
don’t plug the power source into the
rear dash cam connector!) so I cannot
comment further.
Night vision
Most dash cams do not perform well
at night. The extreme contrast between
bright headlights, street lights and surrounding darkness is simply too much
for them to cope with.
But the Navman Drive Duo works
surprisingly well at night – it’s good
enough to make number plates of cars
quite readable, so I was impressed
with that.
But it does come unstuck when it is
raining. It is OK if the windscreen wipers can clear the screen in light drizzle
but down-pours will be too much. To
be fair, that tends to apply with human vision too.
Note that the dash cam must be able
to “see” through a wiped area of the
windscreen.
If that condition cannot be met (eg, if
it is mounted outside the wiper blade’s
arc), you can forget recording anything
useful during night-time driving or in
the rain.
This impressive day and night performance is enabled by Navman’s
Celebrating 30 Years
WDR (Wide Dynamic Range) technology which is applied for recording images smoothly under the condition of
severe light contrast.
WDR allows an imaging system to
correct for the intense back light surrounding a subject (eg, driving into
the Sun) and thus enhances the ability to distinguish features and shapes
on the subject.
Videos taken under these conditions still show significant details in
the shadows.
Its performance is significantly better than any “stand alone” dash cam
I have ever experienced, especially
those in the lower price range.
And having one combined unit (instead of individuals) mounted on the
windscreen is definitely a bonus.
The lens, an f/2.0 1080P (full HD)
wide angle type, is mounted on a gimbal so it can be adjusted to take into
account windscreen rake.
In fact, there is specific detail in the
setup procedure to help you achieve
this.
OK, so the Navman Drive Duo HD
camera is undoubtedly an impressive unit.
The videos are recorded in 3-minute
blocks as MP4 files accompanied by
NMEA files which record all the GPSderived info such as location coordinates, speed, time, compass heading,
3-axis accelerometer forces (accelerasiliconchip.com.au
How do satnavs provide traffic updates?
Readers may be wondering how
satnavs actually provide the traffic update information that flashes up on
the screen.
After all, they do not have a satellite
link apart from the GPS function and
that certainly does not provide up-tominute traffic information.
Nor do they have an in-built 3G or
4G SIM card and a data plan. So how
they do it?
In Australia, traffic information is broadcast across the major metropolitan areas
of all states and territories and some of
the larger regional cities in Queensland,
NSW and Victoria by SUNA traffic: www.
sunatraffic.com.au
The information is digitally encoded and
broadcast by FM broadcast stations using
RDS (Radio Data System), which is also
employed to provide station identification,
time and program information.
The traffic information embedded in
the RDS signal is received and decoded
by the satnav.
In a typical Australian city there are hun-
dreds of traffic reports (accidents and congestion etc) and these may or may not be
displayed on your satnav, depending on
your location and route.
Not only does SUNA provide traffic
reports but it also enables the satnav to
calculate the length of a journey and ETA,
based on current traffic conditions.
One point I should make and that is
even though the traffic info is broadcast via
some FM stations using RDS, this Navman
unit does not depend on your car’s radio
for this data. It uses the supplied cigarette
lighter power cable as the antenna. If you
use another cable or a USB cable to power
the unit, it may not pick up the traffic info.
tion, braking and cornering) and so on.
You can play and view the recordings on the Navman Drive Duo or the
MP4 files can be viewed on your computer with any media player, such as
VLC but you may not have sound playback without installing extra codecs.
corner – frustrating!
We were unable to solve this bug at
the time of writing. Our Mivue screen
grabs (working around this bug) are
brought to you by the magic of PhotoShop!
Mivue Manager software
This may sound like a fairly mixed
review and while it is “NYP” (not yet
perfect), the Navman Drive Duo HD is
a big advance in technology.
Its satnav functions work well and
the HD camera is very impressive; a
most worthwhile inclusion for anyone
concerned with recording daily drives,
just in case there is an accident. . .
Alternatively, you can use Mivue
Manager (which has to be installed on
your computer) to view the recordings
and this is really quite impressive, as
shown in some of the screen grabs included in this article.
Either way, the micro SD card must
be removed from the recording slot on
the Navman and moved to the data
access slot
Two modes are available; one showing the video with sound, together
with all the GPS data listed above.
The alternative also shows the video
with sound but is accompanied by the
Google map for the route you took –
but note that your computer must be
linked to the internet to access Google maps.
In principle, Mivue Manager is a
great feature but we found it buggy in
practice as it would not display the
video with the picture occupying the
designated screen area; it would only
show in small area at the top left hand
siliconchip.com.au
Conclusion
Price and availability
We mentioned earlier that the Navman Drive Duo has a recommended
retail price of $279.00 but at the time
of writing (early December), there was
a $30 cashback being offered (due to
expire mid February).
That’s all spelled out on the Navman website (www.navman.com.au
– search for Drive Duo).
But we also made the point, worth
repeating, that buying from some auction sites may not be quite the bargain
you think it is – we’ve seen this particular Navman being offered online
for more than $330!
SC
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 35
An easy-to-build 6-element VHF Yagi for
Great Digital
TV Reception
Do you watch VHF TV? Do you have problems with drop-outs of
your favourite stations? Is the picture often affected by intermittent
pixellation accompanied by “spitting” sounds? Does your TV give a
“no signal” message in periods of wet weather? If you answered “Yes”
to any of these questions, the chances are that your TV antenna is no
longer suitable for the stations you are hoping to receive.
By LEO SIMPSON and ROSS TESTER
This screen shot, which we found on YouTube, ably demonstrates what can happen when you use an old (or even a new!)
UHF/VHF antenna on a VHF TV signal. It’s almost certainly caused by breakthrough from UHF LTE phone or data signals
“swamping” the VHF signal. The solution, at least in VHF-only capital cities, is to use a VHF-only TV antenna!
36
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Our new 6-element VHF TV antenna is
simple to build, from easily-obtainable
aluminium tubing . . . but gives a great account
of itself in metropolitan areas where VHF TV
broadcasts predominate. It should also be adaptable for
the relatively few country areas using VHF (except perhaps
“fringe” areas). If you still have an old band II/III VHF antenna
or worse, a “combi” VHF/UHF antenna, this design should help
eliminate interference from other services now using the old
TV frequencies. Notice that it has horizontal polarisation, to
suit the majority of VHF transmissions (eg, all state capitals).
P
erhaps you have not realised
that in 2014, along with the
switch from analog to digital TV
in Australia, all VHF metropolitan TV
channels were “restacked” into the
higher VHF band, nominally channels
6 to 12 (band III).
Remember being bombarded with
TV ads telling you that you had to retune your TV set? Or the scores of little old ladies calling talkback radio
saying “my TV doesn’t pick up ‘Days
of Our Lives’ any more . . .”
Previous to that you might have
been receiving your main TV broadcasts from VHF or UHF channels. Or
maybe you were using an old TV antenna which was suitable in the days
of analog TV broadcasts but long-term
corrosion and different channel allocations have now made those old antennas simply no longer suitable.
If you take a drive around city streets
you will often observe that many people are still using a VHF/UHF Yagi array (with very long and very short elements), a log-periodic VHF/UHF array
or maybe UHF bow-tie array. Since the
digital TV “restack” most of these antennas simply are not suitable in metropolitan areas.
More information on this digital
restack topic can be seen in our Nosiliconchip.com.au
vember 2014 issue, in an article by Allan Hughes (www.siliconchip.com.au/
Article/8081).
Now over the last few years, you
have probably had your TV do a rescan to receive new channels and it has
duly picked up the stations you want,
plus the regional stations which are
typically broadcast from band 4 UHF
translators. In that case, you might say,
“It works. Why worry?”
Well, your old antenna probably
does work – sort of.
But the fact that the antenna is not
cut to suit the restacked VHF channels
could explain your occasional reception problems.
Another factor to be considered is
that the old UHF TV channels that you
happily used have now been allocated
to 4G mobile phone and data use and
that can mean that your TV is now being subjected to 4G LTE interference.
This will only get worse – probably
much worse – in the future as more and
more phone/data services are packed
into the old UHF TV band.
Overall, if your TV antenna is more
than a few years old, there is a fair
chance that it is not delivering the optimum signal to your TV set.
And while digital TV reception is
not subject to the many problems of
Celebrating 30 Years
the old analog TV broadcasts, such as
ghosting, noise, aircraft flutter and is
more tolerant of varying signals, once
the signal level drops below the “digital cliff” you reach the point where
the picture starts to pixellate and then
drops out altogether, leaving you with
that annoyingly cryptic “no signal”
message on screen.
That can be really frustrating at the
crucial points in your favourite TV series or sports broadcast.
The “digital cliff”, by the way, refers to the fact that with digital signals
there is very little between a great picture and no picture. It’s either there .
. . or it’s not, as if the signal simply
“falls off a cliff”.
So you probably need
a new antenna
Do you buy or build? If you are going to buy a new antenna do not buy
one from an overseas source. They are
unlikely to be cut to suit Australian
VHF Digital TV broadcasts.
Second point, do not buy a VHF/
UHF array. You don’t need it and it is
likely to feed unwanted 4G interference to your set, as can be seen opposite.
Even if you want to receive both
VHF and UHF, the transmitters are
February 2018 37
How we measured the antenna’s gain
Elsewhere in this article we mention that this antenna has
a gain of 10dBd; that’s +10dB with respect to a standard
dipole. But measuring the gain of any antenna is not a simple
process and ideally you need to do it in an open paddock
with no large objects, buildings or hills nearby. We made do
with the parking area behind our building.
We used a Hewlett-Packard 8654B RF Signal Generator
which covers the range 10MHz to 520MHz and can deliver
1V into a 50Ω load. We matched this to the 75Ω impedance of
standard dipole which was connected via 75Ω coax cable.
The scope grab at left demonstrates a test in progress. The
yellow trace is the output from the RF generator while the
green trace is signal received under test. Note that we have
applied signal averaging to remove noise. We had to do
repetitive tests at different frequencies (for channels 6 to 12).
In each case we used standard dipoles for the transmitter and
the receiver and the receive dipole measurement was then
compared with the same signal picked up by the 6-element
antenna under the test conditions.
most unlikely to be co-sited, so you
need to point the antennas in different directions – ergo, different antennas will be needed. They may also be
different polarisation.
If you are going to buy a new antenna or have it installed, make sure
it comes from a reputable Australian
manufacturer.
Make no mistake, these Australian
companies make well-engineered antennas which will give many years of
service and some of their antennas also
incorporate 4G LTE filtering as well.
Be warned, though, there is a lot of
rubbish (dare we say cons?) around –
particularly online. (See the physicsdefying model on page 43!).
But you can save a significant
amount of money by building your
own.
How much much money? We reckon
you can build the antenna described
here for less than $65. Depending on
where you buy a new antenna, you
could save more than half the price.
What about recycling your
old antenna?
A number of readers have suggested this project and one of their cited
reasons has been to recycle the aluminium tubing from their old antenna.
If you look at the dimensions of the
elements of this 6-element Yagi design,
you might be able to salvage some of
the longer elements from an old lowband VHF antenna. But we don’t recommend it.
Those old elements are likely to be
heavily corroded rolled section aluminium and not worth the trouble
and work in cleaning them up. The
38
Silicon Chip
cost of the extruded aluminium tubing in our new design is not high; we
purchased ours for under $40 from
Bunnings hardware stores.
Why bother with that old tatty antenna? Stick it out for recycling at your
next council clean-up.
By the way, before you contemplate
starting this antenna project, make
sure that you are in prime reception
area for VHF channels 6 to 12.
You can do that by going to this website – http://myswitch.digitalready.
gov.au/ and feeding in the details of
your location.
However, this website is not infallible. By far the best approach is to
simply to walk around your neighbourhood and see what the majority
of antennas are.
If you note that the majority are UHF
(ie, short elements) pointed away from
your city’s primary transmission location, it’s a reasonable bet that there is
little or no VHF signal in your location.
After all, there is no point in building a VHF Yagi if your main reception
comes from a regional (UHF) translator, as it may do even if you live in
the heart of an Australian city such
as Sydney.
For example, in hilly areas such
as Sydney’s Northern Beaches, many
TV antennas are pointed towards the
Bouddi translator on the Central Coast,
perhaps 40km away.
This is despite the fact that they
might be only 10km or so from the
main VHF transmitters at Artarmon
– but there’s a dirty great big hill in
the way!
Similarly in the Southern suburbs –
many viewers get their pictures from
Celebrating 30 Years
one of the even more distant Illawarra
translators.
And what about the recent
SILICON CHIP DAB+ antenna?
Some readers will recall that we
published a 5-element DAB+ antenna
in the November 2015 issue (www.
siliconchip.com.au/Article/9394).
And, given its ease of construction,
a few readers suggested that we simply rescale that design to produce this
VHF antenna.
This turns out to be impractical,
mainly because the VHF coverage
of this new antenna is considerably
wider than that for the DAB channels
(which sit in a narrow band smack
bang in the middle of the TV channels).
Secondly, this antenna is intended
for horizontal polarisation while the
DAB+ antenna is a vertically polarised
design with the mast fixing point behind the reflector.
And because we are covering a wider bandwidth we decided to go for a
6-element design which should give
more gain over the frequencies of interest and a little less for DAB+ reception.
By the way, some VHF TV antennas
are stated as being suitable for DAB+
reception as well as TV.
That is partly true, but if you are using a horizontally polarised VHF TV
antenna for TV reception, its pickup
of DAB+ broadcasts will be largely
incidental. Having said that, such
reception may be quite adequate in
your area.
Antenna gain
A 6-element Yagi antenna like this
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the 6-element VHF TV Yagi with a plan view (at top) and the assembly detail shown below.
should give reception at quite long distances from the transmitter, perhaps
100km or more. However, we have
not tested this aspect. We can vouch
for the gain figure of around 10dB (as
detailed on page 38).
You may also wonder “why six elements?” when the DAB+ antenna had
five – indeed, you often see antennas
with fewer elements or more.
siliconchip.com.au
The reason is both simple and
complicated. The simple part is, the
more elements the higher gain, so you
should pick up more signal.
The complicated part is that you
soon run into “the law of diminishing returns” where adding more elements doesn’t really justify either the
cost nor the increased size.
Six elements, for a wide-band anCelebrating 30 Years
tenna such as required for VHF TV,
appears to be the “sweet spot”.
Tools you will need
Most enthusiasts will have most of
the tools needed for this project. You
will need a hacksaw, electric drill and
a vise. It would also help if you have a
drill press but you can do without this.
Apart from an antenna clamp (UFebruary 2018 39
The reflector and director elements are attached directly
to the boom using self-tapping screws. Ideally, all screws,
nuts and washers should be 316-grade stainless steel to
minimise corrosion.
bolt and V-block), no special hardware
or fittings are required.
Tube cutter
A tube cutter is a very handy tool in
an antenna project such as this. You
end up with smooth square cuts with
no swarf. We used a Bunnings product, the Haron Model STC330N. When
using this cutter, it is important not to
rush the job.
Mark the position of the cut on the
tube with an HB pencil and then position the blade of the cutter precisely on
the mark, with the tube sitting between
the rollers. Apply very light pressure
with the knob of the cutter and then
measure from the end of the tube to
the blade of the cutter, to make sure
you are cutting to the exact length you
want (to be sure, to be sure!)
If you have not used one of these
cutters before, do a couple of practice
cuts on scrap of aluminium tube or
plastic conduit, just to get the feel of
the whole procedure.
You are also likely to find that because the tube is very smooth and quite
small in diameter, it is hard to get a
grip on it as the cut deepens. Gripping
the tube with a rubber kitchen glove
makes it a lot easier.
Buying the aluminium
For convenience we purchased the
10mm round aluminium tubing and
19mm square aluminium tube from
the local Bunnings warehouse. They
stock the 19mm square tube in 3-metre lengths and the 10mm tubing in
1-metre lengths.
So we purchased seven 1-metre
lengths of the 10mm tube and one
3-metre length of the 19mm square
40
Silicon Chip
The ends of the folded dipole are fabricated using 30mm
lengths of aluminium tubing shaped to mate with the upper
and lower pieces. They are held together with 50mm long
machine screws, nuts and split washers.
tube. Total cost: just under $40.
You might be able to purchase your
aluminium from a nearby metal supplier and in that case, they might cut
it to the various lengths you will need
(perhaps for a small extra charge?).
One drawback of buying tube from
Bunnings is that every item you purchase has an adhesive label attached
which can be quite difficult to remove.
While the label won’t interfere with
reception, simply for appearance sake
you will need to remove all traces of
the adhesive and that can be done with
kerosene or eucalyptus oil.
Screws & nuts
After a few years’ exposure to the elements, many antennas are in a poor
state. Aluminium does not “rust” but
it does oxidise and its surface becomes
very powdery, particularly in seaside
areas or in metropolitan areas where
there is a lot of industrial fallout.
Corrosion will also be a lot worse
if you don’t use the right screws and
nuts. We strongly recommend the
use of stainless steel screws, nuts and
washers throughout, whether for machine screws or self-tappers. They do
cost more but they last indefinitely.
Some readers may wonder about
the grade of stainless steel required.
We recommend AS316 for best corrosion resistance; it is better than the
inferior AS304, particularly in seaside
environments.
You may find some of the required
stainless steel screws are available
from Bunnings – however, make sure
they are AS316 (the packet will be
clearly labelled). Most will be also
available from ships’ chandlers (almost invariably AS316) or specialCelebrating 30 Years
ist hardware or engineering suppliers. We purchased our stainless steel
parts from Bomond Trading Co, in
Brookvale, in Sydney.
Don’t, on any account, use brass
screws. When used to attach aluminium elements these will corrode away
almost before your eyes. Nor do we
recommend galvanised, bright zinc
or cadmium-plated and passivated
steel screws (with a gold appearance –
they’re rubbish!). In seaside areas, all
of these can be visibly corroded with
just a few days’ exposure.
In rural areas, away from the sea or
city pollution, you can probably get
away with galvanised screws but the
antenna will last longer if you paint it
– including all the screws.
Starting work
Constructing this antenna is quite
straightforward. If you have all the
materials available you can probably
do it in a couple of afternoons.
Fig.1 shows all the details of the
6-element antenna. It shows the dimensions of all the elements and the
various hardware bits you will have
to make to assemble the antenna. At
top is a plan view showing the lengths
of all six elements and their spacing
along the boom. Note that the spacing
between the elements varies.
Before you start, make sure you
have obtained all the aluminium and
hardware listed in the Parts List. You
will be frustrated if you get half-way
through and find you can’t progress
further because you lack screws or
some other item. Get ’em all before
you start.
You need to cut the 19mm square
tube (the boom) to length and then
siliconchip.com.au
mark it for drilling and this is where
it is quite easy to make mistakes. Double-check everything before you cut
or drill!
If you are experienced in metalwork
and have access to a set of vee-blocks
and a drill press, you could substitute 25mm diameter stainless steel
tubing which is readily available but
quite expensive and quite difficult to
cut and drill.
Do not use nickel plated tubing – it
will rust quickly. Nor should you use
stainless steel tubing sold for wardrobe hangers. It is likely to be AS304
rather than the specified AS-316 and
will corrode in seaside areas.
Centre-punch the boom for all holes
prior to drilling. The boom is 1500mm
long – see the plan diagram on Fig.1.
Mark the hole centre position for the
reflector element first, 20mm from one
end of the boom, and then work your
way along.
If you have a drill press which lets
you drill all the element holes square
through the boom you are fortunate. If
not, mark the hole centre positions on
both sides of the boom and drill from
both sides. If you don’t get the element
holes lined up properly, you will have
the elements skew-whiff, and that may
degrade performance.
A few words of advice on drilling
is appropriate here. Drilling in thin
wall aluminium tubing can be a problem and many people tend to end up
with holes that are more triangular
than round. The way around this problem is to drill all the large holes (ie,
all 10mm holes) under size and then
ream them out to the correct size using a tapered reamer.
Don’t drill the larger diameters with
too high a speed otherwise there may
again be a tendency to produce “triangular” holes. If you have a bench drill
which allows you to set slower drilling
speeds, so much the better.
Either way, it is best to drill the element holes to 10mm and then slightly increase each hole with a tapered
reamer so that each element is held
firmly in the boom.
Reaming larger holes
Be careful when reaming holes out
because it is quite easy to get carried
away and then end up with holes
that are oversize. Use a scrap piece of
10mm tubing to test when the holes
specified at 10mm are the correct size.
Each director element and the resiliconchip.com.au
flector is held in the boom with a selftapping screw, as shown in diagram
A of Fig.1. Drill a 3mm hole at the
centre point of each element but only
through one side.
Don’t mount the elements on the
boom yet because the dipole should
be assembled and mounted on the
boom first.
You need to keep a mental image of
how the finished antenna will appear.
If at any time you become confused,
take a look at Fig.1 and the photos
showing the actual antenna we built.
Making the dipole
The folded dipole is made from five
pieces of 10mm aluminium tubing:
one 810mm long, two short (385mm)
and two tiny end spacers around
34mm long. The detail of its assembly
can be seen from the diagram at the
bottom of Fig.1. The two short tubes,
shown as diagram E on Fig.1, are cut
and shaped so that they key in with the
top and bottom elements of the dipole.
Again, further detail can be seen in
the accompanying photos. The top and
bottom pieces of the dipole are held at
each end with a 60mm long M4 screw,
together with a nut and lock washer.
At the centre, the lower halves of
the dipole are terminated on an insulating plate (shown in diagram D
of Fig.1). This plate is made of 3mm
acrylic (Perspex or Lexan). The dipole
halves are each secured to the insulating plate with a 20mm long M4 screw,
nut and lock-washer.
Terminals for the dipole are provided with two 32mm long M4 screws,
each fitted with a nut and lock-washer
plus a wing-nut and flat washer.
The insulating plate is secured to
and spaced off the main boom via a
19mm length of 19mm PVC conduit,
shown as a “dipole centre spacer” in
diagram F of Fig.1.
The top piece of the dipole is secured to the boom with a 60mm long
M4 screw, nut and lock-washer.
The details of the dipole insulating plate and fixing to the boom can
be seen in the accompanying photos.
Note that while we used black Perspex, you could use a piece of polycarbonate if that is what you have on
hand. However, note our remarks on
painting, later in this article.
By this time the antenna should just
about complete. You need to add the
antenna clamp, to enable it to be attached to the mast. This must be just
Celebrating 30 Years
Parts List – 6-element
VHF TV Antenna
Aluminium
1.5 metres of 19mm square tubing
with 1.2mm wall thickness
7 1-metre lengths of 10mm diameter
tubing with 1mm wall thickness*
Hardware
1 120 x 40 x 3mm Lexan or Perspex
1 stainless steel or galvanised U-bolt
and V-clamp to suit mast
5 8G x 13mm pan head self-tapping
screws
3 M4 x 60mm (pan head)
2 M4 x 32mm screws (pan head)
2 M4 x 20mm screws (pan head)
7 M4 nuts
2 M4 wing nuts
7 M4 lock washers
2 M4 flat washers
1 19mm long spacer cut from 19mm
electrical conduit or 19mm square
aluminium tubing
Miscellaneous (sizes/lengths to suit)
Mast and wall mounts or barge-board
mount (hockey stick style)
300Ω to-75Ω in-line balun (Jaycar
Cat LT-3028 plus matching
F-connector)
Quality 75Ω coax cable to suit
(Jaycar WB-2006/9, Hills SSC32 or
equivalent)
Black plastic cable ties
Silicone sealant or Delrin plugs
If required as anti-bird strengthening:
2 1.5m lengths 19mm external use
PVC conduit
* Actual length required is approx. 5.2m
if being cut into lengths by supplier
Note: all screws, washers and nuts
should be AS316-grade stainless
steel
behind the first director.
You will also need a 300Ω-to-75Ω
balun to match it to 75Ω coax cable.
You can purchase this from Jaycar (Cat
LT-3028).
Unfortunately, many antenna
clamps are sold with a cadmiumplated and passivated finish (which
look like a “gold” finish). This is barely adequate for inland areas but rusts
quickly in sea air. We may seem to be
paranoid about corrosion but since
the SILICON CHIP editorial offices are
only a kilometre or so from the crashFebruary 2018 41
The dipole insulator plate has wing nut terminals to
connect 300Ω ribbon or a 300Ω-to-75Ω balun. The plate is
made from Perspex, Lexan or other acrylic material. The
square boom makes mounting easy.
ing waves we are very aware of just
how quickly metal hardware can rust
and corrode.
If you can, buy U-bolts and clamps
that are stainless steel, as used for car
exhaust systems (or boat fittings), as
these will last a lot longer. At minimum, choose hot-dip galvanised.
Be aware that zinc “plated” fittings
are not as rust resistant as galvanised
types. Zinc-plated fittings have a
smooth bright appearance while hotdip galvanising is unmistakable – it
has quite a rough grey appearance.
We also suggest that the ends of all
the elements and the boom be stopped
up with silicone sealant. This will
stop them from whistling in the wind.
(Commercial antenna manufacturers
tend to squash the ends flat for this
reason).
Better still, you can buy Delrin plugs
to suit the square aluminium tubing.
These look neater.
If you live in an area where corrosion is a problem, it is also a good idea
to paint your antenna.
If nothing else, the dipole insulating plate should be painted as acrylic
material does deteriorate in sunlight
(ie, UV).
We suggest you leave the antenna
for a month or so to weather and then
paint it with an etch primer. Finish it
with an aluminium loaded paint.
Installation
When you have finished your antenna you need to carefully consider its
installation. There is no point in going to a lot of trouble making it if you
don’t install it properly.
Try to install your new antenna well
42
Silicon Chip
Finally, the 300Ω-to-75Ω balun is secured to the boom using
black cable ties. The U-bolt must be sized according to the
mast used – we fashioned our own V-block from a piece of
scrap angle aluminium as the suppliers didn’t stock them.
away from existing TV antennas as
these can have quite a serious effect
on the performance. Similarly, nearby
solar panels, metal guttering, electric
cabling, metal roofing or sarking (ie,
reflective insulation such as Sisalation) can have a bad effect on antenna performance. And don’t forget the
effect of a hot water tank which may
be lurking just beneath the roof tiles.
Combatting the bird menace
Most birds love antennas. You provide them with a lovely vantage point,
so they use it. Most birds don’t do it
any harm but when heavier birds such
as kookaburras congregate on it, they
can bend the elements.
The two most damaging birds are
pelicans and sulphur crested cockatoos. Cockatoos seem to have a particularly mischevous streak – several will
bounce on your antenna elements just
for fun, to see if they can damage them!
To combat really heavy birds, it is
best to provide a strong perch about
750mm above the antenna boom. Then
hopefully the birds will land on the
perch rather than your antenna.
Mind you, you can easily replace
bent elements, since you will have
built the antenna in the first place.
An alternative, often seen where
large birds are a real problem, is to fit
a length of 19mm PVC tube (outside
rated for best UV protection) to the outer ends of all elements. This transfers
the weight of the bouncing birds over
all elements and helps protect them –
to some degree.
The PVC tubes can be drilled to
10mm (same as the elements) and
slipped over the ends. Silicone sealCelebrating 30 Years
ant will hold them in place but this
also tends to break down in sunlight
– a stainless steel self tapper could be
a better option.
Cockatoos are very destructive and
they love chewing antenna cable, baluns and plastic fittings on commercial
antennas. You can partly protect the
cable if you run it down inside the
mast but there is no complete solution.
Finally, install the antenna as high
as possible above the roof and guttering. If that is a problem, try to install the antenna so that it is at least a
half wavelength away from the nearest metallic object such as guttering
or roofing.
This means a distance of about
750mm away from guttering, solar
panels etc.
Take care when installing the antenna. Safe working with ladders is
particularly important. Take your time
and don’t take risks. You don’t want to
end up in hospital with a life-changing
injury – a common result of handymen
working on ladders.
Line up the antenna so that it is
aimed at your designated VHF TV
transmitters. Usually they are in the
same general location. You can find
out more from http://myswitch.digitalready.gov.au/
Choosing coax cable
You probably know that there is a
wide range of prices for coaxial cable,
ranging from cents to dollars per metre. What’s the difference and why is
it important?
When it comes to coax quality, price
is usually a pretty good guide.
Apart from the coax impedance (you
siliconchip.com.au
want 75Ω), the main criteria you look
for is attenuation, or loss. Unfortunately, all coax is lossy – this means
that even if you get the last microvolt
of signal from your antenna, depending on the quality of the coax lead, at
least some of it will be lost on the trip
to your TV receiver. You want to minimise that loss.
Cheaper coax has a solid plastic
dielectric, mid-range has an extruded pattern which is mostly air (hence
“air-core”); the best domestic coax has
“foam core” dielectric (which has minimum loss) and the outer conductor is
not only pretty tightly woven (for minimum loss) it also has one or more levels of aluminium foil surrounding the
copper mesh (for minimum loss AND
to minimise interference).
Attenuation is expressed in dB/100m
and increases as frequency increases.
Because we’re not talking super high
frequencies (~250MHz and less) you
can be a bit less fussy in selecting coax.
But really, if you’re making this antenna because you need all the signal
you can get to avoid the digital cliff,
buy the best coax you can afford, within reason.
If the length of coax lead-in needs to
be relatively long and there are splitters to serve more than one TV set this
becomes even more important.
When the antenna is mounted on its
mast, make sure the coax is firmly secured to that mast (and to the antenna
boom) with black cable ties (for best
UV protection), otherwise the cable
can flap around in the wind.
There is nothing more annoying
than lying in bed late at night and listening to the cable slapping against
the mast!
Cable ties are cheap: use them!
An astonishing technological breakthrough in TV antennas . . . (!)
Every now and then a product comes along that totally rewrites the laws of physics, the laws of electronics, the laws of
commonsense and probably the laws of gravity and decency
(among others!).
Such is the 230 x 102mm TVFox Antenna, available only online, which appeared as banner advertising on a couple of what
could only be described as suspect Australian websites. It was
pointed out to us by SILICON CHIP reader George B.
Thanks for bringing it to our attention!
Since then, we’ve also seen variants of these (one called
the “TVSurf”) offering similar remarkable (and totally unjustifed)
“benefits” – including a testimonial from “William of Perth” who
claimed that “this antenna saved him tons of money”. Exactly
the same testimonial can be found on other websites. William
sure gets around!
George wanted to know if these so-called “super antennas” could do what they appeared to claim – that is, pick up
subscription TV channels for free.
We have to say that this has some of the most creative
copywriting we’ve seen in a long, long time. For a start, nowhere do they actually claim that they can receive pay TV
channels – but the very name, TVFox Antenna, is misleading in the extreme.
They claim that there is a law which forces all cable companies to also transmit their programming on free-to-air channels – and this is what the super antenna receives.
Well, we don’t know if such a law does exist in the US (we
seriously doubt it!) . . . but we do know there is no such law in
Australia. In fact, the exact opposite applies, making it illegal to
view subscription or pay TV programs without paying for them!
siliconchip.com.au
Other claims make for fascinating reading: “designed using discrete military tech” (whatever that means!).
“Mount your razor-thin TVFox antenna anywhere – behind
your TV or a picture frame . . .etc etc” Oh yeah? Sure, you
could mount it there, but would it receive anything (especially shielded by your TV!)? We’d like to see that!
“Up to 30 mile range” Not even with a downwind! And
notice the “up to” – that means it could be 30-inch range!
“Allows you to receive hundreds of free television programs in your area without complicated setups or monthly
contracts.”
The “antenna” is completely passive. But even if it had an
inbuilt (powered) amplifier we doubt it would receive anything,
unless you could reach out and touch the transmitter! Maybe.
There’s even a photo on one website of it mounted on the
side of a caravan – with no apparent connection to the TV set
above. Is there no end to the TVFox wizardry?
Then there’s the price: $35.74 – not too expensive (if it
worked), except that’s in US dollars. So it’s more than $AU45!
Oh, but you do “qualify” for $5.00 shipping – only if you order
today! (And that’s US$ too!).
So if you were to buy one, it’s going to cost you more than
$AU50 to find out that you’re not exactly overjoyed with its
performance!
In a word, it’s a con – and our advice is to run the proverbial
mile away if you see one. We’ll give you the URL just so you
can have a good ol’ chuckle yourself. But whatever you do, don’t
be conned into buying one – no matter how good it sounds!
Be amazed yourself, via siliconchip.com.au/link/aaii
Celebrating 30 Years
SC
February 2018 43
Motion Sensor
& Soil Moisture
Sensing Modules
Using
Cheap
Asian
Electronic
Modules
Part 13
This month we look at two low-cost modules from Elecrow. One is a
motion sensor which uses microwave Doppler radar technology rather
than passive IR sensing, while the other module is designed to sense the
soil moisture level in a garden or pot plant. Both modules can be easily
interfaced with an Arduino or Micromite device.
L
et’s start by looking at the Elecrow
RCWL-0516 Microwave Radar
Motion Sensor module first. It measures only 36 x 17 x 4.5mm, including the on-board transmit/receive antenna.
Essentially, this module is designed
as a replacement for passive IR movement sensors as used in intruder
alarms, movement-actuated lighting
and movement-sensing toys.
It’s designed to work on any DC supply voltage between 4V and 28V, with
an operating current under 3mA. The
UHF oscillator/mixer transmits a signal at around 3.2GHz, with an output
of between 20mW and 30mW.
This is claimed to provide movement sensing at distances of up to 7
metres, with close to 360° of coverage
from the front of the module.
Additional features include the ability to adjust the trigger repeat time and
the sensing distance, plus the ability
to use a CdS (cadmium sulphide) LDR
(light dependent resistor) to disable
the sensor at night if desired.
The trigger repeat time is nominal44
Silicon Chip
ly about two seconds, but an optional
SMD capacitor labelled “C-TM” can
be added on the back of the PCB to
increase this time if desired.
Similarly, a 1MW resistor “R-GN”
can be added on the back of the board
to reduce the sensing range from 7m
to 5m.
The optional LDR is added to the
front of the board if it’s desired to disable the sensor at night. This would
probably only be used for applications like movement sensing toys because for many other applications,
the main use of the sensor would be
at night anyway.
This motion sensor’s circuit
The circuit for the RCWL-0516 sensor module is shown in Fig.1. The UHF
oscillator/mixer is on the left, using
Q1, an MMBR941 NPN transistor. The
low-frequency Doppler signal output
from Q1 is fed to pin 14 of IC1, which
forms the triggering circuit.
By JIM ROWE
Celebrating 30 Years
IC1 is an RCWL-9196 device, for
which no data seems to be available.
However, it’s claimed to be very similar to the BISS0001 “micropower PIR
motion detector” IC used in many of
the passive IR motion sensors.
The oscillator/mixer circuit around
Q1 is interesting because of the use of
PCB track components rather than discrete ones. It appears to be a Colpitts
circuit, with capacitors CBE and CCB
formed by inter-track capacitance and
the inductor/antenna comprising an
S-shaped track forming a microstrip
line on the top of the PCB.
Notice that the microstrip inductor
not only forms a key part of the oscillator circuit but also serves as the antenna for both transmission and reception.
The circuit around Q1 is not just
an oscillator and transmitter but also
serves as a mixer, to combine the transmitted and received signals and deliver the resulting Doppler difference
frequency.
This appears as a relatively small
low-frequency signal across the 2.0kW
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: complete circuit diagram for the Elecrow RCWL-0516 microwave radar motion sensor module. The track inductor
forms the antenna for both transmission and reception of microwave signals and has a range of approximately 7m.
resistor connecting the “cold” end
of the inductor/antenna to ground,
which then passes through a low-pass
RC filter before being fed to input pin
14 of IC1.
Inside IC1, the signal apparently
passes through two stages of amplification and filtering and is then used
to trigger one of a pair of timers. This
timer provides the module’s “movement sensed” pulse at pin 2 (VO),
while the other timer sets the trigger
repeat time.
Optional resistor R-GN is connected between the output (1OUT) and
inverting input (1IN-) of the first gain
op-amp inside IC1, so clearly, the sensing range is reduced by lowering the
gain of this stage. On the other hand,
optional capacitor C-TM is used to increase the capacitance from the RC1
pin (pin 4) to ground, to extend the
trigger repeat time.
IC1 has an internal 3.3V regulator.
This is used to step down the supply
voltage fed to the module via the VIN
pin (4) of CON1 and then into IC1 itself via pin 8.
The output of the regulator not only
powers IC1’s internal circuitry but is
also made available via pin 11 (VDD),
where it’s used in this case to power
the microwave oscillator/mixer stage
around Q1. It can supply up to 100mA
of current to external loads, via pin 1
of CON1.
Another point to note is that pin 9
of IC1 allows the chip’s triggering to be
disabled. As you can see, this pin (VC)
is pulled high to 3.3V, as well as being
brought out to pin 5 (CDS) of CON1.
So triggering is normally enabled
but it can be disabled quite easily,
either by shorting pin 5 of CON1 to
ground or by fitting the optional CdS
LDR to the module.
When an LDR is fitted, its resistance
drops when the ambient light level
increases, pulling the voltage at pin 9
of IC1 down. Once it drops to below
0.2V, triggering is disabled.
The purpose of optional resistor RCDS is presumably to allow fine tuning
of the light level at which triggering is
disabled when the LDR is fitted. This
is useful since LDRs vary quite a bit
in their light/resistance characteristic.
Both photos show the microwave-based motion sensor
module at just over twice normal size (36 x 17mm). The
PCB has numerous vias to connect the top and bottom
layer ground planes. An odd feature of this module is
that nearly all the optional parts (R-GN, R-CDS & C-TM)
are soldered to the bottom of the PCB instead of the top;
with the exception of the LDR (marked CDS).
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 45
Fig.2: wiring diagram for the
motion sensor module to an
Arduino or compatible device.
Connecting to a micro
Fig.2 shows a very simple way of
connecting the RCWL-0516 motion
sensor module to an Arduino micro.
The VIN and GND lines connect to the
+5V and GND pins of the Arduino,
while the OUT pin (pin 3 of CON1)
connects to pin D3. That’s all there
is to it.
It’s just as easy to connect the module to a Micromite, as you can see from
Fig.3. Here the VIN and GND lines
again connect to the corresponding
pins on the Micromite, while the OUT
pin connects to pin 16.
In both cases, the actual pin of the
micro to which the OUT pin of the
module is connected is purely to suit
the program you’ll be using to monitor
the sensor’s output. We’ve shown the
connections in Fig.2 and Fig.3 merely
because they are intended to match the
simple programs we will now discuss.
find that moving anything within the
module’s sensing area will immediately
result in the “Movement detected”
message.
To use the module with a Micromite,
download “RCWL0516 motion sensor
check.bas” and use MM Edit to upload
it to your Micromite.
You’ll find that it works in much the
same way as the Arduino program but
with one exception; as well as sending messages back to your PC, this one
also provides a display on the Micromite’s LCD screen (assuming you have
the LCD BackPack).
Elecrow’s soil moisture sensor
Now let us take a quick look at the
Elecrow CT0007MS Soil Moisture
Sensor module, which is essentially
an updated version of earlier analog
soil moisture sensors.
Although this module is much simpler than the microwave movement
sensor we’ve just looked at, it’s on a
somewhat larger PCB because its two
sensor probes form about 70% of the
PCB area. The overall size of the module is 60mm long by 20mm wide.
Each probe is formed by gold-plated
tracks on both sides of the PCB, connected together with 11 vias in each
case. You can see this fairly clearly
from the lead photo of the module.
Also visible in the photo is the
210mm long three wire lead which is
supplied with the module and used
to hook it up to a micro. The connecting lead is provided with a 3-way line
socket at each end, one of which mates
Programming it
It’s easy to get the RCWL-0516 module working with either an Arduino
or a Micromite, as all it needs in each
case is a few brief lines of code.
On the Silicon Chip website, you’ll
find two short programs which show
just how easily it can be done. The
file “RCWL0516_motion_sensor.ino”
is suitable for an Arduino.
When you download it, verify and
compile it using the Arduino IDE and
then upload it to your Arduino, you
should find that when you open the
IDE’s Serial Monitor, you see a sequence of one-line messages from the
module like this:
Fig.3: wiring diagram for the
motion sensor module to a
Micromite. The MMBasic program
for this module also displays data
on the LCD screen.
No movement detected: Output = LOW
No movement detected: Output = LOW
Movement detected:
Output = HIGH
The messages will be coming at the
rate of two per second, and you’ll soon
46
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.4: circuit diagram
for the Elecrow
CT0007MS moisture
sensor. Q1 is connected
as an emitter-follower
such that the voltage
across the 100W
resistor at the emitter
is proportional to the
soil moisture level.
with the plug on the module itself.
Fig.4 shows the circuit of the CT0007MS module. Which is just an
emitter-follower using NPN transistor Q1.
When the two probe electrodes are
pushed into the soil, they form a resistance whose value is inversely proportional to the moisture present in
the soil.
As this resistance is effectively between the DC supply rail (VCC) and
the base of Q1, this means that its
base current will vary according to the
soil moisture. Ergo, wetter soil equals
a lower resistance in the base circuit
and a higher base current.
Because Q1 is connected as an emitter-follower, this means that the voltage across its 100W emitter resistor
will also be proportional to the soil
moisture level.
The wetter the soil, the higher the
voltage across the resistor due to the
higher base current. Since the voltage across the resistor forms the sig-
nal (SIG) output from the module, this
voltage will also vary according to the
soil moisture.
So the CT0007MS module is essentially just an analog transducer converting soil moisture into a DC voltage. In order to use it with a micro, all
that’s needed is to feed its SIG output
to one of the micro’s (analog to digital converter) inputs and to connect
its VCC and GND inputs to the corresponding supply lines.
Fig.5 shows this connected with an
Arduino, while Fig.6 shows it with a
Micromite. The module’s VCC lead can
be connected to either the +5V line
or the +3.3V line. To emphasise this,
we’ve connected it to the Arduino’s
+5V line, but to the +3.3V line in the
case of the Micromite.
Programming this one
Programming an Arduino to use the
CT0007MS moisture sensor module
is straightforward. All you need to do
Fig.5 (above): wiring diagram for the moisture sensor module
to an Arduino or similar. Note that its VCC line can be
powered from either the 5V or 3.3V rail.
Fig.6 (right): wiring diagram for the moisture sensor with the
Micromite and an optional touchscreen attached. If a screen
is present there will be a bar display of the soil moisture
level, as shown on the next page. As with the Arduino, the
module can be powered from either the Micromite’s 5V or
3.3V line.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 47
is read the module’s SIG output voltage. The higher the reading, the more
moisture in the soil.
To get you going with this, we have
produced a simple little program
called “CT0007MS_moisture_sensor.
ino” which is available for download
from the Silicon Chip website.
Use the Arduino IDE to upload it to
your Arduino and you should find that
it will start printing out (via the IDE’s
Serial Monitor) moisture readings
from the sensor every two seconds, as
shown in the screen grab.
During our test, the sensor probes
were inserted into soil a number of
times. On the last occasion the soil
was quite wet, resulting in readings
of around 866 (out of 1023). On the
other hand, the readings were zero
(0) when the probes were not inserted
into any soil.
We’ve also written a small program
to show how easy it is to use the sensor with a Micromite. It’s called “CT0007MS moisture sensor.bas” and as
before, it’s available from the Silicon
Chip website.
This program produces the same
sort of printout of moisture readings
(a feature of MM Edit) as the Arduino program. But if your Micromite is
connected to an LCD panel, it will also
display a bar graph on the screen, indicating the current moisture level.
You can see this in the two small
screen grabs below, one showing the
display when the soil is fairly dry and
the other showing the display when
it’s very wet.
Hopefully, these two simple programs will give you a good introduction to what’s possible using the
Elecrow CT0007MS module.
SC
Above: example output data from running the sample Arduino program with the CT0007MS.
48
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
SMART POWER
ECO POWER SOLUTIONS
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PW
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Maximum Pow
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te
suited for smal chniques and
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CONTROL POWER USING ARDUINO®
TECH TIP:
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Relays are a great way for controlling power but aren’t capable of being directly controlled by a
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$
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9
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$
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3
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L293D DUAL FULL BRIDGE MOTOR DRIVER IC
ZK-8880
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MOTOR CONTROL MODULE XC-4472
Has 2 x 5V servo ports connected to the Arduino's highresolution dedicated timer to ensure jitter-free operation.
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9
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Page 50
CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE GUIDE FOR USING
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High speed and high torque digital servos with dual
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PROJECT OF THE MONTH
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Page 51
CAPTURE THE SUN'S POWER
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Page 52
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INLINE RCD CIRCUIT BREAKER
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Portable 12VDC appliances and equipment, such as refrigerator or safety
Our MB-3690 DC-to-DC boost charger is capable of taking an 8-16V DC input
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Alternator
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House batteries in van
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NA-1420
Removes or reduces
Features gold finish screw-down contacts for sulphation which kills
Heavy duty, solderless, marine grade brass maximum current transfer and conductivity. batteries. One bottle
battery terminals perfect for isolating your Designed for high current applications.
will do up to a N7OZ
battery to prevent battery drain when not in 80A SF-1990
size battery (4WD,
use. Sold in pairs.
boat, truck, etc.)
100A SF-1992
SADDLE
HC-4030
• 92ml
150A SF-1995
LUG BOLT TYPE HC-4034
200A SF-1997
$ 95
250A SF-1999
UNIVERSAL BRASS
BATTERY TERMINALS
FROM
14 95
$
BATTERY ISOLATOR
SWITCHES WITH AFD
$ 95
PT-4440
GOLD ANL WAFER FUSES
8
To order phone 1800 022 888 or visit www.jaycar.com.au
See terms & conditions on page 56.
4 /m
$ 15
HIGH CURRENT POWER CABLES
56A 8 gauge OFC. Sold per metre.
BLACK WH-3062
RED WH-3060
Page 53
WORKBENCH
ESSENTIALS
INCLUDES QUALITY
STORAGE CASE
NOW
$
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.
99
NOW
149
$
SAVE $10
2
SAVE $30
3
1
NOW
14 95
$
SAVE $5
6
39 95
$
INCLUDES TEMP
PROBE AND CASE
4
69 95
RS SERIES ENCLOSED
POWER SUPPLY
Ideal use for industrial,
automation, appliances,
medical equipment etc.
• Single output
• 15/25W
• 5VDC to 24VDC
• No load power
comsumption 0.2W to
0.75W
See website for full range
2. PORTASOL PRO PIEZO
GAS SOLDERING KIT TS-1328 WAS $159
•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)
5. ANTI STATIC FIELD SERVICE MAT/BAG
TH-1776
• Ideal for field service people
• Mat folds out to work area of 600 x 600mm
(approx)
• 2 pouches at one end
• Ground lead and and wrist strap included
24 95
LRS SERIES ENCLOSED
POWER SUPPLY
Ideal for use with various types
of consumer electronic devices,
office facilitites, industrial
equipment etc.
• 60W/120W
• 12/24/48V
• 90-264VAC input
MP-3285 • No load power comsumption
0.2W to 0.75W
29
95
6. TRUE RMS DIGITAL MULTIMETER
QM-1551
• Higher accuracy
• Autoranging
• Measure AC and DC (600V), Current (10A)
• Non-contact voltage detection and
temperature
GST SERIES DESKTOP
POWER SUPPLIES
Ideal use for industrial
control system, mechanical
& electrical equipment,
electronic instrument etc.
• Single output
• 35/50/75/100/150W
• 5VDC to 24VDC
• No load power
FROM
comsumption 0.2W to
$
95
MP-3295 0.75W
FROM
19
$
$
4. CAT III NON-CONTACT AC VOLTAGE
DETECTOR QP-2268
• Detects AC voltages from 50 to 1000V
• Green and red LED indicators
• LED flashlight function
• 2 x AAA batteries included
• 158(L) x 23(D)mm
3. SOLAR POWER METER
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)
• 63(W) x 162(H) x 28(D)mm
5
$
1. 3 WAY ROUND POWERBOARD
MS-4043 WAS $19.95
• Integrated into a handy cable reel for safe,
tangle free storage
• 3m Extension lead
• Overload protection
• 47(H) x 149(D)mm
See website for full range
MP-3252
$
FROM
49 95
See website for full range
13.8VDC 12A LAB POWER SUPPLY
MP-3079
Fused input, fiixed
output voltage.
• 13.8VDC output
voltage
• 12A output current
• 170(W) x 160(L) x
85(H)mm
$
69 95
0-24VDC 15A COMPACT LAB
POWER SUPPLY MP-3800
0-32VDC 0-3A DUAL OUTPUT
LAB POWER SUPPLY MP-3087
Compact size, high current
& variable output.
• 0-24VDC output
voltage
• 15A output current
• Analogue meter
(backlit) screen
• 148(W) x 162(D) x 62(H)mm
Automatic constant-voltage
/constant current. Operate
two outputs independently.
• 2 x 0 - 32VDC output
voltage
• 2 x 0 - 3A output current
• Backlit LED screen
• 185(H) x 260(W) x 400D(mm)
149
$
$
399
8
$ 95
$
39
95
$
34
95
$
300PC QC CRIMP
CONNECTOR PACK PT-4536
42PC ASSORTED SOLDER SPLICE
HEATSHRINK PACK WH-5668
Contains the most commonly used quick
connectors and joiners in various sizes and
colours. See website for full specifications.
Quickly create sealed soldered joint in
one go.
Page 54
29
95
RETRACTABLE TEST LEADS WT-5334
Set of 3 heavy duty leads with insulated
alligator clips in a handy retractable reel.
3m long.
See website for full contents.
Follow us at facebook.com/jaycarelectronics
5 WAY
CRIMPING TOOL
TH-1828
Cuts and strips wire.
Can also cut bolts with
diameter M2.6, M3.0,
M3.5, M4.0 & M5.0.
Catalogue Sale 24 January - 23 February, 2018
EXCLUSIVE
CLUB OFFERS:
FOR NERD PERKS CLUB MEMBERS
WE HAVE SPECIAL OFFERS EVERY MONTH.
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NERD PERKS CLUB OFFER
20% OFF
20% OFF
SOLAR
PANEL
F
F
O
20%MOUNTING
SOLA* R PANEL
HARDWARE
MOUNTING
EL
HARDWARE*
SOLAR PANG
N
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OUNOFFER *
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E
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NOT
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2 FOR $35
FREE
CIGARETTE LIGHTER POWER LEAD
MAINS
POWER
METER
5M WATERPROOF LED
FLEXIBLE STRIP LIGHT
PP-1981
BER?
NOT A MEM! It’s free to join.
Valid 24/7/17 to
NERD PERKS CLUB OFFER
JUST $299
23/8/17
Sign up NOW
Valid 24/7/17 to
23/8/17
*
ZD-0576
MS-6115 ORRP $24.95 EA
BUNDLE DEAL
1 X OUTDOOR CAMERA
QC-8048 $179
1 X SOLAR PANEL CHARGER QC-8045 $149
1 X WIRELESS IR FLASH
QC-8044 $99.95
VALUED AT $427.95
VALUED AT
$49.90
SAVE
25%
$
*PP1981 valued at $19.95.
Valid with purchase of ZD0576
ONLY
79 95
$
SAVE
12895
NERD PERKS
NERD PERKS
NERD PERKS
NERD PERKS
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
20%
10%
PIEZO REVERSING BUZZER
AB-3464 REG $12.95 CLUB $9.95
4-16V operating voltage.
RJ45 PLUG 8 PIN FOR STRANDED
CABLE PP-1437 REG $14.95 CLUB $12.95
Pack of 10.
20%
LEAD FREE SOLDER 200G
100G POCKET SCALE
NS-3094 REG $24.95 CLUB $19.95
99.3% tin, 0.7% copper lead-free. 1mm
QM-7258 REG $49.95 CLUB $39.95
Weighs in grams, carats, pennyweight or
ounces.
NERD PERKS
NERD PERKS
NERD PERKS
SAVE
SAVE
SAVE
15%
20%
20%
NERD PERKS
SAVE
10%
20%
RED 15A DC POWER CABLE
COMPACT STEREO AMPLIFIER
CCD CAMERA EXTENSION LEAD
M205 FUSE PACK
WH-3054 REG $11.95 CLUB $9.95
10m roll.
AA-0518 REG $99 CLUB $79
2 x 20WRMS. Gold plated terminals.
WQ-7277 REG $44.95 CLUB $39.95
15 metre.
SF-2242 REG $12.95 CLUB $9.95
Pack of 40.
NERD PERKS
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NERD PERKS
HALF
PRICE!
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10%
PROBE K TYPE THERMOCOUPLE
50VA STEPDOWN TRANSFORMER USB RJ45 EXTENSION ADAPTOR
TRANSISTOR PACK
QM-1282 REG $14.95 CLUB $7.45
Plug in probe.
MF-1091 REG $49.95 CLUB $39.95
240VAC to 115VAC.
ZT-2170 REG $16.95 CLUB $14.95
100 Mixed BC series transistors.
XC-4884 REG $29.95 CLUB $21.95
Transmitter and receiver included.
NERD PERKS CLUB MEMBERS RECEIVE:
20%
OFF
SOLAR PANEL MOUNTING HARDWARE
*
*Includes Solar Panel Mounting Bracket, ABS Solar Panel Mounts & ABS Solar Cable Entry Point.
To order phone 1800 022 888 or visit www.jaycar.com.au
See terms & conditions on page 56.
YOUR CLUB,
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Page 55
WHAT'S NEW
WE'VE HAND PICKED JUST SOME OF OUR LATEST NEW PRODUCTS. ENJOY!
LED DRIVERS
High efficiency, low power, complies with latest domestic and international lighting regulations.
APV SERIES
ELG SERIES
LPF SERIES
Suitable for indoor use as decorative lights, strip lights in
kitchens, robes and bathrooms.
• Indoor use
12/24V OPTIONS
• 12/16W
• Plastic case
• Low power
• IP42 rated
See website for full range
MP-3371
$
49 95
Suitable use for LED lighting and moving sign
application i.e panel lights, downlights & tunnel lights.
• Indoor or outdoor use
• 40/60W
• Plastic case
12/24V OPTIONS
• Medium power
• IP67 rated
See website for full range
FROM
$
29
$
59 95
Suitable use for LED street lighting and outdoor LED
lighting i.e architectural lights, sign lights and flood lights.
• Indoor and outdoor use
• 75/150W
12/24V OPTIONS
• Metal case
• High power
• IP67 rated
95
MP-3374
FROM
$
$
See website for full range
FROM
79
95
79 95
12/24V PWM SOLAR CHARGE
2 X 15WRMS PORTABLE
CONTROLLERS WITH TIMER FUNCTION STEREO AMPLIFIER AA-0504
200A DC WATT METER
& POWER ANALYSER MS-6190
All-in-one power meter, volt meter, amp-hour
meter, ammeter and energy meter.
• 75A continuous / 200A Max
WITH ANDERSON CONNECTOR OPTION
AVAILABLE MS-6192 $59.95
MP-3756
High efficient PWM charging. Automatically
recognizes day/night. LED indicators for PV
and battery status.
• IP67 protection
• Load overload and short circuit protection
10A MP-3756 $59.95
20A MP-3758 $89.95
Connects to any passive 4 ohm speakers.
Accepts standard audio line output from any
sound system.
• Intelligent short-circuit /
over-temp protection
• 152(W) x 100(D) x 52(H)mm
Image may vary to the one shown.
MP-3378
$
FROM
99 95
149
$
HDMI 18GBPS REPEATER AC-1728
Will provide a boost to run HDMI signals over
long distances.
• Scale up, down, or pass-through
• 20m <at>4K 60Hz, 40m <at>1080p distance
• Maintains quality over long
cable extensions
14 95
$
$
59 95
19 95
$
ANALOGUE RGB LED STRIP KIT
RGB UNDERWATER LIGHT SL-3933
Select up to 12 different colours and 3
different light patterns. IP65 rated with a max
depth of 2m.
• Requires 3 x AAA batteries
SL-3942
Totally flexible and self-adhesive strip. Mains
power supply included.
• Remote controlled
• Waterproof
LOGIC
PROBE KIT KD-6100
This logic probe will help you diagnose and troubleshoot your 3.3V or 5V circuits,
including Arduino and Raspberry Pi projects. It indicates a logic low or logic high state
on the green and red LEDs, and shows a shift between states on the orange LED. Kit
supplied with double-sided screen printed PCB and specified parts.
TERMS AND CONDITIONS: REWARDS / NERD PERKS CARD HOLDERS FREE GIFT, % SAVING DEALS, DOUBLE POINTS & MEMBERS OFFERS requires ACTIVE Jaycar Rewards / Nerd Perks Card membership at time of purchase. Refer to website for Rewards/Nerd Perks
Card T&Cs. PAGE 3: Nerd Perks Card holders receive special price of $69.95 for RTC Power Point Timer Project (1 x XC-4410 + 1 x XC-4536 + 1 x XC-4454 + 1 x MS-6148 + 1 x ZW-3100) when purchased as bundle. PAGE 7: Nerd Perks Card holders gets FREE Cigarette
Lighter Power Lead (PP-1981) with purchased of ZD-0576 5m Waterproof LED Strip Light. Nerd Perks Card holders receive special price of $299 for Outdoor Bundle Deal (1 x QC-8048 + 1 x QC-8045, 1 x QC-8044) when purchased as a bundle. 20% OFF on Solar Panel
Mounting Hardware applies to Jaycar 450E Panel Mounting Hardware.
Y
HW
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Arrival dates of new products in this flyer were confirmed at the time of print but delays sometimes occur. Please ring your local store to check
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in certain stores, including Jaycar Authorised Stockist. These stores may not have stock of these items and can not order or transfer stock.
Savings off Original RRP. Prices and special offers are valid from Catalogue Sale 24 January - 23 February, 2018.
SERVICEMAN'S LOG
Smart TVs can be pretty dumb sometimes
Dave Thompson*
It might surprise a few readers to know that despite constantly
teetering on the bleeding-edge of technology in my day job, my home
life is surprisingly low-tech.
You’d imagine that after 40-plus
years of building gadgets and magazine projects from all ends of the hobby
electronics spectrum, my home would
be bristling with automatically-opening this and clap-your-hands-to-turnoff that.
You’d think my car would have reversing bleepers, wiper delay controls,
electronic ignition, radio boosters and
all that flash kit. While it does actually
have those features, none were built
by me, rather, they all came standard
with the car. In fact, there is very little in my car with my soldering signature on it.
What’s the old saying? A plumber’s
pipes are always rusty, a cobbler’s children always have bare feet or something along those lines…
When it comes down to it, a lot of the
gadgets I built in the past have become
outdated and were replaced by cheaper and better commercial versions.
I’m also what buzz-word fans like to
call time poor, in that I have little time
left in my day to devote to building
projects. After the on-going
(and seemingly never-ending) work
renovating my workshop, fixing up
the interior of the house and trying to
run a business, free time is a luxury I
don’t presently have much of.
The point behind all this is that we
don’t have a lot of high-tech appliances
and gadgetry at home; we don’t even
have our set-top box wired up to watch
terrestrial TV, and getting Sky or similar cable TV seems like an expense we
can’t justify with the amount of gogglebox watching we currently do.
Perhaps we’d watch more if we had
all that stuff in place but for just one
example, to get that set-top box working, I’d need to re-route the connector
and cable from the external TV antenna that the previous homeowner
installed on the roof. And that would
involve crawling through cramped,
humid, spider-web-covered and dusty
roof spaces.
Given that I’m no longer 20 years
old and find it increasingly difficult
to mould myself into some of the
shapes required to navigate these
areas, the cable run and jack point for
the TV antenna can
stay where it is, on
the exact opposite side of the room to
where our TV sits.
In times past, I’ve rigged a temporary antenna extension cable strung
across the carpet in order to both check
the socket worked and to test a very
funky little set-top box that a very
kind, industry-connected serviceman
sent to me from Australia to ensure it
worked in NZ. But stringing a longer
extension cable around the periphery
of this room is not feasible, nor is it a
tidy long-term option.
Joining the 21st century
I only mention all this because the
other day I saw an offer for joining the
streaming internet TV service Netflix
and began to think about how that
would work in our household. The
advertisement listed some up-coming shows that piqued my interest,
so I thought I’d mention it to my wife
and see what she thought of the idea.
Unbeknownst to me, she’d seen the
same promotion and mentioned it to
me first, so we discussed it and decided to sign up for a month’s free trial and
see what all the fuss was about. It all
seemed straight-forward enough; my
wife mentioned that several people at
Items Covered This Month
•
•
Smart TV versus a smart Kiwi
Samsung S24D390 monitor
repair
•
Fixing two 750W 230VAC/12V
DC GMC generators
•
Switchmode power supply with
a blown fuse
*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
February 2018 57
her workplace were Netflix customers
and highly recommended it.
They’d simply plugged their smart
TV into their local network, signed in
using the Netflix app on the TV and
away they went. This sounded far too
easy, yet it ironically in-part explains
why my company no longer has any
bread-and-butter work to do.
Years ago, we made a respectable
living out of setting up clients’ broadband modems and local networks; now
customers are supplied modems that
are pre-configured to work out of the
box. No more setting IP ranges, subnet masks, MAC addresses or default
gateways. Nowadays everything is
done automatically and is truly “plug
and play”.
Of course, one gets the odd situation
where things don’t quite go so smoothly but typically a phone conversation
with the relevant helpdesk soon has
the customer up and running, and all
without a tech in sight.
I signed up with Netflix on their
website and once logged in, clicked
around it on my computer to check
it out. They have a lot of content that
I considered worth having a look at,
however, as is typical in this day and
age, “our” content is different than
what they offer subscribers in the
USA or the UK (and possibly even
Australia).
58
Silicon Chip
It appears the same old zoning, monopolising and price-fixing practices
extend even to this media broadcast
system. Still, there seems to be enough
to keep us occupied for our first free
month’s trial and after that, we’ll have
to see where we stand.
All I need to do now is to get Netflix working on my eight-year-old 40”
Sony Bravia TV and we will be good
to go.
Watching a two-and-a-half-hour
film sitting at the computer, or worse,
on a smartphone screen might be a
good night in for millennials, but I’d
rather watch anything longer than the
average Mr Bean sketch on a decentsized screen and be sitting comfortably
in a proper chair.
Connecting the TV
The first thing I’d need to do is
connect the TV to our local network.
This means plugging a Cat5 network
cable into the LAN socket on the TV
and running it to the nearest network
switch. Unfortunately, that sits around
15 metres from the TV, as the crow flies
(not that we get a lot of crows in our
living room!).
However, as might be apparent by
now, I’m not into running external cables, no matter how carefully hidden
they might be and with several doorways to contend with as well, I’d ideally need to run the cable through the
roof. I refer you to my previous explanation as to why this isn’t likely to
happen. Underfloor is also out so I’m
going to need another way.
I can already hear the cries of people telling me to go wireless instead.
However, Sony was way ahead of me;
instead of building WiFi capability
into the TV, they helpfully provide
the capability for using an external
adapter.
But I can’t use any old WiFi
dongle, I need to buy a special
Sony WiFi dongle, which of
course costs a small fortune.
This immediately triggers my
“stick-it-in-your-tail-pipe”
response, so I won’t be going
down that road.
In the meantime, I suppressed my aversion to exposed cabling and laid a
temporary cable around the
walls. After all, there’s no
point in getting carried away
with buying hardware or installing anything permanent until we
Celebrating 30 Years
are sure we’ll stick it out past the free
trial period.
With the cable plugged into the
router and the TV, and all the relevant
lights flashing to indicate connectivity,
I sat down to see what we had working. Reassuringly, there is an “Internet
TV” button on the remote controller,
so I started by pushing that.
Straight away I ran into a problem. A menu popped up with a selection of options, all of which were not
available to select, except one, which
was the Bravia Internet option. When
I selected it though, after a moment
‘thinking’ about it, a message popped
up telling me that I wasn’t connected.
After a little more button-pushing
on the remote, I found a network setup section, and after running the rudimentary "wizard" was informed that
the network was OK, the internet was
available and the TV was ready. When
I went back to the Bravia Internet menu
and selected it, I still went nowhere.
But this time I got a message saying I had to register my smart TV with
Sony so I could access their internet
services. To do this, I’d have to return
to my computer and register the TV
online. That only took a few minutes,
and after entering a code provided by
the TV, the set was registered with
“my devices” at my new Sony Entertainment account, and the buzz was
mounting. We were ready to go!
By the time I’d walked back into the
lounge, the TV was displaying a message telling me it was registered. This
time, when I selected Bravia Internet,
a dialogue appeared and went back
and forth for a minute or so while I
was “authenticated” before an error
code popped up telling me I needed
to register my Bravia. What the .. !?!
After trying a few more times to
make sure it wasn’t a temporary glitch,
I resorted to the internet. It seems hundreds of people had the same problems
and it appeared to be related to the age
of the TV. While this model is around
eight years old, it’s not as if it’s from
1975; surely it couldn’t be relegated
to the heap so soon?
Eventually, after much gnashing of
teeth and wringing of hands (and the
odd swear word), I found a new firmware download for this model of TV.
After copying the downloaded file to
a flash drive, I put it in one of the two
USB ports on the rear of the set and
rebooted the TV.
The update file was automatically
siliconchip.com.au
detected and took around three minutes to complete. The set restarted
and all the settings had been retained,
which was quite good; many firmware
updates reset everything to default. In
this instance, it didn’t matter because
I didn’t have any custom settings in
there anyway!
This time, when I tried the Bravia
Internet, I logged on to the Bravia Entertainment Network and was instantly completely underwhelmed by the
choices offered.
There was a grand total of five channels available, three of which no longer
worked and the others were so lame
content-wise that watching paint dry
would have been like a summer blockbuster. What a rort…
Once again, I hit the web; I was under the impression Netflix would be
natively available, but of course, when
this TV was made, Netflix was just an
idea someone was working on.
The firmware was dated 2014, but
still nothing there either. According to
consensus online, my TV was too old
and even though it is a “smart” TV, it
is apparently too dumb to receive today’s content.
Not to be beaten
We had another option, my LG Bluray home theatre system. This device
boasted a network socket in the back so
I plugged that in and fired it up. Sure
enough, there was a Netflix app listed
there, so I selected it and waited. And
waited some more. After about 30 seconds, I was asked to sign in, which I
did, painfully, using the remote control as a text-input keyboard, and then
hit enter and waited some more.
Finally, Netflix loaded, and I selected
a title and hit Play. I then waited for
the documentary to load, the status of
which is indicated by a progress bar at
the bottom of the screen. After about
30 seconds, the bar stopped. After
another minute or so waiting, I tried
pressing buttons, but to no avail; the
system had hung.
Luckily, I’d found out how to hardboot this device when working on it
once before; like many computers,
holding the power button down for
5-10 seconds trips off the power.
After restarting it, I tried loading
another title. After the same loading
wait, it started playing. It seems the
progress bar gets to about 30% while
it is buffering before starting the media. On the previous try it must have
siliconchip.com.au
hung just as the title started to play,
but this time it did start.
However, our joy was short-lived
when we started playing with the
forward and reverse controls. On the
computer, these actions are quick and
perform like any other on-screen media-player menu. On the TV, it was
painfully slow. It is actually so bad
that it is unusable, and our excitement
at this stage was turning to bitterness.
How did other people get on with all
this kerfuffle?
Flashing firmware and configuring
players isn’t the gold-standard for internet TV surely? The people my wife
talked to said they had no worries, or
so they claimed. Once again, we felt
like we were the only people who had
problems with this stuff.
To all those armchair techs out there
whose heads are swimming with possibilities, let me add some figures; we
have a 200mbit fibre pipe into this
house, though at speedtest.net our
tests consistently achieve readings in
the high 90s down and 40 up, so while
underperforming, our speed should
be more than adequate for streaming
media.
The Blu-ray player might be a few
years old and the TV apparently now
pre-historic but I had still assumed
that our experience would be better
than it was.
But I wasn’t done yet. I have a Raspberry Pi and my memory banks had
stored the fact that people were using
them as entertainment centres. Apparently, all I needed to do was download
and run a Linux-based home-theatre
software system named Kodi, and I’d
be away.
This I did, and soon had Kodi running, but once again, while I had a
gazillion available add-ons, offering
everything from German sports to
Arabic news, I had no Netflix, which
further research blamed on licensing
problems. This was becoming very
tiresome and I’d spent a lot of time
I didn’t have to spare on getting this
thing to work.
Then I had the thought of just running Raspbian, the Raspberry-Pi’s normal operating system, and running
Netflix on the included Chrome-based
web browser. This actually worked,
but again not very well; it appears the
Pi doesn’t have the processing grunt
to run this at high resolutions.
With the browser in full-screen
mode, any movie stuttered horribly.
In windowed mode it was watchable,
but who wants to watch a 1024x768
window on a 40-inch screen?
While I was trying all this, my wife
discovered that some bright spark had
found a way of getting Netflix to work
with Kodi but it required a beta version, which I eventually found and
downloaded. After some more downloading and installation of add-ons, we
finally had the Netflix app installed.
It even let us sign in, but as soon
as I tried to play a movie, it crashed
with an error, and further research revealed that I needed another resource
called Widevine, a DRM decrypter and
well, at this point, I ran out of excitement and concluded that it is just too
difficult.
Maybe I was over-thinking it. Maybe
my expectations were too high. Maybe it just isn’t up to what I would call
scratch yet.
Regardless, I ended up plugging
the cable back into the Blu-ray player and making do with that. I’ve also
put an order in for Gigabit internet,
which is five times faster and actually cheaper than what we pay now.
We’ll see whether that improves
Netflix’s loading and fast-forward/
reversing times.
I have since read about people using the likes of ChromeCast to relay
content from computers, tablets and
phones to their TVs but having to do
that seems unwieldy and a bit naff.
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Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 59
To my mind, it should just work, especially if they want us to stay on and
pay for it.
Technology… when it works seamlessly, it may have the appearance of
magic but when it doesn’t, it’s more
like having a voodoo curse or a hex
upon your head!
Samsung S24D390 monitor repair
J. W., of Hillarys, WA, is a generous
sort and so he recently offered to fix
his friend’s monitor, which appeared
to be on the way out. Luckily for him,
it didn’t turn out to be a terribly expensive or difficult job. Here’s what
happened...
A pensioner friend recently asked
me to look at his 24-inch Samsung
LCD monitor. He said the top third of
the screen was going dim after some
hours of use but was OK next time he
turned it on. It was only a few years
old and he did not want to throw it
away and get another.
So I connected it to the Raspberry Pi in my shed and left it running.
When I came back some time later, sure
enough, the picture was intact but the
top third of the screen was dull as if
the backlight had stopped working.
I found a central screw on the back
of the monitor and removed it. I then
had to use some plastic prying tools to
undo the numerous plastic tabs holding the back on.
Inside, I found a small PCB which
contained all the electronics with three
cables connected to it. One large ribbon cable went to the LCD panel itself,
another went to the switch panel on
the front of the monitor. The third went
to the front of the monitor and when I
checked the PCB, the labels indicated
they were for LEDs 1-3. So this was for
the LED backlight system.
As there were only four wires in the
cable, I assumed one was for power
and the other three were the low-side
drive lines for the three sections of the
screen: top, middle and bottom.
I powered up the monitor again and
it performed normally so I traced the
tracks from the backlight connector to
find three transistors connected to the
main controller IC.
The output of each also had a resistive divider that sent a portion of the
output voltage back to the main controller. So the controller was able to
monitor the operation of the backlight
system and disable it if it appeared to
be faulty.
60
Silicon Chip
I measured the voltages on each
transistor and found all to be identical. After a short time, not enough for
the monitor to warm up properly (especially with the back removed), the
top third of the backlight went off. I
checked the voltages on the three transistors again and found one which did
not match the others.
So was the problem the transistor,
the controller chip, the connections or
the LED backlight itself?
I decided to figure out where the
fault lay by swapping two wires in the
backlight connector that plugged into
the PCB. This would move the fault to
another third of the screen if the driver
electronics were at fault.
The fault returned after a short time
with the top third of the screen dull
as before. This proved the fault was
indeed in the backlight assembly and
not the controlling electronics.
The next step was to try to disassemble the LCD panel and backlight to see
if I could identify the fault. The LCD
panel came away easily enough once
I had removed a number of screws. I
was able to hinge it out of the way as
there was a flexible connector at the
bottom edge.
However, once I checked under the
panel, I found that access to the backlight system was from the back.
Celebrating 30 Years
I had a good view of the backlight
diffuser and when I tapped the side of
the monitor, the top backlight would
flicker and eventually go off and come
back on when I turned the power off
and on. So it seemed the problem was
some sort of bad connection and the
controller was detecting the problem
and disabling the faulty section.
I decided to remove the LCD panel
entirely to make it easier to access the
backlight system.
The area around the back of the
monitor was again held in place by
plastic tabs so a bit of prying with a
small plastic tool got it apart. I could
now see the diffuser used to spread
the light from the side-lit LED system.
The LEDs were in a long strip that appeared to be glued to the side of the
metal case, so getting at them seemed
to be impossible.
At this stage, I noticed a 2x3mm
piece of metal which moved when I
shifted the monitor. It was sitting at
the bottom of the string of LEDs. I removed it with a pair of tweezers and
decided there was no more I could do
to fault find any further at this stage.
After reversing the disassembly process and letting the monitor run for
a number of hours, the fault did not
return. So I have to assume that the
piece of metal was sitting in a posisiliconchip.com.au
tion where it was occasionally shorting something out and causing the
controller to switch that section of the
backlight off.
I ran the monitor for a few days
with no sign of the fault returning, so
my friend had his monitor back at no
cost. The only mystery was where this
piece of metal had come from. Maybe
it broke off something else in the monitor. I guess we’ll never know.
Two generators for the price of one
B. P., of Dundathu, Qld, recently
had problems with two similar generators. He faced the typical challenges
of sourcing suitable parts but managed to find a valid substitute. In the
process, he discovered an interesting
design aspect of the alternator. Here
is his story...
Several years ago, we bought a GMC
750W 230VAC/12V DC generator,
which we used a few times initially,
including powering a PC with a CRT
monitor. It was then put in the shed
and not used for quite a few years.
Recently, I took it out to use it and
I found that it no longer worked. The
two-stroke motor ran OK but there
was no electrical output from either
the 230VAC outlet or the 12V DC outlet. As the generator had been barely
used and it was still like new, I was a
bit surprised by this.
I suspected that it might have stuck
brushes as a result of sitting unused
for several years. The first job was to
remove the fuel tank, which was held
on with four bolts. This then revealed
the top of the unit and all the wiring.
I then proceeded to remove the outer
casing from the alternator so that I
could check to see what problem may
exist.
I could find nothing wrong inside.
There were no brushes in this alternator, as it works on a different principle
to a car alternator. There was a field coil
and a wound armature but no brushes,
so it was a bit of a mystery to me as to
how it actually worked. A car alternator (many of which I have repaired) has
brushes (and slip rings) and a regulated
field supply from the battery.
Despite not fully understanding
how it worked, I decided to investigate further. I identified the motor ignition coil and the ignition module
but then I spotted what appeared to
be a large black capacitor. I removed
this capacitor and I noticed a physical defect in it, so this was most likely
siliconchip.com.au
the cause of the problem (see photo at
the upper right).
This capacitor was rated at 10µF and
350VAC, so I started looking on eBay
for a replacement. At first, I had a lot
of trouble finding anything remotely
resembling this capacitor, as what was
showing up was smaller types that are
more common.
Then, several pages later, I found
what I was looking for but this capacitor was really expensive. However, I
noticed that it was called a “generator
capacitor”, so I changed my search criteria to that and now I had a lot more
of the correct type of capacitor showing up but they were mostly 12µF and
not 10µF.
I gave the matter some thought and I
decided to order a couple of the 12µF
capacitors and take a chance that they
would work, as they were a lot more
common than the 10µF capacitors and
a lot cheaper as well.
The capacitors arrived, so I fitted
one and I tried to start the generator. However, now it wouldn't start. I
removed the spark plug and I found
that I had no spark on the plug, but I
had a spark on the lead. This type of
thing often happens with two-stroke
engines.
I heated the plug with my blowtorch
and re-fitted it and then I managed to
start the generator but I would need to
replace the spark plug later. However,
it was running now, so I took the opportunity to test it to see if it was producing any electricity.
My multimeter showed that I had
230VAC at the AC outlet and around
14V DC at the DC outlet, so it was now
working. I grabbed a bed lamp and
this lit when turned on, so I then got
out my angle grinder to see if it would
work on the generator.
This angle grinder has a 625W motor and the generator's rated output
is 550W (750W peak). The generator
ran the angle grinder OK but it did
make the motor work a lot harder.
So the 12µF capacitor was fine as a
The large black capacitor located in
the generator with a fairly obvious
crack in its casing.
replacement for the original 10µF
capacitor.
One down, one to go
Later, I just happened to be looking for something in my shed and I
found another one of these GMC generators which was the same model as
the original one. I couldn't remember
where this generator came from, but
I most likely got it when I helped a
friend clean out his shed a couple of
years ago and I brought a few “goodies” home.
This second generator had no fuel
tap; it had broken off and the fuel line
had gone hard. I needed a new fuel tap
for our original generator too because
the handle part had broken, so I ordered a couple of fuel taps and some
fuel line on eBay.
The fuel taps arrived but I then noticed that the outlet was on the opposite side to the original, so I couldn’t
use them. I hadn't noticed the orientation at the time I ordered them but further searching located fuel taps with
the outlet at the bottom instead of the
side, so I ordered this type and waited
for them to arrive.
In the meantime, I had a look at the
second generator and gave it a clean,
as it was quite dirty. While doing this,
I removed the capacitor to check it and
I found that it was in fact 12µF.
This was interesting. I did notice a
slight variation between the two generators, as this second one did not have
Servicing Stories Wanted
Do you have any good servicing stories that you would like to share in The Serviceman column in SILICON CHIP? If so, why not send those stories in to us? In doesn’t
matter what the story is about as long as it’s in some way related to the electronics or electrical industries, to computers or even to car electronics.
We pay for all contributions published but please note that your material must
be original. Send your contribution by email to: editor<at>siliconchip.com.au
Please be sure to include your full name and address details.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 61
supplies the rotating field of the
main alternator and hence alternator output."
"The result of all this is that a small
DC exciter current indirectly controls
the output of the main alternator."
Switchmode power supply repair
The two GMC 750W generators. The first generator to be repaired, which
provided no electrical output from AC or DC, is on the right while the second,
which had no fuel taps, is on the left
the flap over the 230VAC outlet like
the original generator had.
So, I wondered whether this 12µF
capacitor was the original capacitor
that had been fitted to this generator
by the manufacturer or if it had been
replaced at some stage in the generator's life, before I got it.
While I was waiting on the fuel taps
and the fuel line, I thought I would use
the fuel tank from the original generator to give this second generator a
test. After fitting the fuel tank, I tried
to start the generator but it would not
start. I had already replaced the spark
plug and I had spark, so it must be a
fuel problem.
I removed the spark plug and put
a few drops of fuel into the cylinder,
then replaced the spark plug and
tried to start it again. It fired and ran
for around a second, so that meant
that fuel was not getting through. I
removed the carburettor and took the
bottom bowl off it and I noticed some
dirt in it.
I cleaned this out and removed
and cleaned the main jet, which was
blocked, before reassembling the carburettor and re-fitting it.
Now the engine started and I went
through the process of checking it with
my multimeter and angle grinder. The
generator worked just the same as the
original one, so now I had a second
working generator.
Once the new fuel taps and the fuel
line arrived, I fitted them, then reassembled both generators and put them
62
Silicon Chip
away ready to be used whenever the
need arises. For a small outlay for
parts and a bit of work, I now have
two working generators, a good result
in my book.
Editor’s note: brushless alternator
designs are attractive because they
have a much longer service life due to
the lack of brush wear. For those curious about how they work, the following
excerpt from Wikipedia should help:
"A brushless alternator is composed
of two alternators built end-to-end on
one shaft. Smaller brushless alternators may look like one unit but the two
parts are readily identifiable on the
large versions."
"The larger of the two sections is the
main alternator and the smaller one
is the exciter. The exciter has stationary field coils and a rotating armature
(power coils)."
"The main alternator uses the opposite configuration with a rotating
field and stationary armature. A bridge
rectifier, called the rotating rectifier
assembly, is mounted on the rotor."
"Neither brushes nor slip rings are
used, which reduces the number of
wearing parts. The main alternator has
a rotating field as described above and
a stationary armature (power generation windings)."
"Varying the amount of current
through the stationary exciter field
coils varies the 3-phase output from
the exciter. This output is rectified by
a rotating rectifier assembly, mounted
on the rotor, and the resultant DC
Celebrating 30 Years
R. W., of Mt Eliza, Vic, recently had
a friend present him with a faulty electronic module from an unknown appliance to fix. They must consider him
to be an electronic whiz and he may
be, for he soon had it working again.
As follows...
My friend brought the anonymous
module over and told me that it had
failed but didn’t give me any more
information about it. On inspection,
I found it to be a 110-240VAC input
switchmode power supply with no
protection cage around it. I briefly applied power and discovered that the
fuse had blown. So I told my friend
to leave it with me and I would see
what I can do.
I asked him to give me some further
information about the board, eg, what
piece of equipment it was out of or any
circuit diagrams he might have but
nothing was forthcoming. As mains
switchmode power supplies can be
dangerous, I was not looking forward
to working on it.
Despite using the PCB part number
as a search keyword and trawling the
internet, I was not able to find a circuit or any information and I did not
know who manufactured the equipment it was from, so I could not search
for that either.
I noticed there were two wire links
installed on the PCB and a position
for a high-power resistor which was
vacant. The links were evidently supposed to be installed for 110VAC operation and omitted for 240VAC. And
the missing 27kW resistor was supposed to be installed for 240VAC and
omitted for 110VAC.
This explained why the fuse had
blown; the PCB was configured for
110VAC but had been plugged into
230VAC mains. At least this was a
start. I could easily remove two wire
links and solder in a high-wattage
27kW resistor once I found one. But
what else had blown before the fuse?
I decided to remove the board from
the chassis and see if I could trace the
circuit around the wire links. I found
that it uses a full-wave bridge rectifier
for 240VAC operation (when the wire
siliconchip.com.au
links are not installed) but it functions
as a half-wave voltage doubler when
the links are installed for 110VAC
operation. I also noticed that there
appeared to be a thermistor wired in
series which had burned out.
There were also two optoisolators
on the board. One seemed to be used
to indicate to the control circuit when
the AC input was present. I think this
signal may be important when power
is first applied but I did not trace the
circuit further to find out.
For 110VAC input, the optoisolator
was connected via a 27kW resistor to
the incoming AC line. For 240VAC
input, there was an extra 27kW resistor in series. When the wire link is installed it shorts out the second 27kW
resistor.
But for cost-saving reasons, the manufacturer did not install the second
resistor when factory configured for
110VAC input. This made me question whether the optoisolator may
have been blown when 230VAC was
applied.
I thought at this point I might as well
make the changes required for the unit
to operate from 230VAC, plug it in and
see if it worked. I didn’t have much
to lose; if anything else had failed,
it would probably just blow the fuse
when powered up.
I didn’t have a replacement thermistor but even though a chunk had blown
out the side, the resistance across its
pins didn’t seem too high at 32W. This
was probably higher than a good thermistor but still low enough to allow
the power supply to operate with a
light load. At least I would know if it
still worked.
So I made the changes and replaced
the fuse. I didn’t have the correct slowblow type of fuse on hand so I decided to
use a regular fuse for testing purposes.
I hoped that the inrush current at startup would not blow it. Sometimes, you
have to try your luck!
I put the PCB back into the chassis
and sat it on top of a cardboard box to
ensure that it was insulated from the
top of the workbench. I connected the
mains power cord via an earth leakage
circuit breaker and switched it on at
the power circuit.
The fuse did not blow but there was
a loud crack as a spark shot out of the
side of the thermistor.
Without touching the power supply,
I carefully connected my Fluke multimeter across each of the DC output
connectors. The voltages measured
+5.1V DC, +11.95V DC and -11.96V
DC. Whoopee! All was OK; I guess
one can be lucky sometimes. But I still
needed to replace the thermistor and
put in a proper slow-blow fuse.
On Saturday morning I made a trip
to the local electronics store and fitted the new parts that afternoon. The
power supply passed a no-load voltage
test. Luck was on my side. The fuse had
blown before any damage was done
other than to the fuse and thermistor.
The power Mosfet was clearly OK and
the optoisolator had not blown up with
only one 27kW resistor in circuit.
I made a phone call to my friend to
tell him that it was ready to be picked
up. We decided to have a BBQ on Sunday and he would collect the power
supply at the same time.
I did not hear from him whether the
power supply worked OK when installed into whatever it came from. I
suppose if it had not worked, he would
have let me know straight away. Sometimes no news is good news!
SC
New Rohde & Schwarz oscilloscopes
Rohde & Schwarz have recently introduced the
two-channel RTC1000 series, a compact, lowcost, high-quality digital storage oscilloscope.
It can double as an eight-channel logic analyser,
four-channel pattern generator and a protocol
analyser for I2C, SPI, UART/RS-232, CAN and
LIN; and as a digital voltmeter, component tester,
spectrum analyser and counter. With this eightin-one instrument integration, users get more
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For further information contact:
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Ph: (02) 8874 5100
Email: sales.australia<at>rohde-schwarz.com
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siliconchip.com.au
R&S RTC1000 oscilloscopes are available with
bandwidths from 50MHz to 300MHz. Bandwidth
upgrades are available via software license
all the way to 300MHz and can be purchased
as needed. The maximum sample rate is 2
GSample/s and memory depth is 2 Msamples.
LAN and USB interfaces are standard.
Silicon Chip is expecting to obtain an R7A4000series scope/spectrum analyser (another new
product) for review in the near future.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 63
A 10-LED Bargraph with
Want a really flexible bargraph? This 10-LED Bargraph will fill the
bill. It can be configured for dot or bar mode, while for audio signal
monitoring, extra circuitry can be added to provide for VU or for
Peak Program Metering (PPM). It’s a worthy replacement for the
now-discontinued LM391X series of bargraph chips.
L
ED bargraph displays are ubiquitous – you will find them everywhere, in all sorts of electronic
equipment.
They can be horizontal, vertical,
curved, circular or other shapes. They
give an immediate visual indication of
operating conditions, whether monitoring voltage levels or physical parameters such as temperature, audio
signal level or whatever and they can
be designed to react rapidly or slowly.
While many displays these days are
digital read-outs, bargraphs are much
better at showing variations in level,
especially if those variations happen
quickly.
This 10-LED Bargraph indicates DC
voltage levels in a series of 10 steps but
those DC voltages can correspond to
any physical measurement, as noted
above. The voltage steps to light each
subsequent LED can be equal, meaning that the display is linear, or the
64
Silicon Chip
steps can be non-linear, for example,
giving a logarithmic display. In that
case, each step could amount to say a
3dB increment.
It’s easy to build this bargraph with
a linear, logarithmic or any other scale
since the steps are determined by a set
of resistors, connected in series. We
provide examples of the resistors to
use for linear, logarithmic or VU (audio level) scales.
Alternatively, you could produce
your own custom scale by using a different set of resistors.
This project is presented on two
PCBs. One is the LED Dot/Bar display
PCB and the other is the optional Signal Processing PCB, which is used to
convert an AC signal into a suitable DC
voltage to drive the bargraph.
All the components used on both
By JOHN CLARKE
Celebrating 30 Years
boards are readily available. The main
integrated circuits are LM358 dual op
amps, two LM324 quad op amps and
one LP2951 voltage regulator with
most of the remaining components being resistors and capacitors. The LEDs
that form the bargraph itself can be
surface-mount types that sit directly
on the PCB, or standard 3mm LEDs.
The LEDs will light up singly in dot
mode or in a column of LEDs will light
up in bargraph mode.
The display mode is selected by
bridging pairs of solder pads on the
PCB, with nine links (bridges) to solder for each mode. Once you’ve built
the unit, it is configured as either a dot
or bar display and this can’t easily be
changed later.
Why not use an LM3914/5/6?
No doubt some readers are already
thinking, “Why do we need all these
comparators when single chip barsiliconchip.com.au
really flexible display options
graph ICs from National Semiconductor can already do this?”
The National Semiconductor
LM3914 (linear) LM3915 (logarithmic)
and LM3916 (VU) bargraph ICs certainly can do these jobs and they have
been very widely used for many years.
However, the LM3915 has not been
manufactured by National Semiconductor for 15 years and although we
are aware that are still dribs and drabs
around from some sources, NS advise
not to base any new designs on this
chip. So we won’t!
Its cousin, the LM3916, was discontinued many years ago and is effectively no longer available. The only
one that seems to be readily available
in large quantities is the LM3914 – but
the problem with this is that it can only
display a linear scale.
And while these three bargraph
ICs present an easy single-chip solution for many dot/bargraph applications, they do have limitations when
you want to customise the circuit parameters.
For example, the LM3914 linear
bargraph will always have an overlap in the transition from one LED to
the next. That means that at least one
LED is always illuminated but it does
reduce the precision of the display.
In the case of the logarithmic
LM3915, the LED step increments are
fixed at 3dB, giving a 30dB range. You
cannot change the size of the steps to
2dB, or less, for example.
And for both chips working in bargraph mode, all the illuminated LEDs
are effectively in parallel and that can
cause heat dissipation Featur
es & specifications
problems in the chips;
• 10 LEDs – you decide
they have limited power
which type, colour, etc
handling.
• Dot or Bar modes
Indeed, for many au• DC or AC input voltag
dio signal bargraph apes
plications, the circuit
• Linear, Logarithmic,
VU or PPM display
we present in this arti•
Ru
ns
from 12V (100mA maxim
cle is far more useful.
um)
This is particularly
• Full-scale signal ran
ge
adjustable from 583mV
the case in audio mixto 55V
• Uses readily-availab
ers where multiple LED
le components
bargraphs are required,
• Suits surface-mount
or through-hole LEDs
with a resultant high
current requirement.
In those cases, the LM3914/5/6 series
is definitely not ideal.
nected as a comparator to drive a LED.
Yes, our 10-LED bargraph does use
The op amp’s inverting input (-)
more components than the single-chip
pin 2 is connected to the input signal
chip circuits but all the components
while the non-inverting input (+) pin 3
are cheap and readily available and
is connected to a voltage divider comyou can customise the circuit to suit
prising resistors R1 and R2, connected
your particular application, somein series between a reference voltage
thing that is not easy to do with the
(Vref) and ground.
chip circuits.
Assuming that these resistors are the
Finally, these two boards provide
same value, the junction of R1 and R2
a useful aid to demonstrate the use
is one half of Vref (ie, Vref/2). So pin 3
of op amps as comparators, window
of IC2a is held at Vref/2. Now if the incomparators, driving LEDs, along with
put signal at pin 2 is lower than Vref/2,
signal metering and overall bargraph
the output of IC2a will be high. But if
design.
the input signal at pin 2 is greater than
Vref/2, the output of IC2a will be low
How it works
(at close to 0V).
The 10-LED Bargraph circuit comThat means that the op amp will pull
prises ten op amps (operational amcurrent through the LED to light it up.
plifiers) that are used as comparators.
Note that we could use a comparaEach drives one of the LEDs, switching
tor (such as the LM339) do this same
it on when the input voltage exceeds
function but if we wanted to reverse
(or drops below) a set threshold.
the action of the comparator, to drive
To begin, let’s consider Fig.1, which
a LED connected between its output
shows a single op amp (IC2a) conand the 0V rail, it would not work
On the left is the
converter PCB which takes
an audio signal and processes it into
either VU or PPM . . . to be read by the main
bargraph display board at right. It can show either a
dot graph (ie, one LED alight at a time) or a bar graph
(all LEDs alight up to and including the level at that time).
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February 2018 65
Fig.1 (above): this shows the operation of a
comparator. It compares the input signal with a
reference at its non-inverting input and turns on
the LED if the input is above the reference.
Fig.2 (right): this combines three comparators, each
with separate reference voltages at TP1, TP2 and TP3.
Each comparator will turn on its respective LED if
the input voltage is above its reference voltage. The
different LED connections provide for dot or bar modes.
since that type of comparator can only
“sink” current rather than “source” it.
So we use op amps throughout out
circuit because their push-pull outputs
make them more flexible.
So now we want to drive more LEDs.
For that, we add more comparators or
in this case, op amps.
Fig.2 shows a triple comparator setup, with each comparator driving one
LED and with its non-inverting input
connected to a resistor higher in the
series string. The inverting inputs are
connected together to monitor the
same signal (Vin).
Note that while we will refer to comparators in this article, in each case
they will actually be op amps.
In fact, consider that op amps and
comparator ICs contain almost identical circuitry; the main difference, besides the output configuration, is that
op amps are compensated for closedloop stability, which makes them slower to react. But for this project, we’re
dealing with slowly changing signals
so that isn’t a problem.
(Op amps are normally configured
with external negative feedback while
comparators normally have positive
feedback [hysteresis]).
Fig.2 also shows the LED connections for the dot and bar modes. In bar
mode, each LED connects between the
positive supply and the op amp output
via a series 2.2kΩ resistor. This means
each LED will light whenever its comparator output is low.
For dot mode, the anode of each LED
connects to the next higher op amp
66
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output. So a LED will light when the
higher op amp output is high and the
lower op amp output is low.
For example, for LED1, when Vin is
higher than the voltage at TP1 but lower than the voltage at TP2, the output
of IC2a will go low and current will
flow from the output of IC2b, through
LED1 and the 2.2kΩ resistor and then
into the output of IC2a.
In other words, IC2b is “sourcing”
LED1’s current while IC2a is acting as
the “current sink”. As stated above,
this would not work with a typical
(open-collector output) comparator.
OK. Now when the voltage at Vin
goes above the voltage at TP2 but is still
lower than at TP3, IC2b’s output will
go low, switching off LED1 but it will
sink current through LED2 which ultimately comes from the output of IC3b.
Therefore, in dot mode, only one
LED will light at any given time.
For bargraph mode, the LEDs are reconfigured as shown in Fig.2 (LED1’,
LED2’ etc) and so they will light up
whenever the associated comparator output goes low, so if LED2’ is lit,
LED1’ will be lit and if LED3’ is lit
then LED2’ and LED1’ will also be lit.
Switching thresholds and
dithering LEDs
Having said that, it is possible for
two LEDs to be alight (or partly alight)
when the input signal is close to one
of the voltage thresholds, defined by
the reference resistor “ladder” (ie, at
TP1, TP2, etc).
This is due to the fact that the op
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amps have inherent noise which can
cause them to rapidly switch on and
off when the two input voltages are
very close together.
This can be prevented by using hysteresis and as mentioned above, this
involves adding positive feedback between the output of each comparator
and its non-inverting input.
However, that would require the
addition of three resistors to each (op
amp) comparator and we have not
done that with this 10-LED bargraph
circuit since it would mean an additional 30 resistors. That’s a lot of hassle to solve a minor problem.
Full circuit description
Now let’s have a look at the full
circuit of the 10-LED dot/bargraph
display in Fig.3. This shows the 10
(op amp) comparators and the 10resistor ladder network providing the
reference voltage for each comparator.
The resistor network is connected to
the output of adjustable voltage regulator REG1, an LP2951. This ensures
a stable voltage to the resistor string
regardless of variations in the input
supply voltage. REG1’s output voltage is adjusted by trimpot VR2 to a
precise 10V DC.
Note that this bargraph circuit by
itself is only suitable with a DC input
signal; it will not respond an audio
(AC) input signal. In this respect, it
is the same as bargraph circuits using
the LM3914/15 series chips. (We will
get to the additional circuitry which
allows that later.)
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The DC input signal is applied to
CON1 and voltage is limited by the
clamping diodes D2 and D3, to a range
of 0-11.4V, protecting the circuit from
excessive voltages. The input 100kΩ
resistor limits the current through the
D2 and D3 to safe levels.
If the input voltage to be monitored
swings by more than 10V, it should be
attenuated and that can be done by installing link JP1. That places a 10kΩ
resistor in circuit which, in conjunction with the input 100kΩ resistor following CON1, attenuates the signal by
a factor of 11.
Op amp IC1a is configured as a noninverting amplifier with is gain varied
by trimpot VR1. Its gain can be varied
between unity (one) and six.
Note that op amp IC1b (part of the
same dual op amp) is not used in the
Fig.3: this circuit is an expansion of Fig.2 to show all ten
comparators and their LEDs, together with an adjustable input
gain stage IC1a. Its gain is varied by trimput VR1. The adjustable
regulator, REG1, provides a stable 10V reference supply for the ten
comparators.
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Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 67
circuit and it is disabled by having it
pins 1 & 2 connected together and pin
3 connected to 0V (GND), so it won’t
oscillate or otherwise misbehave.
The circuit is set for dot or bar
modes by installing the soldering the
appropriate set of PCB copper pads at
the output of each op amp comparator, ie, either all the “DOT” pad pairs
are joined or all the “BAR” pad pairs
are joined.
The operation is then as described
above, only with ten LEDs rather than
three.
Handling audio signals
If you connected an audio signal up
to CON1, half of it would be clipped
by D3 and the other half would cause
the bargraph to swing up and down
rapidly; not really an ideal situation.
A better solution is to amplify, rectify and filter the audio signal to produce a DC level corresponding its peak
or average amplitude.
There are many different ways of doing this, two of which are known as VU
Meter or Peak Program Meter (PPM)
displays. Further signal processing is
required to achieve these responses.
All these possibilities are covered
by the Signal Processing circuit shown
in Fig.4.
It consists of a non-inverting amplification stage (IC5a), a precision fullwave signal rectifier (IC6a & IC6b) and
a VU response filter stage (IC5b). IC5
& IC6 are LMC6482AIN dual rail-torail op amps.
The audio input signal from CON1 is
fed via a 100nF capacitor and applied
to potentiometer VR3. Instead of being
directly grounded, the “cold” side of
VR3 is connected to a voltage divider
comprising two 10kΩ resistors, with
the junction bypassed with a 100µF
capacitor.
This method of connection allows
the incoming signal to swing symmetrically about the half supply point
(around 5.7V, ie, 11.4V÷2).
Op amp IC5a amplifies the attenuated signal by a factor of 16, giving a
gain range of 0-16. Gain is reduced by
frequencies above 32kHz due to the
330pF capacitor across the 15kΩ negative feedback resistor.
Its low-frequency response rolls off
below 16Hz, as set by the 1kΩ resistor
and 10µF capacitor between the inverting input (pin 2) and ground (0V).
Precision rectification
without diodes
The output signal from IC5a is fed
via a 10µF capacitor to the precision
full wave rectifier comprising IC6a and
IC6b. Its job is to convert the negative
voltage portions of the signal into positive voltages so that we can determine
the average signal level (the average of
a symmetrical AC waveform is 0V).
This precision rectifier is unusual in
that it does not use any diodes and nor
does it need a negative supply rail. It
works because the op amps are rail-torail types. This means that while their
inputs and outputs can swing from
within a few millivolts from +11.4V
(ie, the positive supply rail) to 0V (or
actually to -0.3V in the case of the input), if the input signal swings negative, the op amp’s output will swing
down to 0V but go no further.
So if we apply a sinewave centred
about 0V to the input of voltage follower IC6a, its output will precisely
follow the input signal for the positive excursion of the signal but the
negative excursions will result in a
0V (“clipped”) output. This means
that the output signal at pin 1 will be
a half-wave rectified sinewave.
So that gives us a positive-going signal but only for the positive half of the
AC signal. We need the whole thing.
This is provided by IC6b and the way
it works is very clever.
When the input signal at “A” is below 0V, the output of IC6a (at “C”) is
0V as described above and thus the
non-inverting input pin 5 of IC6b is at
0V; so it is grounded. It now becomes
an inverting amplifier with a gain of
-1, as determined by the two 20kΩ resistors at pin 6, one from the output
at pin 7 and one from the input signal, at “A”.
The third 10kΩ resistor is irrelevant
since with an inverting amplifier, both
inputs are at 0V and therefore that resistor will have 0V at both ends, so no
current will flow through it. It’s effectively out of circuit when the input
signal is negative.
So IC6b will invert the negative-going signal at point “A” to an identical
but inverted positive voltage signal at
pin 7 (“E”).
But when the input signal swings
Fig.4: as an audio signal is AC, this circuit provides both rectification
and signal filtering to give either VU and PPM characteristics. Its
outputs drive the circuit of Fig.3.
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Celebrating 30 Years
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positive, the output of IC6a at “C” will
be identical to the input signal but with
half the amplitude, because of the resistive divider at its input (pin 3).
Here’s where it gets a bit tricky. Op
amps use negative feedback to attempt
to keep both their input pins at the
same voltage. We have half the input
voltage at pin 5 of IC6b, so we would
expect to also see half the input voltage at pin 6.
The question then is what output
voltage from IC6b is required to provide this. We have the full input signal at “A”, which then flows through
a 20kΩ resistor to “D”.
If we assume that the output of IC6b
is identical to the input signal (ie, the
signal at “E” is equal to the signal at
“A”) then we can consider the two
20kΩ resistors to be in parallel, meaning the current is effectively flowing
through a single 10kΩ resistor.
This virtual resistor forms a voltage
divider with the 10kΩ resistor from
“D” to ground, reducing the signal
amplitude by half.
This matches the signal that’s already present at “C”, hence, this is
the condition which will keep both
op amp input voltages equal.
And that means that for positive
voltages at “A”, the output at “E” must
be an identical signal.
Since we’ve just demonstrated that
the output at “E” is identical to the
input at “A” for positive voltages and
an exact, inverted version for negative
voltages, that means that the signal at
“E” must be a rectified version of the
signal at “A”.
We have attempted to illustrate this
rectification process with the waveforms at the various circuit points. So
there is an sinewave shown at point A
and resulting half-wave rectified signal
with positive half cycles at points B, C
& D. Note the periods for which points
B & C and therefore pin 5 is held at 0V.
We have shaded the negative-going
portions of the signal at point “A”.
These portions are effectively ignored
by IC6a because it cannot respond to
them.
But note the complete rectified
waveform at point E. See that it includes the shaded portions of the signal which have been inverted and amplified by IC6b.
Filtering and processing
We now need to filter that rectified
signal to recover a DC voltage that’s
proportional to either the peak of the
incoming signal or the average, or
some combination of the two with differing time constants (ie, VU or PPM).
VU metering was originally provided by a mechanical meter with particular physical characteristics which determined its response to signals.
It is not ideal for indicating transient signals that can cause amplifier
clipping or excessive recording levels.
However, the display is good for a general guide to signal levels.
The electronic VU filter built around
op amp IC5b simulates the ballistics
of a mechanical VU meter which is
relatively slow responding to changes in level.
It is specified that upon a step
change in the input level, it must
reach 99% deflection in 300ms with a
1-1.5% maximum overshoot. This requires a second-order low pass filter
with a high-frequency roll-off at 2.1Hz
and with a Q of 0.62.
IC5b is configured as a Sallen-Key
filter with the above characteristics,
to produce the VU output at pin 3 of
CON3.
If you’re recording audio and you’re
What do “VU” and a “PPM” stand for – and what do they measure?
Just about everyone would have seen (or at least seen a picture
of!) a meter on an amplifier or tape recorder labelled “VU” with
a scale running from -20 to +3, so it’s a reasonable assumption
that it is displaying “VUs”, whatever they are! The VU – which,
incidentally, stands for Volume Unit – is arguably the most misunderstood “measurement” (along with the decibel!) in the whole
of electronics.
Peak Program Meters, or PPMs, probably run a close second.
We’ll get to those in a moment.
What is a Volume Unit?
Even though the VU meters found in a lot of consumer equipment are not particularly accurate (many are there more for show
than anything!), the Volume Unit is actually an accurately defined
quantity. It was first developed in the USA in 1939 by Bell Labs,
along with broadcasters CBS and NBC, to show the “perceived
loudness” of an audio signal. It became a US (and later international) standard in 1942.
The standard states that a reading of 0VU equals 1.228V RMS
at 1000Hz across a 600 ohm resistance.
Confused? Don’t be: just remember that
the VU meter is normally used to provide
a quick visual guide, not give a definitive
measurement.
Mechanical VU meters are slow to
react to changes in level – deliberately
so. This is partly due to the inertia of the
meter itself (or ballistics) but also due
to the circuitry around it; in effect the
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VU meter integrates the signal, presenting an average level rather
than an instantaneous (or peak) level.
The whole point of a VU meter is to show a level which the circuit as a whole can handle without overloading (causing distortion). That’s normally a level of 0 (zero) VU (on many VU meters
this will also be shown as 100%).
Above that (usually marked by a red zone on mechanical VU meters) you run the risk of overload – especially, for example, when
you’re recording to an analog tape recorder. That’s why you adjust
the level so that the reading seldom, if ever, goes much over 0VU.
Incidentally, VU meters and signals with lots of sharp transients
(eg, drums) do not work well together – so much so that the VU
meter, especially the mechanical variety, has fallen out of favour
it recent years.
Which is precisely why we are presenting our highly flexible
LED version!
The Peak Program Meter
This is a variation on the VU meter which shows, as its name
suggests, the “peak” (or maximum) signal
level. Again, this is designed to stop you
over-driving a circuit or a recorder.
The PPM is often just a single LED which
flashes on maximum level. If you set a level
where the LED is mostly on, you will undoubtedly get a distorted signal.
Sometimes a VU meter will also incorporate a LED (as seen in the photo at left) to
give this indication.
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February 2018 69
Fig.5: here’s how to assemble the LED display PCB which is shown here with
a matching same-size photo. Make sure you connect the bar or dot pads (not
both!) on the underside of the PCB.
concerned about clipping (ie, the recording level exceeding the capability
of the recorder to cleanly reproduce it),
you are better off using a Peak Program
Meter (PPM) indicator.
A PPM meter is built using a filter
which ignores very short transients
but otherwise has a fast attack and
slow decay, so you can better see the
peak level.
Its response should be 1dB down
from the peak level for 10ms tone
bursts and 4dB down for 3ms tone
bursts.
These requirements are met by a
filter with an attack time constant of
1.7ms and a 650ms decay rate.
Here we use a schottky diode (D4)
to charge the 1.047µF capacitance (ie,
1µF and 47nF in parallel) via a 1.6kΩ
resistor, which sets the attack time constant. The decay rate is set by the combination of the above capacitance and
the parallel 620kΩ discharge resistor.
on a PCB coded 04101181 and measuring 58 x 122mm. It fits into an optional
UB3 plastic utility box measuring 130
x 68 x 44mm. Follow the overlay diagram of Fig.5 to see how each component is soldered to the PCB.
Before construction, decide whether you want a dot or bar display and
whether you need a linear, log or VU
scale. Use Table 1 to select the values
of resistors R1-R10, according to your
scale requirement.
Fit the resistors first. You can check
the colour code for each resistor value
by referring to the resistor colour code
table but we recommended that you
also check each resistor value with a
digital multimeter before soldering.
Resistors are not polarised but it is a
good idea to install them so that their
colour codes all run in the same direction. This makes it so much easier to
check their values later on.
Construction
If you want a dot display (ie, only
one LED lit at a time), each pair of pads
The 10-LED Bargraph is constructed
70
Silicon Chip
Dot or Bar mode selection
Celebrating 30 Years
labelled “DOT” will need to be bridged
with solder. There are nine such pairs.
The dot links are on the underside of
the PCB, between the end of the 2.2kΩ
resistor and the LED anode.
Conversely, if you want a bargraph
(where all LEDs will light on full
scale), then bridge the Bar links located near the PCB edge (there are nine
of these, too).
You may need to use short bits of
resistor lead offcuts to bridge the two
PCB pads if you find you can’t do it
with solder alone.
Having done that, install the capacitors. There are two types used in
the circuit.
One type is MKT polyester and can
be recognised by their rectangular
prism shape and plastic coating. The
second are electrolytic and are cylindrical in shape and have a polarity
stripe along one side for the negative
lead (the positive lead is also longer
than the negative lead).
The electrolytic capacitors must be
inserted with the correct polarity as
shown on the PCB overlay, with the
longer lead to the + side and the negative stripe on the opposite side.
Electrolytic capacitors will have
their value and voltage rating printed
on them while MKTs are marked with
a code indicating their capacitance,
shown in the capacitor codes table.
Now install diodes D1, D2 and D3;
D1 is a 1N4004 (1A) type while D2
and D3 are 1N4148s (signal diodes).
You can then solder a single PC stake
at the GND terminal position. This allows you to use an alligator clip lead to
connect the negative probe of a meter
to the circuit, while the positive lead
with a standard needle probe can be
used to contact test points TP1-TP10.
IC sockets for IC1-IC4 and REG1
should then be installed with the
notched end towards pin 1.
Scale:
R10
R9
R8
R7
R6
R5
R4
R3
R2
R1
Linear
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
1kΩ
Log
6.8kΩ
4.7kΩ
3.3kΩ
2.2kΩ
1.6kΩ
1.2kΩ
820Ω
560Ω
430Ω
1kΩ
VU
1.1kΩ
1kΩ
820Ω
750Ω
1.3kΩ
1kΩ
820Ω
910Ω
1.5kΩ
680Ω
Table 1 – Values for resistors R1-R10.
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TO SELECT DOT MODE, SHORT OUT
THESE PADS WITH SOLDER
(ON ALL LEDS 1-9)
TO SELECT BAR MODE, SHORT OUT
THESE PADS WITH SOLDER
(ON ALL LEDS 1-9)
Here’s the area of the
main PCB where you
select the dot or bar
graph mode (right
under the LEDs).
Simply short out the
appropriate pads, as
indicated. If you can’t
get solder to bridge
across the gaps,
use short lengths of
resistor lead offcuts.
Before soldering, check that all the
pins have gone through the holes in
the PCB and that none are bent under
the socket.
Terminal blocks CON1 and CON2
must be fitted with the wire entry holes
to the nearest edge of the PCB.
Trimpots VR1 and VR2 can then
be installed. VR1 is a 5kΩ trimpot
that may be marked as 503 instead of
5k. Similarly, VR2 may be marked as
504 instead of 500k. Don’t get them
mixed up.
Now for the LEDs: if using surface
mount LEDs, these are soldered in
place on the top of the PCB with the anode of each toward the top of the PCB.
Use a multimeter set to diode test
to check which is the anode and the
cathode on each LED. The LED will
glow when the red positive lead is on
the anode (A) and the black negative
lead on the cathode (k).
If using leaded LEDs, then the longer lead is the anode. Install these at an
equal height above the PCB, which is
most easily done using a spacer between the legs to set the height during soldering.
Now straighten the IC leads and insert them into their IC sockets, making
sure that REG1 is not mixed up with
IC1/IC2 and that each is oriented correctly, ie, pin 1 notch/dot lined up with
the socket notches, as shown.
Signal processing board assembly
You only need to build this board
if you are feeding an audio signal into
the LED Bargraph. The PCB is coded
04101182 and measures 58 x 81mm. It
can be stacked below the 10-LED Bargraph on 15mm standoffs if required.
The overlay diagram is shown in Fig.6.
As before, solder the resistors first,
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Parts list –10-LED Bar/Dot Graph
1 double-sided PCB, coded 04101181, 58 x 122mm
1 UB3 plastic utility box 130 x 68 x 44mm (optional)
2 14-pin DIL IC sockets
3 8-pin DIL IC sockets
1 2-way PCB-mount screw terminal (5/5.08mm spacing) (CON1)
1 3-way PCB-mount screw terminal (5/5.08mm spacing) (CON2)
1 PC stake
1 5kΩ mini horizontal trimpot (VR1)
1 500kΩ mini horizontal trimpot (VR2)
1 10kΩ 16mm linear potentiometer (for testing purposes)
Semiconductors
2 LM358 dual op amps (IC1,IC2)
2 LM324 quad op amps (IC3,IC4)
1 LP2951 adjustable regulator (REG1)
1 1N4004 1A diode (D1)
2 1N4148 small signal diodes (D2,D3)
10 3mm or SMD 1206 LEDs (LED1-LED10)
Capacitors
4 10µF 16V PC electrolytic
1 100nF 63V/100V MKT polyester
1 10nF 63V/100V MKT polyester
Resistors (all 0.25W, 1%)
1 270kΩ
2 100kΩ
For linear scale, add:
10 1kΩ (R1-R10)
For log scale, add:
1 6.8kΩ
1 4.7kΩ
1 1.2kΩ
1 820Ω
For VU scale, add:
1 1.1kΩ
2 1kΩ
1 910Ω
1 1.5kΩ
1 10kΩ
10 2.2kΩ
1 1kΩ
1 3.3kΩ
1 560Ω
1 2.2kΩ
1 430Ω
1 1.6kΩ
1 1kΩ
2 820Ω
1 680Ω
1 750Ω
1 1.3kΩ
Parts for Signal Processing board
1 double-sided PCB, coded 04101182, 58 x 81mm
2 14-pin DIL IC sockets
2 2-way PCB-mount screw terminals (5/5.08mm spacing) (CON3,CON4)
1 3-way PCB-mount screw terminal (5/5.08mm spacing) (CON3)
1 100kΩ mini horizontal trimpot (VR3)
Semiconductors
2 LMC6482AIN CMOS dual op amps (IC5,IC6)
1 BAT46 diode (D4)
Capacitors
1 100µF 16V PC electrolytic
3 10µF 16V PC electrolytic
3 1µF 63V/100V MKT polyester
1 470nF 63V/100V MKT polyester
1 100nF 63V/100V MKT polyester
1 47nF 63V/100V MKT polyester
1 33nF 63V/100V MKT polyester
1 330pF ceramic
Resistors (all 0.25W, 1%)
1 620kΩ
2 100kΩ
3 10kΩ
1 1.6kΩ
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2 62kΩ
2 1kΩ
2 20kΩ
1 15kΩ
February 2018 71
Fig.6: same-size PCB overlay and matching photo of the audio signal processor
board, which drives the main display PCB in either VU or PPM modes.
then the sole diode (D4), then the capacitors.
Note that along with the MKT and
electrolytic capacitors, this board also
uses a ceramic capacitor, which will
normally look like a disc and is not
polarised. Then fit the IC sockets for
IC5 & IC6, as before, making sure the
notched end goes towards the pin 1
dot as shown in Fig.6.
Follow with trimpot VR3, which
may be marked as 104 rather than
100k. Then install terminal blocks
CON3 and CON4, again with their wire
entry holes towards the closest edge
of the PCB. CON3 is made by dovetailing a 3-way and 2-way screw connector together before inserting them
into the board and soldering the pins.
Finally, insert the two ICs into their
sockets, making sure that they are both
oriented correctly.
for minimum gain from IC1a.
Switch on power and the LEDs
should all light when the test potentiometer is rotated near fully clockwise and they should all be off when
it is fully anticlockwise. LEDs should
sequentially light up as the potentiometer is rotated clockwise, one at a
time if dot mode was selected or in a
bar otherwise.
You can check that the reference
voltages are correct at test points TP1
to TP10. Table 2 shows the voltages
expected at these test points for a 10V
reference at TP10. The voltages should
be within about 10% of the shown value in the table.
As you wind VR2 fully anticlockwise, you will find that the top LED
will light with only about half full
clockwise rotation. That is because
the reference voltage for the LED Bargraph is below 5V and so the output
from the potentiometer only needs to
be this high for the top LED to light.
Similarly, if VR1 is rotated fully
clockwise to amplify the potentiometer signal by about a factor of four, the
amount of travel required from the
potentiometer for a full-scale display
will be small.
It will be around one-eighth of full
rotation in a clockwise direction from
an initial fully anticlockwise setting.
If you’re using the Signal Processing
board and the LED Bargraph board has
Testing and setting up
Before powering up, check your construction carefully and in particular,
check the orientation of the ICs and
electrolytic capacitors and diodes.
Is it a good idea to test the LED Bargraph PCB by itself first, even if you
are going to use the Signal Processing
board later.
Use a 10kΩ linear potentiometer
connected as shown in Fig.7 for testing. Connect the power supply between the +12V and GND inputs but do
not switch it on yet. Adjust VR2 so that
the voltage between TP10 and GND is
10V and rotate VR1 fully anticlockwise
72
Silicon Chip
Fig.7: connections between the audio signal
processor PCB (left) and the LED display PCB.
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
checked out so far, you can now wire
the two together as shown in Fig.8. To
calibrate it, apply a 250mV RMS audio
signal to the signal input and set VR3
fully clockwise. Adjust VR2 for 10V
at TP10 and adjust VR1 so the display
just lights LED10.
You can then apply a line level audio
signal to the input to see the display
vary. Note that VR3 will need to be
adjusted to reduce the line level voltage to a suitable level for monitoring
on the bargraph.
Line level signals can vary over a
wide range, from around 315mV RMS
full scale up to 1.228V RMS, with
some devices such as CD, DVD and
Blu-ray players producing in excess
of 2V RMS.
To make an accurate VU meter, the
0VU level (LED7) should be set to light
with a 1.228V RMS signal applied to
the audio signal input.
This level can be measured using a
multimeter set to read AC Volts and
a signal generator set to a frequency
that the multimeter will measure accurately.
Typically, multimeters will accurately read 50Hz signals but some may
measure above 1kHz. Check your meter’s specifications before setting the
signal generator frequency.
In practice, the sensitivity of the
VU meter (or PPM) meter should be
adjusted to set the range for the audio
SC
signal that’s being monitored.
Linear
TP10
10V
TP9
9V
LED8,
8V
TP8
LED7,
7V
TP7
LED6,
6V
TP6
LED5,
5V
TP5
LED4,
4V
TP4
LED3,
3V
TP3
LED2,
2V
TP2
LED1,
1V
TP1
Log
0dB
(10V)
-3dB
(7.08V)
-6dB
(5.01V)
-9dB
(3.55V)
-12dB
(2.51V)
-15dB
(1.78V)
-18dB
(1.26V)
-21dB
(0.89V)
-24dB
(0.63V)
-27dB
(0.417V)
VU
+3dB
(10V)
+2dB
(8.91V)
+1dB
(7.94V)
0dB
(7.08V)
-1dB
(6.31V)
-3dB
(5.01V)
-5dB
(3.98V)
-7dB
(3.16V)
-10dB
(2.24V)
-20dB
(0.71V)
Resistor Colour Codes
Qty
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Value
620kΩ
270kΩ
100kΩ
62kΩ
20kΩ
15kΩ
10kΩ
6.8kΩ
4.7kΩ
3.3kΩ
2.2kΩ
1.6kΩ
1.5kΩ
1.3kΩ
1.2kΩ
1.1kΩ
1kΩ
910Ω
820Ω
750Ω
680Ω
620kΩ
560Ω
430Ω
* Quantity depends on configuration – see parts list.
4-Band Code (1%)
blue red yellow brown
red purple yellow brown
brown black yellow brown
blue red orange brown
red black orange brown
brown green orange brown
brown black orange brown
blue grey red brown
yellow purple red brown
orange orange red brown
red red red brown
brown blue red brown
brown green red brown
brown orange red brown
brown red red brown
brown brown red brown
brown black red brown
white brown brown brown
grey red brown brown
purple green brown brown
blue grey brown brown
blue red brown brown
green blue brown brown
yellow orange brown brown
5-Band Code (1%)
blue red black orange brown
red purple black orange brown
brown black black orange brown
blue red black red brown
red black black red brown
brown green black red brown
brown black black red brown
blue grey black brown brown
yellow purple black brown brown
orange orange black brown brown
red red black brown brown
brown blue black brown brown
brown green black brown brown
brown orange black brown brown
brown redblack brown brown
brown brown black brown brown
brown black black brown brown
white brown black black brown
grey red black black brown
purple green black black brown
blue grey black black brown
blue red black black brown
green blue black black brown
yellow orange black black brown
Fig.8: test setup
connections, using a 10kΩ
linear pot, to ensure
that all LEDs light up at the
right points. Voltages for
the various test points are
shown at left.
Table 2 – Test point voltages/
signal thresholds.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 73
DEAL OF THE MONTH!
Build It Yourself Electronics Centre®
February
Add wireless sound
to your kitchen, study or
entertaining area.
Stream music directly from your
phone or tablet with this Bluetooth hi-fi
audio package. It combines our best
selling pair of Opus One C 0873 6.5”
ceiling speakers with the popular A 1115
2x20W Bluetooth amplifier. 20m range.
1199
$
USB Car Jumpstarter
& 2-in-1 Floodlight
29.95
A must have for summer road trips!
Starts most 4 & 6 cylinder cars from
dead flat. • 300 cranking amps
• Fits in your glovebox
• High power LED flood light
• USB phone charging
• Suits 12V vehicles only.
• Includes carry case, battery
clips, mains charger & USB lead.
The perfect compact TV/
monitor for your car, 4WD
or caravan! 7” wide format
LCD features in-built HD tuner
to receive all digital channels.
AV input can be hooked up to a
camera or AV source. USB PVR
recording. MP3 & video USB/
SD playback. 12V or 240V
operation (includes plugpack).
A 1101
NEW!
Add light instantly!
A stylish motion activated light for paths,
driveways, garden sheds etc. Charges by
day, lights at night. Requires no batteries
or cabling - just screw it to the wall in a
sunny spot. Weatherproof design.
145W x 96L x 75Dmm.
M 8194
SAVE 22%
HALF PRICE!
64.50
$
High Definition
7” Monitor With
TV Tuner
Add Bluetooth
Audio Instantly! $
Adds wireless audio
streaming to any 3.5mm
input, whether it be your car,
your favourite headphones
or home amplifier. Internal
battery provides 5 hours of
listening time and is USB
rechargeable. Just 40mm
long, weighing a mere 20g!
Add security to your home or business with our high resolution 4 megapixel
(1080p) CCTV pack. Wireless cameras cut down installation time and effort!
Pack includes power supplies for each camera, a network video recorder
(expands to 9 channels!) and four compact bullet cameras.
Q 1224
Gas Bottle Level Detector
Keep tabs on how much gas you have left
and avoid an embarrassing scene at your next
BBQ! Requires 9V battery (S 4970B $3.95).
SAVE 20%
Plus
dual USB
charger!
44.95
$
S 8861B 7”
X 0604A
Bluetooth FM Audio Player
159 $195
$
Transmits bluetooth audio from your phone
(music, phone calls etc) to your cars FM radio.
S 8861B 9”
X 6010
Project your
dashboard onto
your windscreen!
Keep your eyes on the road.
Suitable for any vehicle with an OBDII port, this easy to install head
up display (HUD) allows you to keep your eyes on the road. It shows
speed, RPM, fuel consumption, warning lights and more!
D 0505A 1A 4000mAh
NEW!
24.50
$
33.95
$
D 0507A 2A 8000mAh
Super Slim Battery Banks
Instant recharge for your phone. Slimline aluminium
design, fits easily in your pocket.
To find your nearest store, visit: www.altronics.com.au/storelocations
Sale pricing ends February 28th 2018.
NEW stores now open in WA!
MCCOY ST
ee
Myar
MIDLAND
GATE
79
$
NORTH LAKE ROAD
SAVE $40
35
$
nd
Midla
COPE ST
Stream direct to your TV from your favourite services
such as Netflix, Stan, YouTube and more! Capable of
streaming stunning 4K videos <at> 60fps! Requires 2A
USB power supply. Pair it with our A 0981 wireless
keyboard/trackpad for $29.95.
4 Channel Wireless CCTV System
E
D 2815
NEW!
S 9941
LOTON AV
All your home
entertainment in one box.
X 2375
LLOYD ST
89
$
SAVE $20
$
NEW MODEL!
Nothing else to buy!
Pre-installed with 1TB
hard drive.
No worries! These new Jabees Shield ‘true wireless’ bluetooth
earbuds are perfect for exercise - they’re sweat resistant, light
weight and provide 9hrs of listening time. Great alternative to
Apple Airpods! Includes charging case and replacement earbuds.
29.95
$
C 9037
No headphone jack on your phone?
SAVE $169
C 0873 + A 1115
99
Scoop purchase!
Why pay $179?
199
$
DS
AL
ON
BUNNINGS
CD
M
LEACH HIGHWAY
MYAREE
5A 116 North Lake Rd.
GT. EASTERN HWY
MIDLAND
212 Gt Eastern Hwy.
189
100W Portable
Gas Tool
$
Blow torch & soldering
iron in one. Totally wireless
operation - No need to run
extension leads! Easy to
light, one-click piezo ignition.
2 year warranty. Kit version
includes hot air tip, heat
deflector, additional gas
cartridge, solder, sponge
and hard carry case.
Top choice for the
enthusiast
T 2598 Iron Only
High Power
Blow Torch
T 2599 Kit
60 109
$
$
SAVE 24%
One flick of the
trigger
and you have a
whopping 1300°C
flame ready for
brazing. Refillable
gas cartridge.
19
$
SAVE $25
Iroda®
Butane
4 Pack
Pocket
Rocket
Blow Torch
4 for
$
28
Stock up the
workbench
with this value
pack of quality
double scrubbed
butane. Doesn’t
clog your tools
like the cheap
stuff!
SAVE 15%
T 2490
T 2444A
Super hot 1350°C
flame! Handheld or
self standing design
for tasks such as
heatshrinking,
model making,
silver soldering!
Easily refilled. All
aluminium design.
SAVE $50
Whisk away those soldering fumes!
T 2494
55
#1 choice for schools! This 60W soldering station has a powerful
in-built fume exhaust fan which sucks away the smoke when
soldering. The active filter helps to reduce airborne pollutants in
your workshop. Durable metal construction.
$
SAVE $15
Accurate to 2mm!
SAVE $19.95
T 2451
70
SAVE 20%
SAVE
12%
Mini Jet
Blowtorch
Produces a powerful jet like
flame - up to 1300°C! Refillable
design is great for hobbyists.
$
T 2252
Upgrade to laser measurement!
T 2488
Don’t grapple with a floppy tape measure for a minute longer.
This accurate time saving device is great for trades & consultants.
30m max range. Requires 2 x AAA (S 4904 $4.95 4pk)
15
$
gIVE yOUR TOOL BOx SOME LOVE WITH THESE DEALS...
NEW!
269
$
Handy USB Soldering Iron
T 2699A
16.95
$
Powered by a USB port! Great for occasional jobs like fixing a dry joint. Built in handle
switch and auto sleep mode ensures safe operation. Includes stand & USB lead.
SAVE
$60
Q 0207
Turn a laptop into a 25MHz scope!
19.95
$
Q 1278A
Handy Probe Thermometer
Stainless steel easy clean probe. Great for use in the lab/kitchen. -50°C to +330°C
Superb quality
for precision
electronics use.
The Velleman PCSU200 is a do-it-all solution to save space on your
workbench and make use of your PC or laptop. It connects via USB
and provides function generator, 25Mhz oscilloscope, transient
recorder, bode plotter and spectrum analysing functions. Includes
Windows software, USB cable & easy to read getting started guide.
For full specs see our website.
34
$
.95
Finally a clamp
meter designed
for electronics!
Specialises in low current,
high resolution readings
down to 1mA. Suits AC
or DC use up to 80A. Cat
III 600V. 2 year warranty.
Includes test probes for
other multimeter functions.
Q 0968
140
$
SAVE $39
SAVE $40
True RMS
Autoranging
Meter
T 2749
44
A price breakthrough
for accurate True
RMS AC measurement! Packed with
features for under
$40. Includes carry
bag and test leads.
$
SAVE 24%
Tungsten 5” Side Cutters ‘Getting Started’ Electronics Kit
Ideal for cutting solid core steel, copper
& piano wire. HRC72º hardened jaws
provides 5 times the life of standard
sidecutters.
Great for enthusiasts and students. This handy kit is
supplied complete with carry case and includes all you
need to get soldering! • 30W soldering iron & stand
• 2m solder • Solder sucker • Pliers & side cutters.
Digital Vernier Calipers
T 2247A
T 2177
T 2162
40
Universal Crimping Tool Kit
Changes jaws in seconds! Includes 7 sets of
magnetic jaws to suit kwik crimps, uninsulated lugs,
telephone spades, shoelace ferrules, RG58, RG59
RG62, RG6 coax crimps and D-Sub connectors.
SAVE 20%
$
Precision measuring with ease! 150mm length,
SAVE 27%
suitable for measuring internal, external and
depth dimensions. 0.01mm, 0.0005” and 1/128th” display.
119
$
40pc Ratchet Driver Kit
50
$
T 2168
A great selection of bits and sockets and a
quality ratchet driver with comfy rubberised grip.
39.95
$
Q 1130B
Magnifier
Head Goggles
Offers 1.5, 2.6 and
5.8x magnification
with in-build LED lamp.
Requires 2xAAA’s
(S4904 $4.95 2pk).
Shop online 24/7 <at> www.altronics.com.au
30
$
T 2555
1300 797 007
gREAT POWER SAVINgS
209
$
BIggER, BETTER SOUND...
NEW!
199
$
299
$
A 4201
C 5201
M 8200A
0-30V 3A
SAVE $100
245
$
M 8205
0-30V 5A
Linear Lab Power Supplies
Our most popular models! Fully adjustable with LCD meters for precision adjustments. Great for R&D and workshops. • Linear toroidal design • Voltage &
current knobs • Fixed 12V & 5V output rails • Fully regulated • Short circuit
& overload protection.
Bluetooth® 2 x 50W Mini Amplifier
Stream audio directly from your device to your
speakers in the study or entertaining area.
3.5mm and RCA inputs. Class D design. Internal
headphone amplifier.
239
30
$
$
A 0309B
Rattle the
floorboards!
180W Subwoofer Sensation!
Add stunning cinema realism to your home theatre sound
system. Massive 180W 10” driver with built in amplifier.
Size: 490D x 315W x 420H. *Pictures without included cloth grille.
C 0993
10” 180W
175
25% OFF!
$
Stay powered up on your travels!
*Devices & charging
leads not included
119
M 8882
Charge
up to 10 USB
devices at once!
Great for families,
classrooms and businesses.
Massive 19A charging
output. Rapid charging
2.4A output on each port.
Includes adjustable dividers
& power supply.
SAVE $40
47
$
A 0287A
Also suits
NiMH
batteries
Lithium Cell Charger
With 5V USB output (use charged
cells as a power bank). 12V DC car
& mains use. Suits AAA/AA/C NiMH
& 10340 to 26650 lithium.
Solar
Battery
Maintainer
249
SAVE
$60
Instant, powerful PA
sound for big crowds!
$
Edifier® Active Bookshelf Speakers
An all in one portable PA sound system with
amplifier that sets up in just seconds - no expertise
required. Just plug into 240V power, switch it on
and connect a mic. USB playback makes it easy to
play your favourite tunes. Great for clubs, sports
events, fetes, carnivals and bingo nights!
20
SAVE $66
Ideal for bands
& small venues.
A 2651
A 3250
6 Channel Mixer With USB Player
HDMI & IR Extender System
Extends 1080p signals up to 50m, plus
bi-directional IR for control of equipment from both
ends. Includes power supply, two IR targets, two IR
emitters and facias to suit existing decor.
N 0700
199
$
189
SAVE $60
SAVE 33%
With Bluetooth streaming. We were floored when we demo’ed
these speakers! Great sound from a compact enclosure design.
Fantastic sound for your home theatre, hi-fi or gaming rig. Dual
analog RCA inputs. Model: R1700BT. Size: 154×258×214mm
$
$
Provides a trickle
of power to your
car, caravan or
boat battery to
keep it topped
up when parked
for long periods.
355x125mm
panel size.
Suits 12V
batteries only.
C 5066
C 0991
8” 100W
Pick up this great travel charger to keep up to 4
devices charged at once! Includes adaptors for Australian, US, UK and European outlets. 5V 4.1A output.
100-240V AC input. - Travel case included!
$
NEW!
Featuring USB/SD card playback with easy to use controls. All
channels feature balanced XLR, unbalanced 6.35mm, insert
inputs, high/mid/low adjustment, pan & gain level.
20
SAVE
20%
$
70
A 1012
$
D 0875
SAVE 25%
M 8528
95
$
SAVE $14
Compact SLA Charger
Easy to use, with trickle charging
function. Multi-stage charge
control ensures long battery life.
6/12V batteries up to 60Ah
UPS Backup for
12V DC Appliances
A compact 12V DC 18W UPS unit for
providing backup power to all kinds of
DC powered equipment. Great for routers, NAS, telephone & comms systems.
A 1109
SAVE 24%
38
$
Add Bluetooth audio to any amp.
Pairs with your phone to stream your favourite
tunes to your existing sound system. Includes
3.5mm lead. Buy P 6020 1.5m lead ($6) to hook
up to RCA input on most amps. USB 5V
1A charging output.
SAVE 33%
Replace a
broken remote.
With IR learning and
codes to suit 1000’s of
AV devices. Requires
2xAAA batteries.
Shop online 24/7 <at> www.altronics.com.au
Reclaim
your desk
space!
These stylish PC monitor
brackets raise your
monitor off your desk.
Easily adjustable angle
& height. Clamps to your
desk for fast installation.
1300 797 007
H 8222A
Dual
120
$
H 8220A
Single
80
$
DESIgN, BUILD & MAKE FOR LESS.
79
50
$
$
SAVE $20
SAVE 19%
*Raspberry pi for illustration purposes.
Integrates a Bluetooth 4.0 chip and a STM32
ARM controller on the board. Great for wireless
programming or controlling a project with a phone.
NEW!
K 9675
Z 6534
Z 6536
Bluno M3 ARM Bluetooth Board
24.95
$
MegaStand Acrylic
16x2 LCD UNO Kit
Bluno Mega2560 Arduino Bluetooth Board
Integrates Bluetooth 4.0 into the Arduino Mega platform allowing
wireless programming and real time low energy communication with
your project.
SAVE 16%
Z 6532
A cut down MegaBox which provides a backlit 16x2 LCD for simple readouts,
plus room to customise the front panel with buttons or IR sensor. UNO
(sold separately) fits neatly behind the screen and provides room for add-on
shields as required.
NEW!
55
$
Bluno Nano Arduino Bluetooth Board
Z 6308
49.95
$
The Bluno Nano offers a compact atmega328p platform with in-built
Bluetooth 4.0 low energy for easy connectivity. Just 53x19mm in size great for portable designs.
3D Gesture Control For R-Pi
FlickHAT is a 3D tracking and gesture HAT that lets
you control yourPi with a swipe, tap or flick your
wrist. Detects gestures up to 15cm away in 3D
space. Also works as a touch sensor pad.
35
$
Z 6502
SAVE 22%
3 Wire Serial 128x64 LCD
Includes easy connection SPI interface module.
Blue backlight with white characters.
HALF
PRICE
Z 6342
18
$
USB Host Peripheral Shield
Connect USB peripherals & mass storage devices
to your Arduino. Uses the MAX3421E chip.
SAVE 22%
MegaBox Kit For Arduino
22
USB Bootloader Programmer
Great for reprogramming your own atmega chips.
Includes 6 and 10 pin cables.
13
$
B 0091
Z 6554
.50
Real Time
Clock For R-Pi
Provides accurate time
for the Raspberry Pi.
Plugs into the I2C bus.
Includes battery.
80
$
The MegaBox allows an Arduino UNO or Mega to be plugged into it, along with
a shield allowing you to build a design into a finished case. Plus it also features
a 16x2 LCD, four buttons, rotary encoder, dual 2A 5V relay outs. All pins
broken out to headers for connection to breakouts.
50
$
NEW
LOWER
PRICE!
K 9615
Arduino Starter Platform Kit
A handy starter kit for educators or Arduino newbies. Includes an
Arduino UNO compatible board, blue acrylic base, 5V 2A power
supply, USB lead, breadboard, 65pcs of jumper leads & hardware.
Tinker Part Pack
K 9640
A huge assortment of parts
for experimenting and
building. Includes diodes,
LEDs, switches, resistors,
caps, strip board, a motor
& more. Normal RRP
value $55!
NEW!
L298 H-Bridge
Motor Shield
$
Uses an L298 H-Bridge
designed to drive relays,
solenoids, DC and stepping
motors. It can also drive two
DC motors. 5V input.
Z 6540
$
K 9670
15
Sale Ends February 28th 2018
Phone: 1300 797 007 Fax: 1300 789 777
Mail Orders: mailorder<at>altronics.com.au
27
$
K 9680
K 9700
7 Segment Driver
Shield Kit
30
$
Ideal for Arduino clock/counter
control. Features two on board
74HC595 chips which can be easily
driven using Arduino ShiftOut.
Z 6343
Build your own jumbo
clock or counter
SAVE $9.95
DIY Geek Tinkerers
Kit For Arduino
Includes an Arduino
UNO compatible board, protoshield, alphanumeric LCD, dot
matrix LED module, 7 segment
displays, two breadboards,
stepper motor, servo,
IR remote, connection
leads, battery box
and a variety of
components, buttons
and sensors.
25.95
$
.95
This handy kit makes one
210x110mm digit and can be
paired with additional digits to
create a clock, number counter etc.
Red high brightness LEDs. Driven
by Arduino ShiftOut.
12.95
$
Heart Rate For
Arduino Kit
K 9805
(DIYODE Nov ‘17) A simple kit
design for biometric Arduino projects
- or anything where measuring a
heartbeat is required. Requires 9V
battery (S 4970B $3.95)
14.95
$
K 9800
89
$
Z 6314
Simple Logic Probe Kit
(DIYODE Oct ‘17) A simple 3 state logic probe for diagnosing circuits,
checking output pins etc. Includes test clip connection lead.
Find your nearest reseller at:
www.altronics.com.au/resellers
Please Note: Resellers have to pay the cost
of freight and insurance and therefore the
range of stocked products & prices charged
by individual resellers may vary from our
catalogue.
© Altronics 2017. E&OE. Prices stated herein are only valid until date shown or until stocks run out. Prices include GST and exclude
freight and insurance. See latest catalogue for freight rates.
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.
Vintage car logbook reminder with temperature and clock display
Like me, I would think many readers have a classic or historic car tucked
away in their garage. Fortunately, most
states in Australia have registration regimes that support these cars by way of
substantially reduced registration fees.
However, there are restrictions on
how many days you can drive in a
year and in some states, only to specified events.
In all cases, a log book is required to
be filled out for each day the vehicle is
used on a public road. In Victoria, if a
vehicle is on the road with no matching logbook entry, that can result in an
$800 fine. So, it is rather important that
the logbook is filled out. But this does
require remembering to do so!
This project is specifically designed
to assist those of us that are memory
challenged by way of flashing a “FILL
IN LOGBOOK” on a 16x2 LCD display
when first powered up (ie, when the
ignition is turned on). Briefly pushing
the “program” button will clear this
and the display will then show the cur-
78
Silicon Chip
rent temperature in the car and time.
Subsequent powering up will not
show the warning for that particular
day, which would be annoying (especially if your classic car, ahem, finds
itself by the side of the road quite frequently!) but it will warn again on the
next day.
It does this by comparing the date
from the real-time clock to the one
stored in EEPROM from the last time
the unit was powered up. If different
it is assumed that one or more days
have elapsed.
The circuit is straightforward and
takes advantage of a low-cost alphanumeric LCD with I2C piggyback module (El Cheapo Modules, March 2017;
siliconchip.com.au/Article/10584)
and an Arduino-compatible batterybacked real-time clock module. Tying them all together is the venerable
PICAXE-08M2.
One issue of using an 8-pin micro
like this is the lack of I/O pins – but I
love a challenge. Since the LCD and
Celebrating 30 Years
real-time clock both use I2C, interfacing with both only takes two pins. Two
further pins are used for the PICAXE
power supply, two for programming
and one for the D18B20 One-Wire digital temperature sensor.
That leaves just one pin for both
clearing the warning and providing
initial settings for the real-time clock.
The later is achieved by carefully
measuring how long the program button is pressed for.
This also has the advantage of making the final unit visually clean with
just the LCD panel and one button
needing to be mounted in the vehicle.
I fitted both inside the ashtray holder
of my Mini Moke.
This single button is used to perform a number of tasks. For example,
holding it down for approximately
four seconds puts the unit into setup
mode. The unit will then cycle through
the settings for the year, month, day,
hour, minute, etc.
For each setting, the user has about
siliconchip.com.au
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
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one second to push the program button
to increment the value shown.
Although the PICAXE-08M2 does
not support edge-triggered input port
interrupts and relies on polling routines to capture input changes, it works
surprisingly well and setting the various values is easy.
The LCD’s I2C interface breaks out
the backlight LED connection to the
onboard switching transistor (which
is controlled by I2C commands). I’ve
used these to provide a simple autodimming function.
This uses an extra Mosfet (Q1) with
its gate biased by a resistor network incorporating an LDR. As the light level
decreases, this automatically reduces
the backlight LED current. VR1 allows
the threshold to be adjusted.
You may need to tweak the resistor
values shown to suit your LDR. Unfortunately, the dimming circuit requires a separate supply connection
to bias Q1’s gate into conduction but
this is pretty simple to run along with
the I2C wires.
The real-time clock module has an
onboard backup battery so that the
time and date are not lost when the
ignition is switched off. Since this
should last years, I haven’t bothered
to connect an unswitched 12V line to
the unit from the vehicle’s battery to
maintain the time.
You could use a clock module with
a rechargeable Li-Ion battery which
would be topped up each time it’s
switched on. Otherwise, Consideration
for access to change the lithium cell
should be given when designing the
hardware and mounting arrangement.
The power supply is fairly simple,
using a 16V zener diode to filter out
brief voltage spikes, in combination
with a 10W current-limiting series resistor and then a 7805 linear regulator
to produce the 5V required to run the
LCD and PICAXE chip.
A second zener, ZD2 (9.1V) develops the gate bias voltage for Q1, using a 4.7kW current-limiting resistor
as very little current is required for
this purpose.
The supplied BASIC code is welldocumented, particularly concerning
exactly how to initialize the display
via the I2C port expander and then using it in 4-bit mode.
This turns out to be fairly complex.
Don’t forget to change the I2C address
for the LCD to suit the chip used in your
unit. The program is named “Classic
Car Temp and Date.bas” and is available for download from the Silicon
Chip website, free for subscribers.
Clive Allan,
Glen Waverley, Vic. ($75)
PICAXE roulette wheel simulator using 7-segment displays
Build this PICAXE-based roulette
wheel project and have all the fun of
playing roulette in your own home
without the risk of losing your shirt.
It uses three 7-segment LED displays
which makes it easy to build; so easy,
in fact, that you could include multiple “wheels” in one rig.
A real roulette wheel is broken up
into either 37 or 38 segments with
numbers 0-36 (plus 00 on American wheels). While it spins, a ball is
thrown so that it runs around the edge
of the wheel in the opposite direction.
As the ball runs out of momentum, it
drops into one of the wheel segments,
selecting a number. Those who have
bet on that number (or its colour) win
extra chips while those who have not
lose their chips.
This unit works slightly differently
but it serves the same purpose, to spin
siliconchip.com.au
the wheel and then randomly select
one of the numbers on it.
Two 7-segment LED digits show the
current number as the wheel “spins”
and a third 7-segment display indicates the current colour: red (for 18
numbers), black (another 18) or green
(0-2 numbers), with one segment lighting for each as shown on the circuit
diagram.
When the spinning “stops”, the number left on the display is the winner.
Detailed information about all aspects
of roulette can be found in books or on
the internet.
Note that you could replace the
DISP3 with three discrete LEDs, however, you might have trouble finding
a black LED!
PICAXE20M2 microcontroller IC1
drives the three 7-segment displays in
a multiplexed manner. The three sets
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of eight anodes are wired up in parallel
and driven from PICAXE output pins
via 100W current-limiting resistors.
The common cathodes are driven by
three BC337 transistors, Q1-Q3, with
1kW base current limiting resistors.
There are four links (LK1-LK4) between PICAXE pins 4-7 and ground.
Internal pull-ups are enabled on those
inputs so that if a shunt is fitted, it
pulls the corresponding pin to ground
and IC1 can sense this.
LK1 selects European style Roulette
with 37 segments (single zero). LK2
selects American style Roulette with
38 segments (including 0 and 00). LK3
selects a modified American style Roulette with 36 segments (no zeros). LK4
slows the operation down so that you
can more closely observe the number
sequence produced.
...continued next page
February 2018 79
The numbers are in a different order depending on whether European
or American style is selected but the
colour assigned to each number is
the same. The zeros are house numbers giving a guaranteed return to the
casino so a wheel layout is included
without zeros for use at home.
To spin the wheel, hold down S2
and the 22µF capacitor charges quickly
via the 220W resistor. NPN emitter-follower transistor Q4 buffers the signal
so that input pin 3 of IC1 goes high
when this capacitor is charged.
Releasing S2 allows the 220kW resistor to slowly discharge the 22µF
capacitor, until input pin 3 on IC1
returns to a low level and stops the
numbers cycling.
IC1 pulses pin 11 high briefly to pro-
duce click sounds from piezo transducer PB1 as the wheel “spins”.
When S2 is pressed a second time,
the wheel starts spinning from the last
number selected. How long it spins
and thus which number it ends up
on depends on how long the S2 button is held and the discharge time of
the 22µF capacitor.
Power is from a 6V battery (eg, four
AAs) and the circuit includes a power
switch S1 and uses diode D1 to reduce
the voltage to just over 5V while also
providing reverse battery protection.
The prototype roulette wheel was
housed in a circular container (because roulette wheels are round) but
could also be housed in a rectangular
jiffy box. The displays and controls
should face upwards when on the ta-
ble. The recommended common-cathode 7-segment displays are blue Jaycar Cat ZD1856. Alternatively, the less
bright red Jaycar ZD1855 can be used.
The piezo transducer can be either
Jaycar Cat AB3440 or Altronics Cat
S6140.
The circuit includes an ICSP header
to load programs into PICAXE microcontroller IC1 with pin 2 as the serial
input and pin 19 as the serial output.
You need a PICAXE-compatible
USB cable and the free “program editor software” from the PICAXE website to upload the BASIC code, which
is available from the Silicon Chip website (“roulette7seg_20m2.bas”), free for
subscribers.
Ian Robertson,
Engadine, NSW. ($60)
Active probe uses switched capacitor charge pump
Sometimes when feeding a signal to
a piece of test equipment, you need an
active probe near the signal source to
buffer or amplify the signal.
The reasons this can be necessary
are numerous and include:
• The input impedance of the test
equipment is too low, eg, lower than
or close to the source impedance of the
signal being measured. An active probe
with a high input impedance and low
output impedance can overcome this.
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Silicon Chip
• To protect sensitive test equipment from voltage spikes or accidentally connecting the probe to a high
voltage part of the circuit.
• To boost a very low-level signal
so that the test equipment can register
it, or to improve the signal-to-noise ratio. This is especially effective when
a local ground point reference is used
in the circuit as this can help overcome probe earth impedance/inductance effects.
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• When the test probe needs to be
soldered to the circuit being tested, to
ensure a good connection or because
there are no good points to clip it to,
and the test equipment does not have
solderable leads.
• When you need to remove the DC
component of an AC signal, to feed it
to equipment which does not have an
AC-coupling option, or to apply gain
to the AC portion of that signal without amplifying the DC portion.
siliconchip.com.au
More than one of the above could be
true. In all cases, this active probe will
help. It only requires a single positive
supply voltage even for signals which
may swing above and below ground.
The supply could be a DC plugpack,
a 9V battery or even a USB port. The
operating supply voltage range is 1.510V, with higher voltages giving better
signal handling.
It’s based on op amp IC1. This is
an OPA353 which was chosen for its
high bandwidth (44MHz), rail-to-rail
input and output which maximises
signal handling, low minimum operating voltage, low noise and very high
input impedance. Other unity-gain stable op amps can be used but may not
give equally good performance.
The input signal is fed through a
1kW 0.5W series resistor and then via
either a 10nF AC-coupling capacitor
or switch S1 to non-inverting input
pin 3 of IC1. The 1kW series resistor,
in combination with clamp diodes D1
and D2, protect IC1 from damage for
signal voltages up to about 23V beyond
its supply rails. With a 9V supply, that
means it will not be damaged by signals up to ±32V.
The input impedance of the circuit
is set to around 20MW by the two series 10MW resistors from pin 3 of IC1
to ground. With S1 closed, the signal
is DC coupled and with it open, it is
AC-coupled with a time constant of
20MW × 10nF = 200ms.
siliconchip.com.au
Voltage gain is selected using S2.
With it closed, the gain is 1 + 2700W
÷ 300W = 10 times. With it open, the
gain is one (unity, ie, no gain or loss).
Either way, the signal is applied to
output connector CON3 via a 10W resistor which stops the capacitance of
the equipment being fed (and the cabling) from destabilising op amp IC1.
A 1MW resistor across CON3 provides a path for output current to
ground if the output is not connected,
or is capacitively coupled to the connected equipment.
The 1.5-10V DC supply is fed in via
CON2 and is filtered by a pi filter comprising the 10µF capacitor, a 100µH inductor and the 201nF of total supply
bypass capacitance for IC1 and IC2.
IC2 operates as a switched capacitor charge pump which generates a
negative rail for IC1, so that it can
handle signals below ground. This
can be an ICL7660, TC1044 or compatible device.
The ICL7660 operates at 10kHz
while the TC1044 operates at up to
45kHz, so the latter should give less
ripple on the negative supply. Both
have a very high efficiency of around
98%.
They work as follows. Initially, the
CAP+ terminal (pin 2) is connected
to pin 8 (V+) while the CAP- terminal
(pin 4) is connected to pin 3 (GND).
Thus, the 100µF capacitor between
pins 2 and 4 charges to the supply
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voltage; in this example, let’s say 9V.
Then, internal switches (Mosfets)
disconnect pins 2 and 4 and then pins
2 and 3 are connected (CAP+ to GND)
and pins 4 and 5 are connected (CAPto Vout).
With the top of the 100µF capacitor
now at 0V, the bottom end is at -9V
and this current flows through pin 5,
charging the 100µF capacitor at that
pin up to around -9V.
It won’t be exactly -9V because the
voltage of the switched capacitor will
drop as it discharges into the second
capacitor but since these connections
are swapped 20,000 times per second,
the capacitor doesn’t have a lot of time
to discharge (around 50µs) and since
the load on the negative output is light,
you can expect around -8.9V there.
There is a little bit of ripple in this
output due to the switching action
and this is filtered out using a second 100µH series inductor and 101nF
worth of bypass/filter capacitors.
Clamp diodes D3 and D4 prevent
the negative supply from going positive when the circuit is not powered
and also protect IC1 in case the output is accidentally connected to a voltage source.
S3 should be closed for proper operation of IC2 if the supply voltage is
below 3.5V. If the supply voltage is
above 3.5V, leave it open.
Petre Petrov,
Sofia, Bulgaria. ($60)
February 2018 81
OLED clock gets its time from the internet using NTP
I hate to adjust my clocks, so most
the clocks in our house either get their
time from GPS or they are showing the
wrong time. Ever since I got an ESP32
microcontroller module with WiFi
and Bluetooth, I decided to develop a
clock that gets its time from the internet, using the standard Network Time
Protocol (NTP).
This turned out to be really easy. I
simply wired up a serial OLED display to the ESP32, wrote about 100
lines of code and the clock is up and
running! In case my WiFi or internet
connection drops out, the clock will
continue running and will update its
time at the next opportunity.
Precise NTP time is provided by
atomic clocks distributed around the
world. The servers are accessible using
the Arduino NTPClient library (built
into the ESP32). NTP automatically
adjusts for the delay in receiving the
time over the network connection, although it can’t compensate 100% so
it may be off by a few milliseconds.
That’s still pretty good!
The time received is in the PST (Pacific Standard Time) time zone. The
code, therefore, needs to be changed to
add your local time zone offset. Once
that’s done, it’s simply a matter of updating the OLED.
There isn’t much wiring to do. The
OLED has an I2C controller so it’s simply
wired to the SDA (data) and SCL (clock)
pins on the ESP32 module. The two
power supply connections simply go
to the 0V and 3.3V pins on the module.
5V power from a supply capable of
at least 500mA can be fed in either via
the VIN and GND pins on the ESP32,
or the micro USB socket. You could
also run it from a regulated 3.3V power supply if required, fed into the 3V3
and GND pins. The current consumed
is around 140mA.
The software is pretty simple. The
setup() routine sets up the OLED display and establishes the WiFi connection. It has the option for providing
two SSIDs and two WiFi passwords
and the second set will be used as a
fall-back if the unit cannot connect to
the first network.
The main loop() function then updates the time, adds the local time zone
offset, then updates the display with
the time (hours, minutes and seconds),
date and day of the week. It then repeats this as long as it has power.
Since the ESP32 is basically an updated version of the ESP8266 chip,
the software could easily be adapted to work on
an ESP8266 board; the following two
lines are used to choose which board
the software is compiled for. Simply
move the two slashes from the start of
the first line to the second line to compile for ESP8266:
// for ESP8266
//#include <ESP8266WiFi.h>
// for ESP32
#include <WiFi.h>
The total cost of the parts used for
this project, purchased from eBay,
came in under $20.
The Arduino sketch can be downloaded from the Silicon Chip website
and includes the required libraries as
ZIPs. The libraries included are “NTPClient”, “Time”, “Adafruit_GFX” and
“Adafruit_SSD1306”.
You need to install these libraries,
using the Sketch → Include Library →
Add .ZIP Library menu option before
the code can be compiled and uploaded to the ESP32 board.
You will also need to enable support for the ESP32 board in the
Arduino IDE before you can compile it.
It’s a little involved but you just need
to follow the instructions given here:
https://github.com/espressif/arduinoesp32#installation-instructions
Bera Somnath,
Vindhyanagar, India. ($75)
A close-up of the finished clock. It uses an ESP32 to track
the time which is then displayed onto an OLED screen.
The default Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to query
the time, with a default server of time.nist.gov
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Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Arduino Mega Box
Music Player
By Bao Smith
Combine an Arduino MP3 player shield with the Altronics Mega Box,
along with our software, to make a neat little music or audio player
with endless possibilities.
W
e introduced the Altronics Mega
Box kit in the December 2017 issue of Silicon Chip. It allows you to
give your Arduino projects a much
more professional appearance and
provides many convenient functions.
In that article, we mentioned that
one possible use of the Mega Box
would be to combine it with the
VS1053 MP3 player shield, which
we used in our Music Player project
in July 2017 (see siliconchip.com.au/
Article/10722).
That project was presented as a collection of boards and modules wired
together. That’s pretty typical for
your average Arduino project but we
wouldn’t say that it gives a finished
product that you can use every day.
Well, that changes now because
we’ve revamped the software to take
advantage of the facilities provided by
the Mega Box.
By using the Mega Box, rather than
just stacking the MP3 Player shield on
an Arduino Uno, we can use a universal infrared remote control rather than
the 4x4 keypad.
That provides several benefits including a larger number of keys and
siliconchip.com.au
buttons, more intuitive user interface
and the fact that you can carry the remote around with you.
We’ve also changed the software so
that you can use at least two of the four
illuminated pushbuttons on the front
panel to control the player.
If you want to use the other two and
the rotary encoder, you’ll need to use
an Arduino Mega instead of the Uno as
the Uno just doesn’t have enough free
I/O pins. The software will auto-detect
if you are using a Mega board and allow
use of the extra front panel controls.
This version of the Music Player also
incorporates the changes we’ve made
to the software since the July 2017 article, to fix some issues reported by
constructors. This includes a fix for
dropouts during recording and an improved menu system.
Now, having mentioned how well
the Mega Box suits this project, we
should add some caveats. The Mega
Box is supplied with a 16x2 LCD,
which is smaller than the 4-line unit
that we used in the original version
of the project.
And since the supplied LCD has
a slightly non-standard pinout, you
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can’t easily attach an I2C translator
module (but it isn’t impossible if you
want to save four pins). So we need
to use the LCD in 4-bit data transfer
mode which requires the use of six of
the Arduino’s I/O pins (plus an additional PWM pin if you want to control
the backlight).
Also, the way the MP3 player shield
is designed means that the headphone
and microphone sockets face into the
box, rather than out through the hole
provided near the rear of the shield
mounting point.
That means you will need to drill a
couple of holes to mount chassis sockets and wire them up to plugs which go
into the shield sockets. Alternatively,
you can run two 3.5mm male-female
extension leads from the shield to the
rear of the case.
As an alternative, you can use the
SparkFun version of this shield (www.
sparkfun.com/products/12660). It has
the same pin layout but has the headphone jack pointed at the rear, but you
will need to solder your own microphone input socket onto the board.
That shield is a bit more expensive
than the version we used originally
February 2018 83
but it’s also decidedly less dodgy, in
that it uses a proper level translator
between the 5V Arduino board and
the 3.3V audio player IC.
The infrared interface is now the
main means of controlling the unit
and while you could probably use just
about any universal remote, we’ve designed it with the Altronics A1012 in
mind (siliconchip.com.au/link/aaio).
We’re using TV code 170 (see supplied instructions for how to set that).
You can use this to operate the unit
from up to five metres away. The
A1012 TV code 170 button codes are
shown in Table 1.
If you want to use a different remote control, you will need to set it to
produce Philips RC5 codes and then
change the “#define” lines at the top
of the Arduino code to the appropriate code numbers to suit your remote.
The best way to check what commands your remote sends are by running the sample Mega Box program
that Altronics have on their website
and read the values off the serial console in the Arduino IDE: siliconchip.
com.au/link/aais
Assembling the project is fairly
simple if you’ve already built the
Mega Box. If you haven’t, see our December 2017 article for the details
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/10902)
and/or follow the instructions supplied with the kit.
The main difference will be in how
you want to handle audio input and
output. What we did was mount two
3.5mm stereo sockets in a convenient
location on the front or rear panel (eg,
above S1-S4, or to the left of the rotary
encoder); a 6mm drill bit should do.
After this, solder an adequate length
– depending on the location of the
sockets – of stereo shielded cable to
their pins. You can just use one cable
and cut it in two and then strip the
outer sheath.
Next, separate the individual leads
and strip the ends of the red and white
leads before soldering them to the connector; white to tip, red to ring and the
shield wires to ground.
Be careful since some sockets are
switched and will have more than
three pins; you will need to plug an
audio cable in and use a DMM set on
continuity mode to figure out which
is the tip (left), ring (right) and sleeve
(ground) connections.
Wire these up to the two line plugs
using the same pin assignments, so
that you end up with what are essentially two extension leads that can
then be plugged into the MP3 Player
shield.
We also recommend that you add a
3.6V 1W zener diode between the 3.3V
line (cathode) and ground (anode). The
easiest place to fit this is between CON3
and CON5 which are located between
the Arduino and the shield on the Mega
Box board (these may be labelled U3
and U5 on the PCB).
This is not necessary if you’re using
the SparkFun MP3 Player shield. The
reason it’s required is that the Geeetech
MP3 Player shield’s lack of level shifting circuitry causes the Arduino output pins to “pump up” the 3.3V supply
when they go high and this can cause
a buzzing in recorded audio.
The zener diode helps to prevent
the loss of regulation on the 3.3V rail
due to this pumping action. Note that
there’s a small risk that the diode could
overheat; we’re counting on the fact
that its voltage “knee” is just above the
normal voltage of the 3.3V rail and so
it will only conduct a small amount of
current (milliamps) at 3.3V.
But it’s possible your diode could
have a low knee voltage or your 3.3V
We’ve used a 3.5mm switched stereo
audio socket (enlarged). You’ll need
to use a DMM on continuity mode to
determine which lead is the tip (white;
left), ring (red; right) and ground.
A close-up of the 3.6V zener diode
inserted with cathode to the 3.3V line
and anode to GND.
Assembly
Table 1: IR codes
Button
Standby (on/off)
Mute
Buttons 0-9
Channel up/down
Volume up/down
Up/down
Right/left
OK
Teletext
Page hold
TV/Video
Pause
Exit
Rewind
Play
Fast forward
Stop
84
Silicon Chip
Hex code (0x)
0C
0D
00-09
20/21
10/11
12/13
14/15
23
3C
29
3F
3D
0B
37
32
34
36
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siliconchip.com.au
regulator could have a slightly higher
output than typical. So after fitting it,
power up the Arduino and make sure
it isn’t getting too hot.
Wiring it up
Now refer to Table 2 to see which
connections you need to make using
jumper leads. Some of the connections
can only be used with an Arduino
Mega, as indicated in the table, so if
you’re using the Uno you will have to
leave them out and their related functions will not be available.
Since the pushbuttons are wired
with pull-up resistors, the pins connected to the pushbuttons are read as
high by default and low when pressed.
The button’s NO connection should
be wired to +5V by placing jumpers
on JP1.
Note that Arduino pins D2, D6, D7,
D8 & D9 are exclusively being used by
the MP3 Player shield and cannot be
used for anything else, while D11-13
can be used with other SPI devices.
This leaves D0 (receive), D1 (transmit),
D3, D4 and D10 (slave select).
Generally, D0 and D1 should not be
used as this would interfere with the
serial console, nor D10 as that is driven by the Arduino SPI unit.
Once all connections have been
made, the Arduino sketch software can
be loaded. It’s available for download
from the Silicon Chip website (free
for subscribers, and it will be bundled
with the July 2017 software).
You will also need to load your audio files (and two required patch files)
onto the root directory of a properly
formatted microSD card (FAT16 or
FAT32) and insert this into the socket
on the player module.
If you don’t already have the latest
version of the Arduino IDE, download it from www.arduino.cc/en/Main/
Software and install it.
The next step is to install the required libraries, which are supplied
in the download package along with
the sketch. Use the Tools → Libraries
→ Add .ZIP Library menu option to
install each one in turn.
Then open up the sketch file, make
sure the correct COM port is selected
in the Tools menu, and then select
the Upload option (CTRL+U in Windows). Check the bottom of the IDE
window to make sure the upload was
successful.
Next, adjust LCD contrast potentiometer VR1 so that you can comfortably
read the text on the LCD screen. If you
don’t see any text, check that the SD
card is properly connected and try connecting the LCD backlight interface to
the +5V line to make sure the screen
isn’t too dim.
By default, the software uses the line
in connection when recording, which
means you will need an external microphone. You can alter the software to
use the Geeetech on-board electret microphone by removing the line “#define USE_LINEIN 1”, but the resulting
quality is quite poor.
Remote control functions
You should find the infrared remote
control buttons to be fairly straightforward. The arrow keys are used to
navigate the menus with the OK button used to select the current choice.
Shown above are the flying lead connections that need to be made to use the project with an Arduino Uno. Take note of
the jumpers for S1 & S2. If you have a spare PWM pin, the backlight can be controlled using that instead of the yellow
lead going to 5V. The audio sockets don’t need to be placed where we have as it does interfere with the header for the
Arduino Mega. Other good locations include above the four pushbuttons or on the back panel above the five relays.
siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 85
Table 2: Lead Connections
Component
16x2 LCD
Infrared Remote
Pushbuttons
Rotary Encoder
To Pin
RS
A0
EN
A1
D4
A2
D5
A3
D6
A4
D7
A5
Backlight
5V
IR interface
D3
S1 COM#
D4
S2 COM#
D5
S3 COM^#
D14
S3 COM^#
D15
Encoder interface A^
D16
Encoder interface B^
D17
Alternatively, you can press a button on the numeric keypad to directly
choose the respective menu option (as
shown on the LCD).
When playing an audio file, the up/
down arrow keys and channel up/
down will go to the previous or next
file respectively. The OK, play and
pause can be used to pause or play
the current file.
Volume up/down will alter the
volume, the mute button will toggle
mute, fast-forward and fast-rewind
will speed up or slow down playback,
rewind will restart the current song
from the beginning and the back/exit/
return button on the remote will end
playback.
When choosing the menu option
“play track number”, you use the numeric buttons on the remote to enter
a specific three-digit track number to
play. The left/right arrows can then
be used to select which file format
to play from (both MP3 and OGG are
supported).
When recording, you will need to
select a file number to record to and
the process is the same. Or you can
simply press OK to record in a sequential order, ergo, record00.ogg, 01, 02…
Using Bluetooth speakers
If you want to use Bluetooth speakers, headphones or some other Bluetooth audio receiving device, all you
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Silicon Chip
Parts List
Lead
1 Inventa Mega Box kit (Altronics Cat K9670)
1 Arduino Mega (recommended) or Uno (or
compatible)
1 VS1053b based MP3 Player shield (Silicon Chip
Online Shop Cat SC4315 [Geeetech] or SparkFun
version [see text])
1 Altronics A1012 universal remote control
4 jumper shunts (2 if using the Uno)
2 3.5mm stereo chassis-mount sockets
2 3.5mm stereo line plugs (Altronics Cat P0030)
1 1m length stereo shielded audio cable
1 USB Type A to Type B (full size) cable
1 USB charger or other USB power supply
16 150mm long male-male jumper leads (minimum 11)
1 3.6V 1W zener diode
1 Bluetooth audio transmitter (optional)
1 PCB-mount Type-A USB socket (for Bluetooth audio
transmitter)
^ only available when using Arduino Mega board
# place a jumper on JP1
With an Arduino Mega these pins MUST be connected in
parallel: 11 → 51, 12 → 50, 13 → 52 for the SD card to work.
need to do is buy a Bluetooth audio
transmitter.
They’re quite cheap and compact.
Here is one we’ve purchased and used
quite successfully: siliconchip.com.
au/link/aair
It can actually be used as a transmitter or receiver; dedicated transmitters cost around the same price (about
$20). We found the audio quality to be
reasonable.
It comes with a short 3.5mm plugto-plug cable so it can be plugged
straight into the audio output on the
MP3 Player module. It’s also supplied
with a short USB cable to power it,
with a Type-A plug on the end.
You will need to solder a PCB-mount
Type-A socket to the prototyping area
on the Mega Box and wire up its +5V
and GND pins to supply points on the
Mega Box board.
Fig.1 shows the connections required for the USB socket; the Dand D+ connections do not need to
be made. Be careful since reverse
polarity may destroy the Bluetooth
transmitter.
You will then need to attach the
Fig.1: expanded
view of a
USB Type-A
socket showing
the required
connections.
Celebrating 30 Years
transmitter inside the case somehow
(eg, double-sided tape or silicone sealant) and then wire it to the socket with
the supplied USB power cable.
If you’re clever, you could drill a
hole into the case giving you access
to the button on the transmitter unit,
which you need to press before you
can pair it with your receiver.
However, given that pairing is something you only need to do when connecting it to a new receiver, that may
not be necessary.
What can it play?
As mentioned in the previous article
in July 2017, assuming you have the
correct patch file located in the root
directory of the SD card, the player
can play these formats/containers: Ogg
Vorbis, MP1, MP2, MP3, AAC, WMA,
FLAC, WAV and MIDI
This should cover most of the audio
file formats that you will commonly
encounter.
The VS1053b chip is able to record
in the following file formats: Ogg Vorbis, PCM and ADPCM.
However, the software is only programmed to record in the Ogg Vorbis
compressed format.
A list of individual bitrates which
are supported by the IC for each file
format can be found under section 8
in the VS1053 datasheet: www.vlsi.fi/
fileadmin/datasheets/vs1053.pdf SC
siliconchip.com.au
Vintage Radio
By Ian Batty
A detailed look at the
Grebe Synchrophase
If you feel that you
have already read about the Grebe
Synchrophase, you are correct, as it was featured
in the July 2016 issue. But this set is so exceptional that
it warrants a detailed analysis, explaining why its performance
rivaled some of the finest superheterodyne sets of the period.
The first point to note is that it is
not a superheterodyne circuit. Edwin Armstrong’s famous patented circuit was well known at the time the
Grebe was manufactured but the patent fees were expensive. So the Grebe
Synchrophase is a Tuned Radio Frequency (TRF) set, using Hazeltine’s
Neutrodyne patent (www.google.com/
patents/US1450080).
And while you have probably assumed that TRF sets are pretty basic stuff, with performance not much
better than a crystal set and subject to
unpleasant whistles and fluctuating
volume from different stations, be prepared for some surprises.
siliconchip.com.au
While it may appear simple, the
Grebe Synchrophase is a very wellengineered product that’s one of the
best examples of TRF design ever
manufactured.
In the 1920s, radio pioneers must
have been a persistent lot. The few
stations that did exist were broadcasting at low power, and not always for
24 hours a day.
Still, the excitement of hearing the
news before it arrived on your doorstep
in the form of a newspaper, eavesdropping on the lives of movie stars, keeping up with the heroes and heroines of
radio serials, hearing the latest weather
reports and the most up-to-date doings
Celebrating 30 Years
of politicians... these were all just too
good to miss out on.
But how to receive this avalanche of
information? It was all well and good
for Uncle Harry to teach Junior how
to build a crystal set and tune into it
instead of doing homework or playing in the yard but a family needed a
family radio.
That meant a radio that would get
more than just one station and play it
over a loudspeaker, not the earphones
of a crystal set that only one person
could listen to.
And you could forget about putting up an aerial forty feet high and a
hundred feet long like on Grandpa’s
February 2018 87
The label inside the cabinet gives detailed information about the battery connections, the function of the dial controls and
dial settings as well as descriptions of the tone and volume controls. The chain drive links the three tuning capacitors, one
for each stage, since tuning gangs had not been developed yet.
farm. City dwellers needed a good set
that would work with just a few feet
of wire.
Gain, gain and more gain
Edwin H. Armstrong, studying at
Columbia University, had heard of the
“howling” problem encountered by
Lee de Forest and other experimenters working with early Audion (triode)
amplifiers.
Reasoning that this was a form of
uncontrolled regeneration, Armstrong
turned a curse into a blessing. Controlled regeneration could give astounding improvements in receiver
sensitivity but a regenerative set was
tricky to tune and use. Bursting into
oscillation, it would blank out all other
receivers in the vicinity.
Do-it-yourself articles describing
Tuned Radio Frequency sets abounded but you would be hampered by the
natural anode-grid feedback capacitance of triode valves with their pitiful gains – tetrodes and pentodes were
still some years in the future.
Further work by Armstrong produced the superheterodyne which remains a widely used technology to this
day. US giants General Electric, RCA
and AT&T bought Armstrong’s superhet patents and those of another signif88
Silicon Chip
icant contributor, Reginald Fessenden.
The Independent Radio Manufacturers’ Association (IRMA), frozen out
of the superhet world, contacted Louis
Hazeltine’s laboratory for some other
method of building high-performing
radios. Employee Harold Wheeler
produced the Neutrodyne, with Hazeltine filing U.S. patents 1,450,080
(7/8/1919) and 1,489,228 (28/12/1920)
and throwing the IRMA a lifeline.
The Neutrodyne is simple. If a triode’s anode-grid capacitance could be
cancelled out, you could get its maximum gain. So you “just” need to apply a neutralising feedback equal to
the (undesired) anode-grid signal, but
in opposition to it.
This cancels out the undesired anode-grid coupling and also (equally
important at radio frequencies) removes the effect of lowered input impedance caused by anode-grid feedback.
A feedback capacitance of “a few”
picofarads might seem trivial but the
amplifier’s gain magnifies the Miller
effect: a gain of only 8 applied to a
Cg-a of 5pF gives an effective value of
40pF. At radio frequencies, that’s a lot
in anyone’s terms.
You can regard the Neutrodyne as
a feedback circuit, but it’s more useCelebrating 30 Years
ful to regard it as a balancing circuit.
Now the concept of electrical balance
had been understood for some 80 years
in circuits such as the Wheatstone
Bridge, first popularised in 1843.
Indeed, the Hazeltine patents describe their principles solely in terms
of neutralising. And as noted below,
our modern concept of feedback had
not even been described at the time,
let alone fully understood.
A neutralised triode circuit becomes
a simple amplifier and the problems of
feedback and oscillation are removed.
We can go back to a straight TRF radio, where every RF stage works at the
signal frequency, without Armstrong’s
novel and (in the early days) the troublesome complexity of the superhet.
Even partly tech-savvy customers
could grasp the Neutrodyne concept.
Enter George Grebe, born in 1895.
Having built and supplied “submarine receivers” for the U.S. Navy during WWI, he viewed the burgeoning
domestic radio market with anticipation. People wanted radios, radios and
radios, of any kind.
Beginning with regenerative sets,
Grebe moved on to the prestige end
of the market. The Synchrophase
was (and still is) widely recognised
as the best non-superheterodyne set
siliconchip.com.au
This Synchrophase has trademarked binocular coil plates which became a feature of sets produced after mid 1925.
Another production change was the small lamp (actually made by Mazda) below the centre dial which was powered by
the filament line and would light up when the radio was turned on.
of its day.
Grebe’s problem was that he was not
a foundation member of the IRMA, so
he was in breach of their ownership
of the Hazeltine patents. A lawsuit
reached court in 1927 but by then
Grebe had sold some 150,000 sets and
the growing acceptance of Superheterodynes meant that the Synchrophase
(like all Neutrodynes) was reaching
the end of its commercial life anyway.
Design highlights
The Synchrophase was aimed
squarely at the prestige market. Its
luxurious mahogany cabinet, with
dark Bakelite front panel and goldplated trim, combines with Grebe’s
patented chain drive tuning to offer
one-touch operation. Given the flip
top and compact width, I guess this
is a “mini-coffin” set.
It might have been all sizzle and no
sausage but Grebe sensibly realised
that a high-priced radio needed to offer
superior performance. That implied
two things: sensitivity and selectivity.
Sensitivity was a major problem with
TRFs, since they needed to optimise
gain but somehow reduce undesired
coupling between stages.
by Dr Hugo Holden in the July 2016
article on the Grebe, the two coils in
each “binocular” are connected in series and are placed beside each other.
Because the windings run in opposite directions, this reduces their mutual coupling. Any signals (eg, from
radio stations or due to interference)
picked by this coil arrangement induces out-of phase signals in the two
coil halves and so they cancel. There’s
also reduced unwanted signal pick-up
from radio stations because of the parallel orientation of the coils.
The result was similar to that
achieved with coil shielding but with
no actual metal shield which always
has the effect of lowering the circuit’s
Q. This physical design greatly reduced magnetic coupling effects between grid and anode circuits, allowing the coils to be assembled vertically
onto the baseboard.
This was an elegant arrangement
and an ingenious solution to preventing coupling between interstage coils.
In fact, it seems similar to the thinking
behind the design of today’s common
mode filter chokes which have two
windings on a common toroid core. Is
Binocular coil design
P. D. Lowell, working for Grebe, designed the unusual “binocular” interstage coupling coils. As pointed out
siliconchip.com.au
This photo shows the construction of the binocular coils which each comprise a
pair of formers wound in opposite directions with green Litz wire. In front of the
closest coil there is a small lamp that acts as a series fuse for the 90V B+ rail.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 89
this yet another case of “nothing new
under the sun”?
This coil arrangement was devised
in the early 1920s and the designer
must have had a clever insight in to
the problem.
Other designers, lacking this technique (and insight), were forced to reduce coupling by offsetting coils at different angles to each other. While such
offsetting works, it just looks awkward
and amateurish.
The Synchrophase’s physical presentation is just what you’d expect from
a set costing some 155 USD in 1924
or around $2750 in today’s Australian currency.
So the Synchrophase exhibited good
sensitivity, but what about selectivity?
Selectivity allows a radio to respond
to a desired station while rejecting
those nearby. Superhets, with their
fixed-frequency IF amplifiers, can be
designed for high selectivity that’s constant across the tuning band.
Selectivity (Q) is controlled by (i)
resistive losses (principally due to
inductors) and (ii) the LC ratio. TRFs
suffer from variations in Q as the LC
ratio changes with tuning.
A high Q gives good selectivity but
tuned circuit Q is mostly compromised
by the RF resistance of inductors. It’s
mostly due to skin effect, where RF
current flow is largely confined to the
conductor’s surface. The solution to
this problem is to use multi-stranded
Litz wire.
The bother of stripping and tinning
every one of a bundle of 20 wires is
well compensated for by their combined surface area: Lowell’s 20/38 Litz
has the surface area of single-strand of
28 AWG but the bundle is more flex-
90
Silicon Chip
ible. In practice, Grebe engineers did
laboriously tin each individual wire,
then tested the actual RF resistance
once assembled.
Let’s talk about feedback
An article in April 1925 QST, by
Grebe engineer R. R. Batcher, asserts
that it was component quality rather
than use of the Neutrodyne principle
that gave Grebe sets their performance
edge. Well, yes and no.
It’s true that the Synchrophase is
superbly engineered by any standard.
But the cancellation of feedback probably plays a larger role than Batcher
(or anyone) probably realised back in
1925. Bell Labs’ famous Harry Black
did not lodge his patent for negative
feedback (with its engineering description) until late 1928.
Feedback from output to input
(whether positive or negative) modifies gain: that’s why it’s so widely used
in analog circuitry. Negative feedback
is overwhelmingly used, and it reduces gain.
But also, the anode-grid feedback in
triodes (shunt voltage feedback) reduces input impedance. Indeed, this design is used with solid-state op amps
to create a virtual ground node of (theoretically) zero impedance.
So un-neutralised triode amplifiers
present a low impedance to their inputs at Broadcast frequencies, rather
than the almost open-circuit that a
valve should exhibit. Anode-grid feedback would create significant loading
of the grid tuned circuit, thus reducing gain and compromising selectivity.
Selectivity is specifically addressed
in Hazeltine’s 1924 patent US1489228,
and input circuit loading is specifically
Celebrating 30 Years
addressed (as “increased input conductance”) in that patent (note that
increased conductance means reduced
resistance/impedance).
The third potential problem of oscillation could be (and was by some
other manufacturers) overcome by
circuit damping. But this also reduces both gain and selectivity – the two
highly desirable characteristics that
Grebe engineers were able to optimise
and which set the Synchrophase apart.
So the Neutrodyne principle’s balancing-out of anode-grid capacitance
(ie, isolation of an amplifier’s grid circuit from its anode circuit) was vital
to the Synchrophase’s performance,
allowing its refined tuned circuits
to operate at their peak of selectivity, and the amplifiers at their peak of
sensitivity.
A final note: is the Neutrodyne a
positive feedback circuit? Yes, you can
describe it that way. Remember that
the purpose was to achieve the theoretical maximum gain from a stage, not
to increase it over that maximum (the
purpose of regeneration).
Is it possible to increase the positive
feedback beyond the point of balancing and get extra gain? Yes. I was able
to push the Synchrophase into regeneration and ultimate violent oscillation by maladjustment. Is this cheating, against the purpose of the Neutrodyne principle and just plain wrong?
Yes, yes, and yes.
But it is a TRF, after all.
So how does a sensitivity of 8 microvolts for 10 milliwatts output sound?
And in the HF band?
The BC-AN-429 military aircraft receiver (kitted out with pentode RF amplifiers) managed this over its lowest
siliconchip.com.au
HF range of 2.5-7MHz, rivalling that of
its more famous superhet “Command”
successors. Could the Synchrophase
get anywhere near that benchmark?
Circuit description
The Synchrophase, like other Neutrodyne designs, is simplicity itself,
as can be seen in the circuit diagram
overleaf. Like other sets of the era, its
component count is “economical”. LT
(filament) power was commonly from
a 6V lead-acid battery, regulated via
one or more filament rheostats.
“Gasoline Alley”, a comic of the
day, shows the man of the house driving around and around the block: he’s
taken the radio battery for an outing
to charge it!
HT batteries came in some multiple
of 22.5V and were connected in series, the highest voltage for the output
stage, lower voltages for the demodulator and RF stages. Bias was very often supplied via a tapped battery, with
outputs at 1.5 or 3V.
Given the ready availability of battery-supplied voltages and the natural
low impedance of such batteries, the
Synchrophase has just two bypass capacitors, C3 and C12, both 1µF.
The set covers frequencies 5451900kHz in two bands: 545-1250kHz
and 1200-1900kHz. Turning the dial
to either extremity of its range trips
a lever that operates a 3-pole slider
switch.
The switch cuts in (or out) part of
each of the binocular coils and it’s also
possible to do this manually (as can be
seen at the bottom of this page).
The aerial circuit, in common with
many early sets, provides for “long”
and “short” wire aerials or for a tuned
loop aerial. If using a loop, it’s important that it is of the correct inductance
for proper tuning.
All valves in this set are UX201As,
similar to the iconic ‘01, but with reduced filament current of only 0.25A.
Later sets used a UX112 in the final
stage for greater audio output. V1 and
V2 operate as common-cathode, tuned
RF amplifiers.
The proprietary “binocular” coils
are secondary-tuned by C2 and C4.
Neutralisation is provided by C3 and
C5. The bias battery supplies a common bias voltage of -4.5V while the
HT supply is +90V.
Demodulator V3 operates with grid
leak bias, returned to its filament, rather than to the -4.5V ground potential.
C7, although similar to C3 and C5,
does not neutralise; it’s there to match
the circuit capacitances of C3 and C5
so that V3’s tuned grid circuit tracks
those of V1 and V2.
The tuning capacitors use plates
cut to give a straight line (linear) frequency calibration, preventing crowding of stations at the top ends of the
bands. This is shown in the diagram
directly below.
V3 feeds 1st audio V4 via driver
transformer T1. This has a step-up
ratio of around 4:1. The demodulator
runs from a +45V supply.
All three RF stages are tuned together via Grebe’s patented chain drive
system that mechanically couples the
three separate tuning capacitors. Note
that the now commonly-used multigang capacitor did not appear until
The three-pole slider switch shown the the centre of this
photograph can be used to manually change the operating
band.
siliconchip.com.au
F. W. Dunmore’s competing patent on
the 23rd of March 1926.
First audio amplifier V4 uses another step-up transformer to drive output
valve V5. Together, T1 and T2 give
more gain than an extra UX201 without the cost of an actual valve and its
power consumption.
Be aware that such transformers
can have very high resistance windings. We’re probably accustomed to
conventional valve output transformers with primary resistances around
500W.
Because these are loaded (by loudspeakers), the natural combination of
inductance and winding capacitance
is well-damped and any peak exhibited by the winding is commonly
damped by small shunt capacitor.
Interstage transformers, fed by a
triode of some 10kW source impedance, matching into the following grid
of near-infinite impedance, do exhibit
significant resonance within the audio band.
The solution was to use high-resistance wire for primary or secondary (or
both) to damp out the resonant peak.
T1 and T2 both have primary resistances of 300W and secondaries of
6.6kW. So if you’re working on one of
these set, don’t be misled into assuming an interstage transformer with high
resistance has a faulty winding.
As this set uses a UX201A for output amplification, it shares the common -4.5V C supply and the common
+90V HT. Sets using the UX112 need
an extra bias voltage of -9V and use an
HT supply of +135V.
My set’s volume is controlled by
This diagram shows the straight-line tuning
characteristic of the Synchrophase.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 91
RV1a/RV1b, a dual rheostat that adjusts filament voltages of all
valves, with greater effect on V1 and V2 than V3/4/5. This both
compensates for falling A battery voltage and controls gain in
the RF section.
While low heater voltage can be a recipe for disaster with oxide-coated cathodes, this method of controlling emission (and
thus gain) works fine with “bright emitter” tungsten filaments
(UX201) and with thoriated-tungsten (UX201A).
Later Grebe versions used a variable shunt rheostat across
the first audio’s anode connection to its driver transformer for
volume and a common rheostat for all valves to compensate for
falling A battery voltage.
Tone control, via switched resistor bank RV2 (ranging from
3.6kW to 120W) and 150nF capacitor C10, applies a variable top
cut to the audio driver’s anode circuit.
Such sets are designed for high-impedance speakers, either
“earphone” types that use a flat diaphragm to drive a coupling
horn or moving-iron types that drive a large diaphragm. When
testing, I found two horn speakers to be less sensitive than my
moving-iron example.
When it comes to the supply, the C supply’s negative end
connects to ground. This may seem odd but its positive end
connects to the A supply’s negative, putting all five filaments
at 4.5V above ground and applying a -4.5V bias to V1, V2, V4
and V5.
This arrangement ties these grid returns (“cold” ends of transformer secondaries) to ground, eliminating valve-to-valve coupling that would otherwise need at least two bypass capacitors
(one each in RF and Audio sections). Demodulator V3’s grid returns to its filament.
Continuing the supply “totem pole”, B- connects to A+ (a
point some 10.5V above ground), thus counteracting a loss of
some 10V if the B- were connected directly to ground.
Cleanup
Online examples, and Dr Hugo Holden’s version in the July
2016 issue, show the beautiful gold flashing on the escutcheons and the timber in new condition. In contrast, mine has
a definite patina, with the escutcheons dulled off to a faded
bronze colour.
It came with a modern power supply and the connecting cables
in a modern reproduction woven cotton jacket. The valves were
all ST (“stepped tubular”) 01As. Some tested low so I bought
a new kit of balloon envelope 01As from the HRSA valve bank
at a good price.
Apart from noise in the volume pot, the set worked just fine.
But on test, there were a few surprises. The 01A was only ever
meant as a general-purpose triode, so its output power is modest. The set went into clipping at around 30mW, reaching 10%
THD at 35mW. I decided to test at an output of 25mW, finding
THD of about 7%.
That sounds high, and the 10mW figure was 6%. Everything
seemed to be working, so I suspected the grid-leak detector’s
basic design. That was confirmed by a test which exhibited obvious non-linearity over its signal range, as shown in the diagram to the right.
This will create distortion in the demodulated envelope, and
is probably typical of any rectifier/demodulator working with
a low input voltage.
On the other hand, its RF performance was surprisingly good.
A few metres of wire thrown out the door brought in local stations strongly, and extending that to about eight metres let me
just pick up 3WV at Horsham, 200km away.
92
Silicon Chip
Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
Using the standard dummy antenna, I needed 170µV
at 600kHz, 100µV at 1150kHz and 280µV at 900kHz and
1700kHz. Signal-to-noise ratios well exceeded 20dB for
all settings.
Audio bandwidth was surprising: I found -3dB bandwidths of ±1.2kHz at 600kHz, ±3.5kHz at 1150kHz,
±1.2kHz at 900kHz and ±8.5kHz at 1700kHz.
Frequency response from antenna to speaker terminals
was around 350Hz to 2.5kHz for -3dB the points at the
1700kHz end, indicating that the audio transformers have
limited low and high frequency performances.
If the figures sound pretty good, consider the detailed
stage injections on the circuit. You’ll see that, for my 100µV
input at 1150kHz, I needed around 1.6mV at the 1st RF
grid. This implies a circuit gain of some 16 times in the
antenna coupling and its tuned circuit. It’s a reminder of
just how well good circuit design can contribute to a set’s
performance.
The difference in sensitivities between the two bands
is probably due to the band-change mechanism, which
appears to short out the unused sections of the RF coils. I
had wondered about a “shorted turns” effect and figures
seem to bear it out.
Volume control was pretty effective: turning down all
the way demanded some 35mV at 1700kHz, implying a
gain reduction of around 42dB.
How good is it?
It’s great. Grebe gave us a set with sizzle and sausage,
and it hits both of my criteria for collecting: it’s a visual treat that people find attractive and charming, and it’s
technically refined and a great performer.
Would I buy another? One is enough but you can still
find them for sale at affordable prices. Given its great visual
design, if you want a “real” radio, and one that’s compact
enough to fit most shelves, it’s hard to pass by.
Synchrophase versions
“A new set every week!” while it was not really a Grebe
slogan, there were many versions. Model coding is mysterious and confusing but the “radioblvd” reference located under “Further Reading” has useful information.
Special handling
In some sets, the 01 and 01A use a locking pin to secure
the valve in the socket; the pin tips make contact against
flat “leaves” at the bottom of the socket rather than sliding into socket contact sleeves used in later equipments.
The pin indexes the valve, so insertion requires matching the pin, pushing down and gently twisting clockwise
a few degrees. Removal is the opposite but excessive
twisting can detach the envelope from the valve’s Bakelite base. Use care.
Further Reading
The 1924 review appears at: www.greberadio.com/
?page_id=101
Batcher’s QST review of 1925 (four scans) appears at:
www.atwaterkent.info/grebe/Articles/QST2504.html
There’s an excellent Synchrophase site at: www.
radioblvd.com/Grebe%20Synchrophase.htm
Set manufacture: www.youtube.com/watch?v=
2ovD5lX53Ck
And don’t forget Ernst Erb’s comprehensive site.
It has the MU2 and many other Grebe sets at: www.
radiomuseum.org/r/grebe_synchrophase_mu2_1.html SC
Thoriated-tungsten filaments
This diagram shows the audio output versus the antenna
input. Note that it is not a straight line and this is the
reason for the relatively high harmonic distortion in the
Grebe MU-1.
siliconchip.com.au
The first generation of valves used either tungsten or
tantalum filaments, a natural consequence of their light
bulb predecessors’ technology.
These were also the only available metals that could
give useful emission and stand the extremely high
temperatures needed, around 2200°C. This was close
to tantalum’s melting point, so tungsten became the
material of choice
It was known that thorium, for instance, would give
improved emission at lower temperatures, but that it
was incapable of being formed and used at the 1700°C
required for useful emission.
The solution was to coat a tungsten filament with a
very thin thorium coating, and to run the tungsten at the
1700°C needed. Where tungsten gave only about 5mA
of emission per watt of heating power, thoriated-tungsten
improved this to 100mA/watt.
Thoriated tungsten also offered much longer life than
pure tungsten “bright emitters”, but was still capable
of the very high emission currents demanded in
transmitting valves.
Further development led to oxide-coated cathodes
used in receiving valves and low-power transmitting
valves. These commonly use a combination of barium,
calcium and strontium oxides, giving emission currents
of 500mA/W and operating temperatures around 700°C.
Oxide-coated filaments are used in battery-powered
octal, miniature and subminiature valves.
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 93
ASK SILICON CHIP
Got a technical problem? Can’t understand a piece of jargon or some technical principle? Drop us a line
and we’ll answer your question. Send your email to silicon<at>siliconchip.com.au
Mounting the 6GHz+
Frequency Counter
I’m very interested in building the
new Touchscreen Frequency Counter
in November 2017 edition of Silicon
Chip (siliconchip.com.au/Series/319)
but I am not too keen on the case idea.
Being a bit more traditional perhaps,
I prefer the standard metal case type
way of housing. Plus a built in power supply.
It seems that if I fit right-angle header pins to the Micromite Explore 100
board then the display could mount
onto a front panel, with the coax sockets at the bottom and projected out the
front of the case.
This would mean however that the
display would be upside-down compared to your design. To that end,
would you consider adding a switch
in the firmware such that the presumed
spare pin, AN11/RB11, could be used
to select this inverted display mode?
(G. P., via email)
• The display orientation is easy to
change as this is configured using an
MMBasic command. See the part two
article in the November issue for the
instructions. This is done over the serial console as part of the set-up procedure. Just use a different orientation
than specified. The Micromite Plus
manual PDF has the details of how to
specify the display orientation.
You may be better off using a short
ribbon cable to connect the two boards
as that would give you more flexibility
in mounting.
Larger screen for 6GHz+
Frequency Counter
Congratulations on producing a
great magazine. I look forward to my
copy every month.
Some time ago, I built the Micromite
Plus Explore 100, more as an exercise
in my SMD skills than a need to program and use it. So it sits here doing
not much. I note that in the October issue, you have a new Frequency Counter (siliconchip.com.au/Series/319)
94
Silicon Chip
project using the Micromite Plus Explore 100 module.
I built mine with the larger 7-inch
diagonal display. The Counter project would be ideal to let me use the
Micromite to actually do something
useful. Will the larger display work
in this Counter project? I’ll simply
house it in a larger enclosure. (G. M.,
Torquay, Qld)
• On page 71 of the Micromite Plus article in the August 2016 issue, it states
that the 5-inch, 7-inch and 8-inch LCD
touchscreens supported by the Micromite Plus all have the same resolution.
That being the case, we can’t see any
reason why the software won’t work
with the larger displays. However, we
don’t have any of these larger displays
and have not tested it.
Arduino Data Logger
with Depth Sounder
Please forgive my ignorance. Can
the Arduino Data Logger (August-September 2017; siliconchip.com.au/Series/316) be used to record the NMEA
output from a sounder unit? I currently feed the combined depth/position
NMEA output from my Humminbird
sounder into a Brookhouse data logger.
Post-survey, I download the logger using Tera Term and then further
process using Surfer to get the depth
contour map.
This project is interesting in more
ways than one. (F. B., Penrith, NSW)
• It should work in theory but some
minor adjustments to the software may
be required.
Firstly, you would need to add some
code to extract the depth information
from the NMEA stream and write it to
the log file as the GPS library we’ve
used only extracts information such as
the date, time, position and number of
satellites. See the September article for
details on how to log additional data.
Secondly, the Data Logger sketch
expects a TTL serial stream at 9600
baud. The Depth Sounder may use
4800 baud and it may use RS-232 signalling which is inverted compared to
Celebrating 30 Years
TTL. The GPS baud rate is set by this
line and so is easily changed:
nss.begin(9600);
Assuming the signal is not already
TTL, the simplest solution may be to
use a converter like this: siliconchip.
com.au/link/aaiq
However, it would be possible to do
the inversion in software by changing
the AltSoftwareSerialReceiveOnly
library code. In that case, the only
hardware change required would be
a series resistor of around 4.7kW between the serial output of the Depth
Sounder and the serial input pin on
the Arduino shield.
We haven’t tried modifying this library to invert the signal. It would involve changing all the calls to CONFIG_CAPTURE_FALLING_EDGE() to
be to CONFIG_CAPTURE_RISING_
EDGE() and vice versa. It would also
be necessary to change the line which
reads:
capture = GET_INPUT_CAPTURE();
to:
capture = !GET_INPUT_CAPTURE();
That should be all that’s necessary
to get the unit to handle an inverted
serial stream but note that we haven’t
tried this.
Queries about the
Super Clock
My father found the July 2017 issue of Every Day Practical Electronics (EPE) here in the States, containing the construction of the Super
Clock (originally published in Silicon
Chip, July 2016, siliconchip.com.au/
Article/10004).
Let’s just say that with him being an
amateur horologist, he was impressed
enough to ask me to look over the
article, schematics and DS3231 RTC
module.
From everything I’ve read, it seems
like an amazing circuit for basic timekeeping of a clock.
I have actually been looking for
something to keep time on my own
clock project and this will be my test
run for this one. I do have three quessiliconchip.com.au
tions about your Super Clock kit:
1. Is the DS3231 included with the
kit? I did not see it specifically
called out as an item or add-on, as
I did the GPS module.
2. The UB3 box appears to be an Australian standard project box as I
could not find it from my suppliers here in the USA. Do you have a
preferred vendor to purchase them?
3. The UB3 lid that is listed and laser
cut: is this cut for both the display
screen and mounting screws?
As it stands even with a response
I will be purchasing two of these for
each of us. (J. W., via email)
• You do not need the RTC module
if you are using the GPS module. The
time-keeping will be much more accurate with GPS than with an RTC
which will gain or lose about one second a month.
Our kit for the Micromite LCD BackPack includes a 2.8-inch touch-screen
LCD panel, the BackPack PCB, a PIC32
microcontroller programmed with
Super-ClockFull.hex, all the on-board
parts and a laser-cut black or clear
acrylic lid with a cut-out to suit the
LCD and mounting holes to suit a UB3
box (the black lid has a gloss finish on
one side and a matt finish on the other).
Note that the kit does not include
the DS3231 or GPS module, the box,
mounting hardware, power supply, DC
socket, off-board headers or any connectors or cable parts.
The UB3 box is available in the USA
from the Jaycar international website:
www.jaycar.com (Cat HB6013).
The BackPack PCB and a programmed microcontroller are also
available separately.
We also have available the DS3231
RTC module (back-up battery not included) plus two M2 x 10mm Nylon
spacers and four M2 x 6mm Nylon
screws for mounting. In addition, two
different GPS modules with internal battery back-up are available and
these are each supplied with a connecting cable.
Finally, suitable USB-to-serial converters are on offer and these are each
supplied with a short DuPont cable to
connect to the Micromite.
Remote control settings
for unidentified preamp
I have acquired an already built kit
preamp. The only thing written on the
case is “SILICON CHIP STUDIO REsiliconchip.com.au
MOTE PREAMPLIFIER”. It came with
no remote and also no source/input selector switch/button on the unit.
I need to change it to phono to use
it as a turntable preamp. I have a universal remote. Are you able to tell me
the best code/manufacturer setting
might get it to control the unit? (Guy,
via email)
• This sounds like a home-built version of our Studio Series Preamplifier
(ie, not built using the Altronics kit,
K5500).
The design was published in the
October and November 2005 issues
(siliconchip.com.au/Series/320), with
the remote control module described
in the April 2006 issue.
The Studio Series Preamplifier does
not contain a phono preamplifier or
any RIAA equalisation circuitry. If you
want to hook it up to a record player, you will need to build a separate
preamp such as our Magnetic Cartridge
Preamplifier design from the August
2006 issue. See siliconchip.com.au/
Article/2740
This unit can be built to suit playback of 78 RPM records, as well as
standard 33 & 45 RPM microgroove
vinyl records. It is available as a shortform kit (without diecast case) from
both Altronics (siliconchip.com.au/
link/aaij) and Jaycar (siliconchip.com.
au/link/aaik).
With regard to your query about suitable universal remotes, you will need
to refer to the relevant article from the
April 2006 issue. See siliconchip.com.
au/Article/2625
It explains that the Preamplifier is
set up to expect codes for a Philips TV,
CD or Satellite receiver. So check the
manual for your universal remote and
try a few different codes until you find
one that works.
Watering controller
wanted
I have been going through my store
room and came across a Game Boy. I
remember that there was an article to
use a Game Boy for a watering controller for the garden. Can you help find
which magazine it was in? I have the
magazines back to 2002 but it might
have been before this. (B. M., Kiama
Downs, NSW)
• We have published several watering systems based on PICAXE microcontrollers but we can’t find any based
on a Game Boy.
Winding the coils for
the Planet Jupiter
I hope that not too many years have
passed to ask for advice on your Planet
Jupiter Receiver project (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/1902) from Silicon
Chip which I came across in the British Everyday Practical Electronics
magazine.
I have sourced all the components
but as you know, the Jaycar coil formers
Using Burp Charger with lithium cells
Recently, lithium rechargeable
cells have appeared on the market.
I would appreciate it if you could
update your Burp Charger information to give some help as to charging rates etc.
I have found that your charger performs very well on the NiMH batteries and at this time, I am in the
process of putting some of the controls on the lid, to facilitate changing from AAA to AA cells. (J. H.,
Motueka, NZ)
• The Burp Charger is not suitable for use with lithium cells or
batteries.
Here are two charger circuits published since the Burp Charger which
are suitable for use with lithium cells
and batteries:
Celebrating 30 Years
August 2016: Circuit Notebook:
Simple Li-Ion Cell Charger by Phillip
Webb (siliconchip.com.au/Article/
10045)
April 2014: Circuit Notebook:
2-cell lithium-polymer charger has
balancing feature by Robert Budniak
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/7171)
And here are two cell balancer/
equaliser circuits, which need to
be used with a separate charger that
suits lithium chemistry:
March 2016: Battery-Pack Cell
Balancer For Optimum Charging by
Nicholas Vinen (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/9852)
April 2015: Circuit Notebook:
Lithium battery cell equaliser by
David Francis (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/8443)
February 2018 95
are discontinued and alternatives are
not obvious. I intend to turn my own
formers from plastic stock but I can’t see
how I can wind L2, 1.8µH with 20 turns
on a 3mm (as in the text) core given
the coil height would be about 5mm.
It comes out around 0.6µH. Am I
correct to use an air coil calculator
for this? A 6mm diameter coil would
be about right.
I’m probably missing something obvious here as radio is not my usual frequency range! (S. M., via email)
• We can supply an RF Coil Former
Pack (SBK-71K) from our online shop.
There are some differences to the Jaycar LF1227 set, so some slight modifications need to be made in order to
fit the new coil formers onto the PCB:
1) The SBK-71K has five pins rather
than two. The extra pins can be cut
off or where they will fit into an existing PCB mounting hole, used as
tap connection points.
2) The SBK-71K is slightly smaller so
you will need to use 0.25mm diameter enamelled copper wire rather
than the 0.3mm diameter specified
in the parts list.
3) You may need to bend the pins
slightly to fit them into the PCB
mounting pads.
We should also note that both the
L1 and L2 tuned circuits are of fairly
low Q, so they cover virtually all of
the required tuning range.
So a small discrepancy in inductance can be compensated by the settings of trimmers VC1 and VC2. Alternatively, you could also wind an extra
3 or 4 turns on each (there should be
room for the extra turns of 0.25mm
enamelled copper wire).
The situation regarding oscillator
coil L3 might seem a little more critical, but on the other hand this one is
tuned over the desired range using
VC3, with its much larger capacitance
range (10-120pF). If needed, you’d get
around the problem by winding 3 or 4
extra turns on L3 as well.
Best way to check for
irregular heartbeat
I am writing regarding the February 2005 USB-Controlled Electrocardiograph article (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/2972).
I looked at building this, in response
to feeling (and hearing) the odd irregular heartbeat, as probably do many
older persons. Techniques and components have obviously changed enor-
mously, making old circuits questionable. Using electrodes will obviously
require a good op amp.
Could a stethoscope be a reasonable
alternative? The peaks would not be
sharp, but almost certainly adequate
for diagnosing irregular heartbeats.
Presumably a modern microprocessor and probably the Micromite will
be fast enough to put a digitised record of sound pulse shapes appearing
at 60 to 120 peaks per minute into a
memory record.
That could then be played back onto
either the microprocessor’s own screen
(Micromite set up), or on a notebook.
The notebook version could then also
be printed like an ECG. Obviously not
as good as an electrocardiograph but
for an older person an easy record to
take to the doctor. Could also be played
back as sound, as though the doctor
were using his stethoscope at the time
of recording.
The hardware set up would be simple and cheap. (C. B., Manypeaks, WA)
• If you think you have an irregular heartbeat, you should see your GP
right away!
Getting back to your question, that
project has been superseded by an
Arduino-based version in the October
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Celebrating 30 Years
siliconchip.com.au
2015 issue. Have a look at siliconchip.
com.au/Article/9135
A kit for that project is available
from Altronics; see siliconchip.com.
au/Shop/Altronics/K2523 It works
well; we don’t see the point of producing a sound-based version which
would likely give inferior results.
Replacement ignition
system for 200cc scooter
I have a single-cylinder, single-coil
200cc motorbike with a failing electronic ignition. It has a transistorcontrolled ignition (TCI) unit which
receives its signal from a pickup coil
(of approximately 114W).
Would your High Energy Ignition for
Cars from the November and December 2012 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/18; Jaycar kit Cat KC5513) work
on my scooter and does it have a option to adjust the timing curve? (B. P.,
New Zealand)
• It may be that your ignition is actually a capacitor discharge ignition
(CDI) where a high voltage coil generates around 300V DC to charge a
capacitor and the trigger coil fires the
CDI to produce a spark from the ignition coil high tension lead. We have
published a replacement CDI unit for
this type of ignition.
It was in the May 2008 issue and
titled “Replacement CDI Module For
Small Petrol Motors” with an Altronics kit (Cat K4025) and Jaycar kit (Cat
KC5466) available. See: siliconchip.
com.au/Article/1820 This design has
the ability to have different spark advance depending on the trigger coil
design.
If you are after the High Energy
Ignition, a 12V battery is required. You
could use the reluctor input circuit to
suit the pickup coil.
We published High Energy Ignition projects in the November-December 2012 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/18; Altronics kit Cat K4030) and
a Programmable Ignition system in the
March-June 2007 issues (siliconchip.
com.au/Series/56).
USB-controlled power
board wanted
I was reading your article on the
USB-controlled Power Switch (power
board) from the November 2004 issue
(siliconchip.com.au/Article/3679) and
I see that the Jaycar Kit, Cat KC5401,
is no longer available.
Do you know anyone who makes
an equivalent device? I’m looking to
build up an arcade and would like my
Raspberry Pi to turn on the power to
the rest of the devices. (T. F., via email)
• Jaycar used to sell a pre-built USBcontrolled power board but that too
has been discontinued (Cat MS-4032).
We also found this one on the internet
but it doesn’t seem to be available any
more: siliconchip.com.au/link/aail
We’re not sure why this sort of device has suddenly become difficult
to purchase. The simplest solution
would be to buy a remote-controlled
power board like the Jaycar MS-6154,
disassemble the remote and drive its
buttons using transistors controlled by
the Raspberry Pi outputs.
We did something similar with our
“Programmable Mains Timer With Remote Switching” project in the November 2014 issue. See siliconchip.com.
au/Article/8063
Active crossover with
Majestic loudspeaker
I have already built your Majestic
loudspeaker and it is awesome. Can I
change it to an active speaker, using
the Silicon Chip Active Crossover?
Or is that not workable because the
Majestic has a full enclosure? (J. S.,
via email)
• Theoretically, a good active crossover system such as the one described
this year (September & October 2017;
siliconchip.com.au/Series/318) would
offer lower distortion, better phasing
and better control of cut-off frequencies and amplitudes than the passive
6dB/octave crossover we used in the
Majestic design in the June & Septem-
Locating Anti-Fouling transducers on 12m fibreglass boat
I previously built a two-channel version of the Ultrasonic AntiFouling project as described in
Silicon Chip, May and June 2017
(siliconchip.com.au/Series/312).
I had a small issue with getting
the unit to start reliably but thanks
to John Clarke’s assistance, was able
to overcome that and the unit is installed in the boat and has been happily running for a couple of months
now.
Unfortunately, I have not been able
to get the boat lifted and cleaned/antifouled since fitting the unit so I am
not able to make any comments on
the effectiveness as yet.
My boat is just under 12m and
of fibreglass construction. Ideally,
I should have fitted one transducer
towards the stern and one towards
the bow.
siliconchip.com.au
As it is extremely difficult to get
a cable from stern to bow, I actually
fitted both transducers to the stern,
one on either side.
I am well aware that having a
transducer towards the bow would
be more effective and there is a suitable position near the bow thruster
but just couldn’t run the cable that
far. I have considered building and
installing a second single-channel
unit and putting the transducer near
the bow thruster.
There is 12V available there as the
bow thruster is live even when the
battery switches are off. I am well
aware of your warning regarding the
high voltages that will appear on the
bow thruster supply when in use.
I was wondering if the bow thruster 12V supply could be used in conjunction with some filtering/isolaCelebrating 30 Years
tion and (perhaps) another smaller
12V battery to power another ultrasonic unit. (D. B., St Ives, NSW)
• You may find that your positioning of the transducers, both on the
stern, is sufficient protection against
algae growth on the bow.
We suggest you wait a bit longer,
until the end of summer (when algae
growth is more prevalent) and then
have your boat checked to see if the
system is working satisfactorily.
If you find that a bow transducer
is required, it would be possible in
theory to come up with a power filter that would allow the unit to be
run from the thruster battery.
But we would recommend instead
that you build a single-channel AntiFouling unit and power it from its
own 12V battery, charged by a solar
panel/charger.
February 2018 97
ber 2014 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/275).
We have not tried it, so we cannot
say if it would offer a significantly improved audible result.
Assuming you want to maintain the
two-way system you will have to biwire and bi-amp everything and add
extra binding posts. It would be a good
idea to place a 4.7µF capacitor in series with the tweeter to protect it, in
case someone gets the wires the wrong
way around and ends up destroying it
with some heavy bass signal.
You will not need to change the cabinet, apart from adding the extra binding posts, and you may have to extend
your wires if you had cut them too
short. All this will involve extra cost,
extra amplifiers and a lot of wires lying
around the place, so we don’t think it
will be worth doing, especially since
the Majestic is already very good.
We were aiming for low cost and
simplicity in the Majestic design and
the results are pretty good, as you can
attest.
Whirring noise from
the PreChamp
I am having trouble trying to interface a mono dynamic microphone
(250W impedance) to the sound card
of my computer. I have found an old
Jaycar “Pre-Champ” kit, Cat KC5166
(now apparently discontinued), based
on your article in the July 1994 issue.
It amplifies just fine but there is a continuous whirring sound in the background (only when the mic cable is
plugged in). I suspect it may be rapid
motor boating.
I see that on page 102 of the December 2011 issue, you answered a question about Champ noise and seemed to
say it was an inherent problem. You
recommended the Jaycar Short Circuit
Volume 3 Project 13. According to my
Jaycar catalogue, Project 13 is a High
Power Amplifier (actually 13.5W) so
obviously that would be unsuitable
for this role.
Project 12 is stereo pre-amp, which
might be suitable if I can connect it
as mono. Was Project 13 a misprint?
How do I connect Project 12 as mono?
What do you recommend for low noise
mono signal from a dynamic mic of
250W to a sound card? (A. F., Salamander Bay, NSW)
• That answer was in response to
someone who had noise from the
98
Silicon Chip
Champ, not the PreChamp. So if Project 13 is a 13.5W power amplifier, that
seems like a reasonable alternative.
The whirring sound you have could
be the circuit amplifying EMI which
is being picked up by the microphone
lead. EMI can be pretty pervasive. It
could be from a switchmode power
supply some distance away that’s radiating through your mains wiring.
We aren’t aware of any inherent
problem with the PreChamp or it having a tendency to motorboat. We suggest you try shielding the circuit in
an earthed metal (ideally steel) box.
The normal approach to sending
a microphone signal over anything
more than a short distance is to fit a
microphone preamp with balanced
output near the microphone and then
send the signal over a shielded, balanced cable and convert it back to unbalanced at the far end, to feed to your
sound card. That should be much more
effective at rejecting buzz, hum, EMI
and other undesired signals.
If you don’t want to take that approach, an op-amp based preamp
like the PreChampion design from
January 2013 (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/1301) may be less susceptible
to EMI. But we suggest you investigate
the shielding option first.
45-Second Voice
Recorder won't record
We have built the 45-Second Voice
Recorder Module published in the
May 2005 issue (siliconchip.com.au/
Article/3058).
Our problem is that when we press
the record button, the red LED flashes
once but it won’t record anything. (M.
A., Hamersley, WA)
• We can only guess from your brief
description of the problem that you
might not be holding down S1 during the recording. If you simply press
and release S1, you will just get one
flash from LED2 and nothing will be
recorded. Refer to the text on page 30
of the May 2005 issue.
This states that for recording, switch
S2 should be in the Record position
(whereupon the Record mode LED2
should begin glowing) and then pushbutton S1 is held down during the
actual recording (during which Run
LED1 should flash). If some or all of
this is not happening, you may have
a component orientation error or perhaps a dry solder joint.
Celebrating 30 Years
By the way, we published an enhanced version of this project in the
December 2007 issue (siliconchip.
com.au/Article/2448) which could record and play back multiple different
sound samples.
Where to find CH340G
USB/serial driver
I bought an Arduino clone board
and an Arduino development board
on trademe, in New Zealand.
The seller says to go to siliconchip.
com.au/link/aaip to download the
CH340G USB/serial driver, however,
the readme file on this site is gobbledegook and I am worried about “bricking” my desktop.
Can you direct me to a site that has a
safe download for this driver? I am using Windows 10. (R. K., New Zealand)
• Try one of these:
Manufacturer driver download:
www.wch.cn/download/CH341SER_
EXE.html
Translated datasheet (may or may
not be accurate): siliconchip.com.au/
link/aain
Alternative driver download site:
www.5v.ru/ch340g.htm
And here is a step-by-step guide
with links: siliconchip.com.au/link/
aaim
Adjustable regulator
design wanted
Has your magazine (or Electronics
Australia) ever published a project
using LM317 or LM338 adjustable
linear regulators? I’m looking for a
PCB to replace an LM723-based PSU
that no longer works. (G. N., Tumby
Bay, SA)
• We have published at least three
projects using the LM317 regulator:
1) 4-Output Universal Voltage Regulator, May 2015: siliconchip.com.
au/Article/8562
2) MiniReg 1.3-22V Adjustable Regulator, December 2011: siliconchip.
com.au/Article/1238
3) High-Current Adjustable Voltage
Regulator, May 2008: siliconchip.
com.au/Article/1830
Issue starting Induction
Motor Speed Controller
I have an Altronics 1.5kW Induction Motor Speed Controller Kit, Cat
K6032, as described in your April and
siliconchip.com.au
Recycling parts for the Ultrasonic Anti-Fouling unit
I built the original version of the
marine Ultrasonic Anti-fouling system (September & November 2010;
siliconchip.com.au/Series/12) from
the Jaycar kit (Cat KC5498).
I'm now planning to build the
revised version (May & June 2017;
siliconchip.com.au/Series/312) from
the Jaycar kit (single transducer version; Cat KC5535), salvaging parts
for the second transducer from my
original unit.
The problem I will have is obtaining the parts for the neon activity indicator, specifically the 220kW 1.6kV
resistor, the 1nF 2kV capacitor and
the UF4007 fast diode.
Will these be made available as a
package from the Silicon Chip online
shop, as for some other hard to get
parts? I most likely will obtain the
two CSD18534KCS Mosfets from the
Silicon Chip online shop as well, as
they are higher powered and will be
more robust that the RFP30N06LE
devices in my original unit.
My boat is a Top Hat 25 foot
(7.8m) long keel sail vessel with a
cutaway forefoot and tucked under rudder, and approximately two
tonnes of lead in the keel (https://
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_Hat_25).
Its sections are typically wineglass in shape and the only flat(ish)
panels are the sides of the bilge
sump, at the aft end of the keel, after
the ballast and forward of the rudder; a bit less than a square metre in
area each side. This is where I fitted
the transducer, in the middle of the
panel on one side.
There was a clear reduction in
May 2012 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/25). I finished building the kit,
however, it is not functioning correctly.
The LED illuminates as expected but
once a load is connected, it goes into
fault mode (red fault led illuminated)
and no power is output.
I have disconnected the feedback
optocoupler from the power module
and now the unit appears to work fine
with a load connected. Ramp rate, reversing and variable speed all function correctly.
Could this be a faulty power module? Or something else in the circuit
siliconchip.com.au
fouling growth but more so on the
side with the transducer. I imagine
that the two tonnes of lead has a
damping effect on the passage of the
ultrasound from one side of the hull
to the other, which is why I intend to
build the dual transducer unit and
fit a transducer on each side of the
bilge sump (which is always dry, by
the way).
How can a hobbyist constructor
ascertain that both the Mosfets for a
channel are operating correctly and
whether the transducer is properly
coupled to the hull, without some
kind of monitoring tool? I know one
can use an AM radio to show activity
but this would still be evident even
if one Mosfet had failed.
I was wondering if Silicon Chip
might consider designing something,
say, based on the receiver section of
the Ultrasonic Water Level Meter,
driving a bar-graph or just a DVM.
Possibly with some means of calibration, whereby the ultrasound detector could be held against the back
of the Anti-fouling transducer and on
various panels of the hull, to show
the level of ultrasonic vibration.
It could be used when the units
were initially installed, and afterwards, for example at every haul-out
or whenever some doubt existed that
the units were operating properly.
Would the Banggood DSO recently
reviewed in your pages (April 2017;
siliconchip.com.au/Article/10613)
be adequate to show that the Mosfets
are functioning correctly?
Even so, the problem of ascertaining adequate coupling to the hull
causing the fault? (J. T., via email)
• It seems that your load may draw a
very high initial current and it’s tripping the protection circuitry. Motors
which start up under load, such as pool
pumps, are tricky to get up to speed
since they draw so much current when
operating at low speed under load.
In the past, the solution has generally been to try lots of different ramp
rate settings until you find one that
works. The ramp has to be slow but
not too slow.
When you say you “disconnected
the feedback optocoupler”, it sounds
like you’re bypassing the over-current
Celebrating 30 Years
would remain. Such a device might
also be useful to constructors for
checking out other ultrasound projects as well.
By the way, I have enjoyed your
magazine since it was RTV&H. (D.
J., via email)
• Apart from the Mosfets you mention, we do not sell parts for this project since Jaycar have the exclusive
rights to sell it.
Jaycar do have the UF4007 diode
(Jaycar Cat ZR-1038) and you can
substitute a 220kW 1W resistor for
the one rated at 1.6kV. Altronics
have a 1nF 3kV capacitor (Altronics
Cat R2889).
Your approach with fitting two
transducers on your complex hull
should lead to better results.
As far as knowing that both
Mosfets are working, it is doubtful whether there would be much
output at all from the transformer
secondary if only one Mosfet was
working and this would mean that
the neon indicator would not work.
Your suggestion about using the
ultrasonic water level meter to monitor whether the hull is being excited
is intriguing but we doubt whether
it would have sufficient sensitivity
to work.
We have thought long and hard
about some sort ultrasonic hull detector but have not come up with
anything workable.
Interestingly, some divers and others who have been under boats with
the Ultrasonic Anti-Fouling working
have reported that they feel “pressure in the ears”.
protection which is pretty dangerous.
Then there’s nothing to stop the IGBT
bridge from blowing. If you have to
modify the protection, it’s safer to
slightly reduce the current sense resistor value so you still have at least
some protection.
The standard current sense resistor is 15mW. You could try 10mW instead, increasing the current limit by
33%. The easiest way to do this is to
solder a 30mW shunt on top of the
15mW shunt. However, we still don’t
recommend doing this as it’s possible
the module could be damaged before
the over-current protection trips. SC
February 2018 99
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
PIC12F675-I/P
PIC16F1455-I/P
PIC16F1507-I/P
PIC16F88-E/P
PIC16F88-I/P
PIC16LF88-I/P
PIC16LF88-I/SO
PIC16LF1709-I/SO
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)
Courtesy LED Light Delay for Cars (Oct14), Fan Speed Controller (Jan18)
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)
Batt Capacity Meter (Jun09), Intelligent Fan Controller (Jul10)
GPS Car Computer (Jan10), GPS Boat Computer (Oct10)
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)
PIC16F877A-I/P
PIC16F2550-I/SP
PIC18F4550-I/P
PIC32MX795F512H-80I/PT
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
NEW THIS MONTH:
WiFi ANTENNAS WITH U.FL/IPX CONNECTORS
5dBi
2dBi (omnidirectional)
ALTIMETER/WEATHER STATION
Micromite 2.8-inch LCD BackPack kit programmed for the Altimeter project
GY-68 barometric pressure and temperature sensor module (with BMP180)
DHT22 temperature and humidity sensor module
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)
(FEB 18)
(DEC 17)
$12.50
$10.00
$65.00
$5.00
$7.50
(OCT 17)
$69.90
$15.00/pack
3-WAY ADJUSTABLE ACTIVE CROSSOVER
(SEPT 17)
set of laser-cut black acrylic case pieces $10.00
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
P&P – $10 Per order#
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)
Hard to get parts: 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
SC200 AMPLIFIER MODULE
(JAN 17)
hard-to-get parts: Q8-Q16, D2-D4, 150pF/250V capacitor and five SMD resistors
$35.00
60V 40A DC MOTOR SPEED CONTROLLER
$35.00
(JAN 17)
hard-to-get parts: IC2, Q1, Q2 and D1
VARIOUS MODULES
MICROBRIDGE
NRF24L01+PA+NA transceiver with SNA connector and antenna (El Cheapo 12, JAN18)
$5.00
WeMos D1 R2 board (Logging data to the ‘net using Arduino, SEPT17)
$15.00
Geeetech Arduino MP3 shield (Arduino Music Player/Recorder, VS1053, JUL17)
$20.00
AD9833 DDS module (with gain control) (for Micromite DDS, APR17) $25.00
AD9833 DDS module (no gain control) (El Cheapo Modules, Part 6, APR17)
$15.00
CP2102 USB-UART bridge
$5.00
microSD card adaptor (El Cheapo Modules, Part 3, JAN17)
$2.50
DS3231 real-time clock with mounting spacers and screws (El Cheapo, Part 1, OCT16)
$5.00
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK V2 – COMPLETE KIT
TOUCHSCREEN VOLTAGE/CURRENT REFERENCE
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK KIT (programmed to suit) PLUS UB1 Lid
LASER-CUT MATTE BLACK LID (to suit UB1 Jiffy Box)
EFUSE
MICROMITE PLUS EXPLORE 100 *COMPLETE KIT (no LCD panel)* (SEP 16)
ARDUINO LC METER
(JUN 17)
1nF 1% MKP capacitor, 5mm lead spacing
$2.50
(MAY 17)
PCB plus all on-board parts including programmed microcontroller
(SMD ceramics for 10µF) $20.00
(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
(APR 17)
two NIS5512 ICs plus one SUP53P06 $22.50
(DEC 16)
SHORT FORM KIT with main PCB plus onboard parts (not including BackPack
module, jiffy box, power supply or wires/cables)
$70.00
$10.00
$99.00
$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
02/18
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:
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
$5.00
APPLIANCE INSULATION TESTER
APR 2015
04103151
$10.00
APPLIANCE INSULATION TESTER FRONT PANEL
APR 2015
04103152
$10.00
LOW-FREQUENCY DISTORTION ANALYSER
APR 2015
04104151
$5.00
APPLIANCE EARTH LEAKAGE TESTER PCBs (2)
MAY 2015
04203151/2 $15.00
APPLIANCE EARTH LEAKAGE TESTER LID/PANEL
MAY 2015
04203153
$15.00
BALANCED INPUT ATTENUATOR MAIN PCB
MAY 2015
04105151
$15.00
BALANCED INPUT ATTENUATOR FRONT & REAR PANELS MAY 2015
04105152/3
$20.00
4-OUTPUT UNIVERSAL ADJUSTABLE REGULATOR
MAY 2015
18105151
$5.00
SIGNAL INJECTOR & TRACER
JUNE 2015
04106151
$7.50
PASSIVE RF PROBE
JUNE 2015
04106152
$2.50
SIGNAL INJECTOR & TRACER SHIELD
JUNE 2015
04106153
$5.00
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD TO SUIT PROJECT:
PUBLISHED:
BAD VIBES INFRASOUND SNOOPER
CHAMPION + PRE-CHAMPION
DRIVEWAY MONITOR TRANSMITTER PCB
DRIVEWAY MONITOR RECEIVER PCB
MINI USB SWITCHMODE REGULATOR
VOLTAGE/RESISTANCE/CURRENT REFERENCE
LED PARTY STROBE MK2
ULTRA-LD MK4 200W AMPLIFIER MODULE
9-CHANNEL REMOTE CONTROL RECEIVER
MINI USB SWITCHMODE REGULATOR MK2
2-WAY PASSIVE LOUDSPEAKER CROSSOVER
ULTRA LD AMPLIFIER POWER SUPPLY
ARDUINO USB ELECTROCARDIOGRAPH
FINGERPRINT SCANNER – SET OF TWO PCBS
LOUDSPEAKER PROTECTOR
LED CLOCK
SPEECH TIMER
TURNTABLE STROBE
CALIBRATED TURNTABLE STROBOSCOPE ETCHED DISC
VALVE STEREO PREAMPLIFIER – PCB
VALVE STEREO PREAMPLIFIER – CASE PARTS
QUICKBRAKE BRAKE LIGHT SPEEDUP
SOLAR MPPT CHARGER & LIGHTING CONTROLLER
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK, 2.4-INCH VERSION
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK, 2.8-INCH VERSION
BATTERY CELL BALANCER
DELTA THROTTLE TIMER
MICROWAVE LEAKAGE DETECTOR
FRIDGE/FREEZER ALARM
ARDUINO MULTIFUNCTION MEASUREMENT
PRECISION 50/60Hz TURNTABLE DRIVER
RASPBERRY PI TEMP SENSOR EXPANSION
100DB STEREO AUDIO LEVEL/VU METER
HOTEL SAFE ALARM
UNIVERSAL TEMPERATURE ALARM
BROWNOUT PROTECTOR MK2
8-DIGIT FREQUENCY METER
APPLIANCE ENERGY METER
MICROMITE PLUS EXPLORE 64
CYCLIC PUMP/MAINS TIMER
MICROMITE PLUS EXPLORE 100 (4 layer)
AUTOMOTIVE FAULT DETECTOR
MOSQUITO LURE
MICROPOWER LED FLASHER
MINI MICROPOWER LED FLASHER
50A BATTERY CHARGER CONTROLLER
PASSIVE LINE TO PHONO INPUT CONVERTER
MICROMITE PLUS LCD BACKPACK
AUTOMOTIVE SENSOR MODIFIER
TOUCHSCREEN VOLTAGE/CURRENT REFERENCE
SC200 AMPLIFIER MODULE
60V 40A DC MOTOR SPEED CON. CONTROL BOARD
60V 40A DC MOTOR SPEED CON. MOSFET BOARD
GPS SYNCHRONISED ANALOG CLOCK
ULTRA LOW VOLTAGE LED FLASHER
POOL LAP COUNTER
STATIONMASTER TRAIN CONTROLLER
EFUSE
SPRING REVERB
6GHz+ 1000:1 PRESCALER
MICROBRIDGE
MICROMITE LCD BACKPACK V2
10-OCTAVE STEREO GRAPHIC EQUALISER PCB
10-OCTAVE STEREO GRAPHIC EQUALISER FRONT PANEL
10-OCTAVE STEREO GRAPHIC EQUALISER CASE PIECES
RAPIDBRAKE
DELUXE EFUSE
DELUXE EFUSE UB1 LID
MAINS SUPPLY FOR BATTERY VALVES (INC. PANELS)
3-WAY ADJUSTABLE ACTIVE CROSSOVER
3-WAY ADJUSTABLE ACTIVE CROSSOVER PANELS
6GHz+ TOUCHSCREEN FREQUENCY COUNTER
KELVIN THE CRICKET
6GHz+ FREQUENCY COUNTER CASE PIECES (SET)
SUPER-7 SUPERHET AM RADIO PCB
SUPER-7 SUPERHET AM RADIO CASE PIECES
THEREMIN
PROPORTIONAL FAN SPEED CONTROLLER
NEW THIS MONTH
WATER TANK LEVEL METER (INCLUDING HEADERS)
10-LED BARAGRAPH
10-LED BARAGRAPH SIGNAL PROCESSING
JUNE 2015
04104151
$5.00
JUNE 2015
01109121/2 $7.50
JULY 2015
15105151 $10.00
JULY 2015
15105152
$5.00
JULY 2015
18107151
$2.50
AUG 2015
04108151
$2.50
AUG 2015
16101141
$7.50
SEP 2015
01107151 $15.00
SEP 2015
1510815 $15.00
SEP 2015
18107152
$2.50
OCT 2015
01205141 $20.00
OCT 2015
01109111 $15.00
OCT 2015
07108151
$7.50
NOV 2015
03109151/2 $15.00
NOV 2015
01110151 $10.00
DEC 2015
19110151 $15.00
DEC 2015
19111151 $15.00
DEC 2015
04101161
$5.00
DEC 2015
04101162 $10.00
JAN 2016
01101161 $15.00
JAN 2016
01101162 $20.00
JAN 2016
05102161 $15.00
FEB/MAR 2016
16101161 $15.00
FEB/MAR 2016
07102121
$7.50
FEB/MAR 2016
07102122
$7.50
MAR 2016
11111151
$6.00
MAR 2016
05102161 $15.00
APR 2016
04103161
$5.00
APR 2016
03104161
$5.00
APR 2016
04116011/2 $15.00
MAY 2016
04104161 $15.00
MAY 2016
24104161
$5.00
JUN 2016
01104161 $15.00
JUN 2016
03106161
$5.00
JULY 2016
03105161
$5.00
JULY 2016
10107161 $10.00
AUG 2016
04105161
$10.00
AUG 2016
04116061
$15.00
AUG 2016
07108161
$5.00
SEPT 2016
10108161/2 $10.00/pair
SEPT 2016
07109161 $20.00
SEPT 2016
05109161 $10.00
OCT 2016
25110161
$5.00
OCT 2016
16109161
$5.00
OCT 2016
16109162
$2.50
NOV 2016
11111161 $10.00
NOV 2016
01111161
$5.00
NOV 2016
07110161
$7.50
DEC 2016
05111161 $10.00
DEC 2016
04110161 $12.50
JAN 2017
01108161 $10.00
JAN 2017
11112161 $10.00
JAN 2017
11112162 $12.50
FEB 2017
04202171 $10.00
FEB 2017
16110161
$2.50
MAR 2017
19102171 $15.00
MAR 2017
09103171/2 $15.00/set
APR 2017
04102171
$7.50
APR 2017
01104171 $12.50
MAY 2017
04112162
$7.50
MAY 2017
24104171
$2.50
MAY 2017
07104171
$7.50
JUN 2017
01105171 $12.50
JUN 2017
01105172 $15.00
JUN 2017 $15.00
JUL 2017
05105171 $10.00
AUG 2017
18106171 $15.00
AUG 2017
SC4316 $5.00
AUG 2017
18108171-4 $25.00
SEPT 2017
01108171 $20.00
SEPT 2017
01108172/3 $20.00/pair
OCT 2017
04110171 $10.00
OCT 2017
08109171 $10.00
DEC 2017 $15.00
DEC 2017
06111171 $25.00
DEC 2017 $25.00
JAN 2018
23112171 $12.50
JAN 2018
05111171
$2.50
FEB 2018
FEB 2018
FEB 2018
PCB CODE:
21110171
04101181
04101182
Price:
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$7.50
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WARNING!
SILICON CHIP magazine regularly describes projects which employ a mains power supply or produce high voltage. All such
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siliconchip.com.au
Celebrating 30 Years
February 2018 103
Coming up in Silicon Chip
Advertising Index
Vintage TV RF Modulator
Altronics.................................. 74-77
This circuit allows you to drive a vintage TV from a composite video source
such as a DVD player. It is optimised to provide the best video quality for older TVs and incorporates vertical blanking removal circuitry to avoid buzzing
noises from the TV's sound decoder. It uses six ICs and some discrete and
passive components.
Dave Thompson......................... 103
El Cheapo Modules - ESP8266 WiFi modules and boards
High Profile Communications..... 103
We've used ESP8266/ESP32 modules and boards in a few of our projects now.
They are ideal for any microcontroller-based project which requires internet
access. This article will provide more detail on what's available.
Triac-based Motor Speed Controller
We've published many mains motor speed controllers in the past, including
several based on Triacs but this is our best yet. It avoids many of the pitfalls
of Triac-based controllers and gives very smooth speed control, including operation at very low speeds. It's relatively simple and quite easy to build, too.
Digi-Key Electronics....................... 3
Emona Instruments.................... IBC
Hare & Forbes.......................... OBC
Icom Pty Ltd................................. 13
Jaycar............................... IFC,49-56
Keith Rippon Kit Assembly......... 103
LD Electronics............................ 103
LEACH Co Ltd................................ 9
LEDsales.................................... 103
Microchip Technology..................... 7
Earthquake Early Warning
It's possible to get early warning before a devastating earthquake by sensing the "P waves" which travel through the Earth faster than the damaging "S
waves". It could give you 30 seconds or even a minute to get to a safe place.
This article describes the electronics required to form an early warning system.
Ocean Controls............................ 11
Rohde & Schwarz.......................... 5
Sesame Electronics................... 103
SC Online Shop.................. 100-101
AM Transmitter for Vintage Radios
AM radio stations may start to disappear in a few years. If that happens, you will
need a low-power AM radio transmitter such as this one to continue enjoying
vintage radios. It's also handy for playing MP3s or CDs through an AM radio.
Note: these features are planned or are in preparation and should appear
within the next few issues of Silicon Chip.
The March 2018 issue is due on sale in newsagents by Thursday, February 22nd.
Expect postal delivery of subscription copies in Australia between February
22nd and March 9th.
SC Radio, TV & Hobbies DVD...... 96
Silicon Chip Binders.................... 10
Silicon Chip Subscriptions........ 102
The Loudspeaker Kit.com.............. 6
Tronixlabs................................... 103
Vintage Radio Repairs............... 103
Wagner Electronics...................... 35
Notes & Errata
UV Light Box & Timer, November 2007: the errata in the August 2008 issue regarding this project is wrong. There is no
47kW resistor (it’s 4.7kW) and it should not be installed. The three 10kW pull-up resistors mentioned in the March 2012
errata should be fitted instead. These can be soldered between the following pairs of IC pins on the underside of the board:
pins 3 & 4, pins 12 & 14, pins 13 & 14.
Micromite BackPack Touchscreen DDS Signal Generator, April 2017: add three chassis-mount RCA sockets to the
parts list.
Deluxe Touchscreen eFuse, July, August & October 2017: in the circuit diagram (Fig.3) on pages 44 and 45 of the
July 2017 issue, the resistors connecting to pins 24 and 26 of IC1 are shown incorrectly. The 390kW/30kW and 27kW/3kW
pairs should be swapped. The same is true of the overlay diagram on page 63 of the August 2017 issue. The resistors
to swap are above REG3 (390kW) and just above Q4 (30kW), and to the right of REG1 (27kW) and above and to the left
of REG3 (3kW). Also, the PCB overlay incorrectly shows ZD8 (just above Q6) as ZD4. The PCBs supplied are correctly
labelled and the online versions of these issues have been corrected.
Kelvin the Cricket, October 2017: there is a bug in the software which prevents modes 13-16 from working properly.
Revised firmware (0810917B) is available for download from the Silicon Chip website and chips supplied from now on will
be programmed with this new version.
104
Silicon Chip
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