This is only a preview of the December 2023 issue of Silicon Chip. You can view 37 of the 104 pages in the full issue, including the advertisments. For full access, purchase the issue for $10.00 or subscribe for access to the latest issues. Articles in this series:
Items relevant to "Arduino Uno R4 Minima":
Items relevant to "Ideal Diode Bridge Rectifiers":
Items relevant to "Secure Remote Switch, Pt1":
Items relevant to "Multi-Channel Volume Control, Pt1":
Items relevant to "Coin Cell Emulator":
Items relevant to "Recreating Sputnik-1, Part 2":
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DECEMBER 2023
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Contents
Vol.36, No.12
December 2023
12 The History of Electronics, Pt3
This final part in our series covers the many significant electronic
developments that were not the work of individuals, but came from
universities, companies and other organisations.
By Dr David Maddison
Electronic inventors & inventions
24 Arduino Uno R4 Minima
The Arduino Uno R4 Minima is the latest version of the well-known Arduino
Uno. It marks a major upgrade for the Uno series, because of its 32-bit ARM
microcontroller and greatly expanded memory among other additions.
By Jim Rowe
Microcontroller review
57 Electronic Markets in Shenzhen
Shenzhen is home to one of the biggest public electronic marketplaces in
the world, full of everything from cameras, drones and individual electronic
components such as resistors, capacitors and integrated circuits.
By Edison Zhang
Electronic components
86 Recreating Sputnik-1, Part 2
Completing a replica of the Sputnik-1 radio transmitter wasn’t easy. Learn
how Dr Hugo Holden reverse-engineered and built one of the two D-200
radio transmitters used in the satellite.
By Dr Hugo Holden
Vintage Radio
The History of Electronics
Inventors and their Inventions
Part 3: page 12
Reviewing the
Arduino UNO
R4 Minima
Page 24
Page 72
Coin Cell
Emulator
Recreating Sputnik-1
34 Ideal Diode Bridge Rectifiers
We have six different Bridge Rectifiers you can build, each acting as a highefficiency drop-in replacement for existing bridge rectifier designs. The
‘Ideal’ Rectifiers can handle currents from 2A up to 40A (continuous).
By Phil Prosser
Power supply project
42 Secure Remote Switch, Pt1
Our Secure Remote Switch is designed to control low-voltage appliances,
such as a garage door controller, fans, pumps or LED lighting. It’s powered
from 12V or 24V DC and can be controlled by up to 16 transmitters.
By John Clarke
Remote control/security project
60 Multi-Channel Volume Control, Pt1
Control the volume of up to 20 audio channels simultaneously using this
Volume Control. The Volume Control can be adjusted using its touchscreen,
rotary encoder or via an infrared remote control.
By Tim Blythman
Audio project
72 Coin Cell Emulator
This device is used to emulate a coin cell to power a circuit, and at the
same time measure the current, voltage and charge plus other statistics. It
is a versatile tool when designing or testing low-power circuits.
By Tim Blythman
Test & measurement project
Part 2: Page 86
2
Editorial Viewpoint
5
Mailbag
33
Online Shop
80
Serviceman’s Log
98
Circuit Notebook
101
Ask Silicon Chip
103
Market Centre
104
Advertising Index
104
Notes & Errata
1. Wireless power transfer demo
2. MIDI Spectral Sound software update
3. Battery-powered timer
SILICON
SILIC
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Publisher/Editor
Nicholas Vinen
How our magazine is distributed
Editorial office: Unit 1 (up ramp), 234
Harbord Rd, Brookvale, NSW 2100.
Postal address: PO Box 194,
Matraville, NSW 2036.
Phone: (02) 9939 3295.
ISSN: 1030-2662
Printing and Distribution:
I thought it would be worthwhile to describe
how Silicon Chip is distributed to clarify why the
magazines don’t necessarily arrive or go on sale on
exactly the same day each month.
Newsagents require that the magazine goes on sale
on either a Monday or a Thursday; thus, we can’t have
the same on-sale date each month. We try to keep it
between the 26th and the 29th of the month before
the cover date, although public holidays sometimes stymie that.
That is also our target date for deliveries to Australian subscribers via
mail, but with the quantity we send, they are all prepared and handed over
to Australia Post on the same day. That means subscribers who are further
away from us will get their magazines later. Overseas subscription copies
are a whole other kettle of fish that I won’t get into here.
We mail subscription copies around the 15th of the previous month,
expecting the average transit time within Australia to be around 10-14 days.
Thus, most subscriber copies (but likely not all) should arrive by the time
the magazines go on sale in newsagents. Then again, some newsagents may
decide to put them on shelves early.
The other main avenue by which Silicon Chip is sold is dealers like Jaycar,
Altronics and Aztronics. They receive the magazines in bulk on the same
day as the newsagent distributors, but we find they usually get them to
their stores quickly. So those stores may be the first ones you notice a new
issue of Silicon Chip on sale. After all, they have smaller networks than the
newsagents and Australia Post.
That leads me to the most common complaint we receive: that a subscriber’s
magazine hasn’t arrived on time. The first question is usually, “Has there
been some sort of a delay?” I don’t recall a time in the fifteen years I have
been involved with Silicon Chip that we were late enough going to press that
it affected the magazine’s distribution.
There was one time I recall that the printers took longer than usual (due
to equipment failure), and the newsagent on-sale date had to be pushed back
a few days to the next opportunity, but that’s it.
So if you usually get your magazine delivered around a certain point in
the month and it hasn’t come, it has almost certainly been held up in the
mail. That seems to happen pretty much randomly. A few people complain
that their magazines arrive late each month, and a few more never get them
(and we have to send another copy).
We have never received a good explanation as to why this happens. Still,
you have to expect the occasional mistake when delivering the volume of
mail that Australia Post handles.
By all means, let us know if your magazine hasn’t come on time, and
definitely tell us if it was lost so that we can send a replacement. Still, I
hope readers understand that we are at the mercy of the postal system for
subscription deliveries.
Occasionally, there have been times when many people have had their
magazines delivered late or lost, but that’s pretty rare, and the remedy is the
same regardless. The last time that happened was when the Trans-Australian
railway line was damaged by flooding in February 2022.
Finally, note that our newsagency distributors determine precisely which
newsagents receive how many copies of the magazine. If your local newsagent
has no copies (left), let us know their address so we can follow up with the
distributors.
24-26 Lilian Fowler Pl, Marrickville 2204
by Nicholas Vinen
Technical Editor
John Clarke – B.E.(Elec.)
Technical Staff
Jim Rowe – B.A., B.Sc.
Bao Smith – B.Sc.
Tim Blythman – B.E., B.Sc.
Advertising Enquiries
(02) 9939 3295
adverts<at>siliconchip.com.au
Regular Contributors
Allan Linton-Smith
Dave Thompson
David Maddison – B.App.Sc. (Hons 1),
PhD, Grad.Dip.Entr.Innov.
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Associate Professor Graham Parslow
Dr Hugo Holden – B.H.B, MB.ChB.,
FRANZCO
Ian Batty – M.Ed.
Phil Prosser – B.Sc., B.E.(Elec.)
Cartoonist
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loueee.com
Founding Editor (retired)
Leo Simpson – B.Bus., FAICD
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2
Editorial Viewpoint
Silicon Chip
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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 has the right to edit, reproduce in electronic form, and communicate these letters. This also applies to submissions to “Ask Silicon Chip”, “Circuit Notebook” and “Serviceman’s Log”.
Parts and tools for sale after retirement
After 21 years as a product development specialist, it’s
time to retire and dispose of surplus equipment and components. I’m offering them at less than half the current new
price while stocks last. Bulk sales are negotiable, so feel
free to make an offer. All components are new but repackaged for sale.
Items include Microchip PIC32MX360 processors,
development boards, break-out boards, capacitors, resistors, transistors, oscillator crystals, linear ICs, interface
ICs and in-circuit debuggers for MPLAB. For a complete
list, further information, or to make a purchase, please
email me:
Phil Carden, ISPI Limited, Auckland, New Zealand.
info<at>ispi.co.nz
Earth stakes can be marginal
Over the years, there have been various comments on
Earth stakes and Earthing in general. I fail to see how, in
many places, just a rod in the ground suffices, especially
when the soil dries out.
Being rural may be an advantage in terms of the amount
of surface area available. The now-discontinued SWER
system, a ‘grid’ in the ground, was installed by the thenSECV.
Fortunately, there are several wet patches here and in a
similar fashion to the SEC, a grounding wire was laid in
the same trenches as the power. That gives a vastly superior Earthing system, as it is in an old creek bed.
On the German guy with the coffee grinder that had an
arcing mains switch and tripped the circuit breaker (Ask
Silicon Chip, October 2023, p106), some fridges here were
apt to do that, as well as some twin-tub washing machines
with switched Neutrals. There are motor caps in a lot of
that stuff.
Marcus Chick, Wangaratta, Vic.
Comment: that is why the MEN system connects an Earth
rod (or multiple) at each premises into the mains Earth/
Neutral network. The Earth rod of every premises is in
parallel, so even if the local Earthing is not that great, the
impedance to other nearby (hopefully good) Earth rods is
kept low.
Memories of 200V DC in suburbia
I grew up in Surrey Hills, then outer Melbourne, just
north of the Surrey Hills railway station. There were
farms between Mont Albert and Box Hill, within pushbike range.
In the late 1940s, the power supply there was 200V DC.
I remember that we could not use some of the new-fangled
siliconchip.com.au
electric appliances as they could not switch the current off
safely. The brass and ceramic wall switches opened and
closed with a heavy click.
Many years later, I found a board with a switch and a
three-pin socket of the type I remembered, in my father’s
shed.
The switch was a double-pole, single-throw type and the
contacts were moved by an over-centre spring action. As
I remember it, the moveable contactor came to rest a good
¼-inch (6.35mm) from the live contacts.
Our main appliances, a stove, a sink heater, and a bath
heater, were fed by town gas. The plumbing for the gas
lights was still installed but disconnected. My grandmother had a Bakelite mantle radio that sat on a shelf in
the breakfast room. It was supposed to be turned off and
on at the wall, but was usually just left on with the volume turned down.
One day, it caught fire. It burned through the shelf; my
father pulled the cord out of the wall socket and dropped
the radio into a tub of water. The MFB (Metropolitan Fire
Brigade) turned up in a red truck with the brass bell on the
front, the men wearing their brass helmets.
I do not remember a replacement radio, but my parents
bought a refrigerator and a cake mixer in August 1952, so
by that stage, the power must have been 240V AC.
I know that the bills for the electricity came from Victorian Railways, and I wonder if there is any knowledge of
the history of this type of supply in Australia. What modifications would have been made to the radio to allow it
to run from a DC mains supply?
Brian Wilson, Gowrie, NSW.
Praise for article on photographing electronics
I wish to congratulate Kevin Poulter on a magnificent
article on radio photography (October 2023; siliconchip.
au/Article/15969).
His writing style is both relaxed and inspiring, so I’m sure
anyone who reads the article would have had their interest
piqued in the subject. I particularly liked the encouragement to the reader regarding lower-cost cameras, software
and the home ‘studio’.
The article was an excellent descriptive blend of the
issues. It dealt with the technical, the functional and the
practical processes.
The photos of the radios in the article are truly magnificent. Those alone will fire up the minds of readers,
let alone his words. The placement and lighting used for
the radio photos are exquisite. They clearly show what
is possible, and Silicon Chip presented those images
beautifully.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 5
He also does a wonderful job promoting the Historical
Radio Society of Australia (HRSA) in his articles. He is a
great champion for the HRSA. I expect more new members
will be in contact with Jim Greig.
My thanks to Silicon Chip for the effort, time, cost and
willingness to present the article in the grandest of manners. It is a pinnacle article from many perspectives. Those
of us with an interest in historical radios are so very well
served on numerous fronts in this country. How fortunate we are.
Graeme Dennes, Bunyip, Vic.
Since 1964
Videos on rocket launches in Australia
ID-50A
VHF/UHF DUAL BAND DIGITAL TRANSCEIVER
In the spirit of Dr David Maddison’s articles on WRESAT (October 2017; siliconchip.au/Article/10822) and the
information on space and rocketry in the Avalon Airshow
article (May 2023; siliconchip.au/Article/15773), I would
like to present the following video links. I think readers
who are interested in the Australian space industry will
find them a great watch.
• “Rocket Range Australia”: youtu.be/o9ObtDCUNCE
• “Guided Weapons Testing In Australia - Woomera Test
Range”: youtu.be/ESi4ncoGk2Y
Andre Rousseau, Auckland, New Zealand.
Earthquake Early Warning module not initialised correctly
I am an electronics amateur writing from Turkey. You
may know that strong earthquakes occur frequently in
our country. For this reason, I built the “Earthquake Early
Warning Alarm” circuit (March 2018; siliconchip.au/
Article/10994) but could not get it to work. I looked at the
software that I downloaded from your website because the
circuit was very simple.
Ultimately, the circuit worked when I added the following lines to the “setup” section. Without these lines, the
sensor cannot reset and become active:
Wire.write(0x6B);
Wire.write(0x00);
|905
MULTI-BAND 144 MHz TO MICROWAVE TRANSCEIVER
Then I realised that the sensitivity settings weren’t perfect; it was either very sensitive or not. I think the filter
settings are also problematic. There is no code line about
included filter frequency settings like this:
FilterOnePole highpassFilter
(HIGHPASS,filterFrequency);
Also, the lines below in the setup section do not make
any high-pass filter frequency settings to the sensor because,
according to the sensor’s register map, there are only selftest bits and full-range settings, with no filter settings:
Wire.write(MPU6050_ACCEL_CONFIG); // 0x1C Accel.
Wire.write (MPU6050_ACCEL_HPF_0_63HZ |
MPU6050_AFS_SEL_2G);
|T10
|V3500
VHF/UHF DUAL BAND
FM TRANSCEIVER
144 MHz FM TRANSCEIVER
www.icom-australia.com
6
Silicon Chip
Ferudun Yurdabak, Turkey.
Comment: this goes to show the danger of using sample
code. We based our Earthquake Early Warning sketch on
an example we found on the internet that we tested, and
it seemed to worked fine. We could pick up the vibrations
of cars and trucks driving down a nearby road.
We cannot easily explain how it worked for us then but
it does not work for you now; perhaps it is due to changes
in the Arduino IDE, or somehow our accelerometer
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 7
module was already set up or responded differently to
commands.
Upon review, we determined that each I2C register write
must be in separate transmissions to work correctly. The
original sketch performed a series of register writes backto-back within the same I2C ‘packet’, while the updated
sketch separates them into three individual packets. That’s
necessary as the MPU6050 treats subsequent data bytes as
writes to consecutive addresses.
We have uploaded a revised sketch to our website that
fixes that. We also moved the initialisation code so it works
more reliably.
The filter frequency settings are near the start of the
sketch:
FilterOnePole XFHigh(HIGHPASS, 1),
YFHigh(HIGHPASS, 1), ZFHigh(HIGHPASS, 1);
According to the register map we have, register 0x1C also
configures the Digital High Pass Filter (DHPF).
DIY Capacitor Discharge Welder works well
I built Phil Prosser’s CD Welder last year (March & April
2022; siliconchip.au/Series/379) and had great success making a couple of 10S7P Li-ion packs for my ebike, plus all
those little projects that can be powered with Li-ion batteries instead of AA cells. Isn’t there just a fantastic range
of DC-DC switch-mode ICs?
Last week, I discovered that I can spot-weld tabs to
coins. My nephew brought back a load of US coinage
from his trip (and I have a big jar of NZ 5c coins). I have
some wood-turning ideas for using them (hopefully, they
won’t turn out too cheesy). Having tabs will make it a
lot easier and more secure to incorporate them, rather
than gluing.
Joe Colquitt, Auckland, New Zealand.
Untracked postal deliveries can be slow
I placed an order with your Online Shop on the 28th
of September and selected the less expensive untracked
postage option as I was not in a great hurry and thought it
would arrive in around a week. I am in Seven Hills, NSW,
while your office is in Brookvale – both within the Sydney
metropolitan area.
I was advised that the order was sent to me on the 29th.
However, it didn’t arrive until the 17th of October, nearly
three weeks later! I was pretty surprised by how long it
took. Upon receipt, I noticed that the package had two
postmarks, which usually indicates it landed at the wrong
address the first time. One was dated the 3rd, while the
other was illegible.
Name withheld.
Comment: while we generally find Australia Post’s letter
service fairly reliable, it is not as reliable as the tracked parcel service. Over the last 18+ months, not a single domestic tracked parcel we sent has been lost out of thousands,
although a handful were delayed significantly. Unfortunately, we can’t say the same for untracked packages or
letters.
We want to continue to offer the untracked option, as
it’s slightly less expensive, but we have some concerns.
While it’s out of our hands once the package leaves
our office, it still reflects poorly on us when deliveries are
delayed or lost.
8
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
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One of the first questions usually asked when the item
has not arrived in a reasonable time is whether we actually sent it; we don’t send dispatch notifications unless the
package has been handed over to a delivery service (typically Australia Post).
There’s also the cost involved in sending replacement
orders, which usually falls on us. Any savings made in the
less expensive postage could easily be wiped out by having
to send more than the occasional order twice. We are still
giving customers the option for now, but that might have
to change if too many packages go astray.
Leakage current causes LED lamps to glow or flash
Have you ever had mains-powered LED ceiling lamps
glow after being switched off, or worse, flash slowly while
also glowing? Maybe not if they are being switched by a
standard light switch on the wall; however, if you are using
a solid-state device, like in a dimmer, you likely have had
this happen.
Years ago, I built a holiday house on the North Coast of
NSW. I decided to make all the light switches low-voltage switching. The low-voltage signals controlled solid
state relays made from Triacs and opto-couplers like the
MOC3021. I envisioned that one day, when the technology
arrived, I could remotely switch lights on and off. For example, to make the house look occupied while we were away.
It worked well, without problems, for many years,
although I never got around to setting up the remotely
controlled lights.
With the pandemic and flooding on the NSW North
Coast, I decided to rent the house out as there was a desperate need for rented accommodation in the area. The
lights were all still working fine.
Then, the tenant advised that some lights were glowing
at night when switched off, and one or two were flashing
slowly. It only happened when incandescent light bulbs
finally blew their filament and were replaced with LED
bulbs. Filament bulbs are, of course, now almost impossible to source.
I did some research and it soon became apparent that
this is a big problem, particularly in theatre and stage productions, where special lighting effects require rapid light
switching. They would be using solid-state switching of
the mains voltage, so they would have similar problems
to my system.
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10
Silicon Chip
The problem appears to result from the high efficiency
of mains-powered LED lamps, which draw very little current. Therefore, even very small leakage currents through
the Triac switching devices, or snubbers & filtering around
these Triacs, allow the LED lamp power supplies to power
up periodically (flashing) or power the LEDs at a low power
(glowing) even when ‘off’.
There were suggestions on the internet of simply fitting
a simple 15W pilot filament bulb in parallel with the LED
lamp to shunt this leakage current and prevent the LED
lamp from glowing. I set this up on my bench with an LED
lamp, and it certainly worked.
There were stories on the internet of stage lighting setups with hundreds of small filament bulbs hooked up in
parallel with the LED lamps. The filament bulbs are so
inefficient that they don’t produce any visible light output
while passing the leakage currents. However, that doesn’t
seem practical in a home setting.
So I experimented with alternative methods of shunting the power around the mains-powered LED lamps. One
simple technique is to place a 47-100W resistor and 100nF
X2 capacitor in series with each other, directly across the
mains-powered LED lamp to shunt this leakage current.
I tried this out with several mains-powered LED lamps,
and it worked on most, but there was one where the lamp
still glowed when switched off. Hmm!
I had two 92mm flush-mount LED ceiling lamps, identical in all respects, except one was labelled 7W and the
other 9W. The 9W one said it was dimmable, while the
7W one was not.
I powered both lamps in parallel with my Triac switch.
With the switch off, one was off completely while the
other glowed. I had the 47W resistor and 100nF capacitor across them, and I figured that was creating a voltage
divider with the resistor and capacitor snubber across
the Triac switch.
The snubber across the LED lamps was to shunt the
leakage current, whereas the one across the Triac was to
prevent noise on the incoming mains from false-triggering
the Triac.
The easiest solution was to remove the snubber across the
Triac and switch to using an MOC3063 Triac opto-coupler
with zero-crossing detection. Even the 47nF capacitor,
designed to remove line noise from the Triac trigger signal, had to be removed. Finally, it worked perfectly, with
both LED lamps switching off.
I would be interested to know if others have experienced
a similar problem and if they have found any other way
of overcoming this problem, besides using a relay instead
of a Triac.
Keith Bennett, Greenbank, Qld.
Comment: we have seen fluorescent lamps glow/flash with
the switch off in buildings with old wiring, which we figured
was due to leakage through the old wire insulation (which
might have become damp at some point or just degraded
with age), or possibly leakage in the regular mechanical
switch. So what you describe can happen even with standard switches.
It would be nice if the lamps could be designed to remain
switched off unless they have the full mains waveform
applied; the problem may be that they are universal (110240V) designs, so they can’t be too sensitive to the supply
voltage.
SC
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
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The History of Electronics
Inventors and their Inventions
Over the last two issues, we have described many individuals who made vital
contributions to electronics. Their work made modern technology possible. Many
significant developments also emerged from universities, companies and other
organisations, described in this third and final part of the series.
Part 3: by Dr David Maddison
T
his final article covers significant inventions that cannot be
attributed to an individual, either
because we don’t know their name(s)
or because they were part of a team.
Unlike the last two parts, which were
organised by the date of birth of the
inventor, we will list them by the year
of the invention or discovery.
electric catfish
~2750BCE
An Ancient Egyptian mural in the
tomb of the architect Ti in Saqqara,
Egypt refers to electric catfish, later
reputed by Pliny and Plutarch to treat
arthritis pain and other maladies. This
could be one of the earliest discoveries involving electricity.
Fig.54: a drawing of the Baghdad
Battery. Source: https://w.wiki/7FNe
12
Silicon Chip
Baghdad Battery
Image Source: www.pexels.com/photo/2047905/
~150BCE – 650CE
The Baghdad Battery (see Fig.54) is
thought to be a battery cell by some,
but it could have had other uses and
there is no evidence it was used as a
battery. See our article on Batteries in
the January 2022 issue (siliconchip.
au/Series/375).
optic fibres
27BCE
Romans are known to have drawn
glass into long flexible fibres, an idea
later used for optical fibres for communications and light transmission.
lighthouse, transatlantic cable
1858
The South Foreland Lighthouse near
Dover, UK was the first lighthouse with
an electric lamp. It used a carbon arc
lamp developed by Frederick Hale
Holmes and was on trial until 1860.
In 1872, it received a permanent electrical installation.
The light was powered by a pair of
coke-fuelled steam engines driving
four magnetos, shared with an adjacent
lighthouse. Michael Faraday was then
investigating electric lighting for lighthouses, and Holmes demonstrated the
lamp to him.
The first transatlantic telegraph
cable was laid. It worked for only
three weeks and took two minutes to
Australia's electronics magazine
transmit one character, about 10 minutes per word.
undersea telegraph cable
1859
An undersea telegraph cable was
laid between Victoria and Tasmania,
the longest undersea cable at the time.
It was retired in 1861.
US transcontinental telegraph
1861
The US transcontinental telegraph
line was completed.
1866
transatlantic cable
A more functional transatlantic
telegraph cable was laid. Messages
could be transmitted at eight words
per minute.
international telegraph cable
1872
Australia connected to the international telegraph cable between Darwin and Java.
1876
AU-NZ telegraph link
The Australia to New Zealand telegraph link was completed.
transcontinental telegraph line
1877
The transcontinental telegraph line
became operational between Port
Augusta, SA and Albany, WA, a distance of 3196km.
first international phone call
1881
The first international phone call
was made between New Brunswick,
Canada and Maine, USA.
siliconchip.com.au
The Sydney telephone exchange
opened with 12 subscribers.
public power station
1882
The first large public power station,
the Holborn Viaduct power station
(also known as the Edison Electric
Light Station) was built in London. It
produced 93kW at 110V DC, with the
generator driven by a steam engine.
It was preceeded by a small waterwheel-powered generator in Godalming, Surrey that only generated 7.5kW.
The Pearl Street Station opened in
New York. It had six 100kW dynamos,
was powered by steam and its waste
heat was also used for local heating.
hydroelectric generation system
1883
The Adelaide telephone exchange
opened with 48 subscribers, and the
Port Adelaide exchange with 21 subscribers.
Australia’s first hydroelectric generation system opened at the Mount
Bischoff Tin Mine, to power about 50
Swan incandescent lights.
Graphophone (phonograph)
1887
At the Volta Laboratory (established
by A.G. Bell), Chichester A. Bell and
Sumner Tainter improved Edison’s
phonograph by using wax rather than
tin foil as the recording medium.
Along with Alexander Graham Bell,
this confirmed wax as the superior
recording medium.
They established the American Graphophone Company to sell their Graphophone product, which was a commercial success.
public electricity supply
Electric generator producing 2.4kV at
1082A (2.6MW).
standards for electrical units
1893
Standards and definitions for electrical units of ohms, amps and volts
were refined at the International Electrical Congress in Chicago, Illinois,
USA.
public hydroelectric scheme
1895
Australia’s first public hydroelectric scheme began operating, to power
street lights in Launceston, Tas. In
1921, it was converted to three-phase
and 2MW, and was used until 1956.
international telegraph
1902
Telegraph operations began between
Australia and Canada, with connections via Fiji and Norfolk Island.
Morse Code transmission
1906
The Marconi Company made the
first official Morse Code transmission
in Australia from Queenscliff, Vic to
Devonport, Tas. Some claim Morse
radio transmissions were made in 1897
by Professor William Henry Bragg of
Adelaide University alone, or with G.
W. Selby of Melbourne.
By 1906, Australia had 46 electric power stations with an aggregate
capacity of 36MW.
production of tungsten-filament bulbs
1907
Tokyo Electric Co (predecessor to
Toshiba) started small-scale production of tungsten-filament bulbs, reaching full production in 1910.
1909
radio broadcasting
Radio station KQW started broadcasting in California for experimental,
promotional and training purposes by
engineer Charles David Herrold (18751948). By 1912, he was making scheduled news and music broadcasts (see
Fig.55). Many others at the time were
only broadcasting Morse Code. He
received a commercial license in 1921.
The station still exists today as KCBS.
amateur radio frequencies
1912
The US Government passed the
Radio Act of 1912, limiting radio amateurs to frequencies above 1.5MHz,
as those frequencies were considered
useless. This led radio amateurs to
discover HF radio propagation via the
ionosphere. In 1921, a one-way transmission was made across the Atlantic;
then, in 1923, two-way transmission
(see siliconchip.au/link/abnv).
transcontinental phone call
1915
The first transcontinental phone call
was made in the USA, over 5794km,
facilitated by the newly-invented vacuum tube amplifier.
rotary dial telephones
1919
Bell System, USA made the first
rotary dial telephones.
commercial radio
1920
The world’s first commercial
licensed radio station, KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA started
broadcasting.
1888
Tamworth, NSW was the first town
in Australia with a public electricity
supply for arc and incandescent lighting (240V DC).
three-phase AC power
1889
Young, NSW got three-phase AC
power for street lighting, shops, offices
and homes.
AC hyroelectric power plant
1891
The first German three-phase AC
power plant started operating in
Lauffen am Neckar. 15kV was generated and transmitted 175km to the
International Electro-Technical Exhibition in Frankfurt.
Possibly the first commercial AC
hydroelectric power plant became
operational in Ames, Colorado, USA.
It had a capacity of 3.75MW at 3kV,
133Hz, single-phase. That location is
still producing electricity but not with
the original equipment, although a
powerhouse dating from 1905 is still
in operation, with a 1904 General
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.55: Charles Herrold’s San Jose, California radio laboratory, circa 1912.
He transmitted from this location as radio KQW. Herrold is standing in the
doorway. Source: https://w.wiki/7EFw
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 13
double-coiled tungsten filament
1921
At Tokyo Electric Co, Junichi Miura
made the first double-coiled tungsten
filament light globe using the technique developed by Benbow (1917).
It entered small-scale production in
1930 and mass production in 1936.
“mobile phone”
1922
Early experiments were conducted
with a “mobile phone”. The phone was
a portable two-way radio that used an
umbrella antenna with a fire hydrant
for its Earth. Music was transmitted
from a base station to the radio. See
the YouTube video titled “World’s First
Mobile Phone (1922)” – https://youtu.
be/ILiLaRXHUr0
transatlantic telephone call
1926
The first transatlantic telephone call
was made.
car radio, Phonovision
1927
The first mass-produced car radio
was made, the Philco Transitone.
Before that, radios were adapted for
car use. The exact year is subject to
some dispute.
John Logie Baird made the first “videodisc” player as a proof-of-concept
called the Phonovision. The output of
mechanical television scanning from a
Nipkow disc was recorded to a gramophone record. It only had a 30-line
resolution at 5FPS. Some recordings
were found, and in 1982-87, software
was made to recover the images.
See the website at siliconchip.au/
link/abnw and the video titled “30-line
TV video recordings news feature”,
plus other videos below:
https://youtu.be/J2mb4R9W9TI
siliconchip.au/link/abnx
https://youtu.be/G3CFkK5OORw
blind aircraft take-off and landing
TDK incorporated the first ferrite
cores in radios in 1937, making them
smaller and lighter. TDK was the only
company that could supply ferrite
cores until the end of WW2.
LP records
1931
RCA introduced the first commercial LP (long play) records. They were
12 inches or 30cm in diameter, ran at
33⅓RPM and contained up to 11 minutes of audio per side (the same time
as a standard 1000ft/305m movie reel).
They were a commercial failure due
to the expense of playback equipment
and the Great Depression.
Magnetophon K1 tape recorder
1935
German company AEG introduced
the Magnetophon K1, the first practical tape recorder (see Fig.56). It used
iron-oxide-coated non-metallic magnetic tape.
The tape was originally based on
Fritz Pfleumer’s idea (see his entry
last month), with further development by Friedrich Matthias. A non-
damaging head was designed by Eduard Schüller, who also built the prototype machines.
The audio quality was poor until
Walter Weber (1907-1944) discovered the AC biasing technique (by
accident!), dramatically improving
audio quality. These recorders had
all the basic features that were incorporated into later analog tape recorders. You can see a video on the similar
14
Silicon Chip
1939
German company Fernseh AG
demonstrated high-definition 1029line TV for displaying military maps.
This system required 15MHz of bandwidth, which is why HDTV wasn’t
widely introduced until the advent
of digital broadcasting in the 1990s.
commercial FM broadcasting, NTSC
1941
Commercial FM broadcasting formally began in the USA, although
there were experimental transmissions
before that. It was on the 42-50MHz
band, split into 40 channels. In 1945,
it was reassigned to 88-106MHz band
with 80 channels, then extended to
108MHz and 100 channels.
The monochrome NTSC television
standard was released.
“Colossus” digital computer
1943
The first programmable digital computer was built, the British “Colossus”.
“ENIAC” digital computer
1945
The US “ENIAC” computer was
built, the world’s first general-purpose
programmable digital computer.
The electronic Merrill Wheel-
Balancing System for cars was also
invented.
FM broadcasting in Australia
1947
Experimental FM broadcasting in
Australia took place from 1947 to 1961
but with an extremely limited audience (the receivers were costly). It was
discontinued to clear the TV band and
eventually reintroduced on a band that
no one else in the world used. Fortunately, in 1975 it was reintroduced
on the widely used 88MHz-108MHz.
1948
Columbia Records used PVC to
make vinyl records, which are more
durable than previous shellac compounds. They could be made with
much finer grooves called “microgrooves”. These allowed for a playback time of about 22 minutes on
a 12in/30cm disc (there was also a
10in/25cm disc). Peter Carl Goldmark
(1906-1977) developed the format.
45RPM records
1930
Yogoro Kato and Takeshi Takei at
the Tokyo Institute of Technology first
synthesised ferrite compounds. These
materials are used in inductors, transformers and electromagnets, electrical
noise control, early computer memories, magnetic tapes, radar absorbing
materials, loudspeakers and magnets.
high-definition television
vinyl records
1929
The first blind aircraft take-off and
landing was made by Lt James Doolittle in a Consolidated NY-2 biplane.
It was instrumented with a Kollsman
altimeter, Sperry directional gyroscope and an artificial horizon, with
a radio range and marker beacon by
the National Bureau of Standards and
a special radio receiver with a vibrating reed display by Radio Frequency
Laboratories.
synthesis of ferrite compounds
Magentophon FT4 at https://youtu.be/
cLjD0B6QoaM
Fig.56: the AEG Magnetophon K1 tape
recorder being delivered to the Berlin
Radio Show in 1935. Source: https://
museumofmagneticsoundrecording.
org/ManufacturersAEGMagnetophon.
html
Australia's electronics magazine
1949
Columbia competitor RCA introduced the 45RPM record with a
7in/18cm diameter, intended as
a replacement format for 78RPM
records, with a similar duration of
about five minutes per side. Eventually, “quality music” was distributed
on 33⅓RPM records, with “popular
music” on 45RPM records. Both formats are still around today.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.57 (above): an image from the
1956 US Army patent 2,756,485 for
PCB manufacturing.
Fig.59 (above):
the Regency
TR-1, the first
commercial
portable
transistor radio.
Fig.58 (right): an advertisement for the
first practical solar cell by Bell from
the 25th of April, 1954. It had a 6%
efficiency. Source: www.onthisday.
com/photos/1st-solar-battery
permanent magnets, PCBs
1950
Philips accidentally discovered barium hexaferrite, which became a popular permanent magnet material.
The US Army applied for US patent 2,756,485, granted in 1956, titled
“Process of Assembling Electrical Circuits” (see Fig.57). This led to the mass
production of printed circuit boards.
nuclear power, colour TV etc
1951
Sony released the H-1 magnetic
audio tape recorder for consumer use.
It was the first tape recorder designed
for domestic use and weighed 13kg.
The first nuclear power reactor
(EBR-1) became operational in Arco,
Idaho, USA. It could power four 200W
light globes.
CBS in the USA demonstrated
colour TV broadcast using the electromechanical field-sequential system
(FSC) standard. There were very few
appropriate receivers. That standard
was withdrawn and the NTSC standard was subsequently used instead.
speech recognition system, video game
1952
The first speech recognition system
was demonstrated, which could recognise one speaker saying the digits
zero to nine with 90% accuracy. It was
called Audrey (Automatic Digit Recognition machine) and was produced by
H.K. Davis at Bell Laboratories.
The first computer game was created
by Alexander Shafto Douglas (19212010) at the University of Cambridge
in England. It was called “OXO” and
was a version of noughts and crosses
(also known as tic-tac-toe).
maser, nuclear submarine, NTSC
by Charles H. Townes, James P. Gordon, and Herbert J. Zeiger at Columbia University. Masers are used as
highly-stable frequency references
and extremely low-noise amplifiers
for microwave frequencies. They can
also generate electromagnetic waves
at microwave and other frequencies.
The first nuclear-powered submarine, the USS Nautilus, was launched.
The NTSC colour TV standard was
released.
photovoltaic cell, transistor computer
1954
The first practical photovoltaic cell
was developed at Bell Laboratories
(see Fig.58) by Calvin Souther Fuller
(1902-1994), Daryl Chapin (19061995) and Gerald Pearson (1905-1987).
The world’s first commercial colour
television broadcast (NTSC) began in
the USA. However, most programming
remained in monochrome for some
time due to the high cost of sets and
lack of colour source material.
TRADIC (for TRAnsistor DIgital
Computer or TRansistorized Airborne
DIgital Computer) was the world’s first
fully-transistorised computer, built
by Bell Labs for the US Air Force. It
included 684 Bell 1734 Type A point
contact cartridge transistors and
10,358 germanium diodes.
The first transistorised portable
radio went on sale, the Regency TR-1.
It used four Texas Instruments NPN
transistors, a 22.5V battery and cost
US$49.95, equivalent to about $850
today (about what collectors pay!). See
Fig.59 and our article in the April 2013
issue (siliconchip.au/Article/3761).
programmable music synthesiser etc
1955
The RCA Mark I Synthesiser was
the first programmable music synthesiser. There is an interesting article
about how it works at siliconchip.au/
link/abny
The first wireless TV remote control was introduced, the Zenith Flashmatic. It used visible light and had to
be directed at one of four photocells
in each corner of the screen to perform various functions (on/off, mute
or change channel).
IBM 350 drive, VRX-1000 recorder etc
1956
The first commercial disk drive,
the IBM 350 (Fig.60), went on sale.
Fig.60: two IBM 350
disk drives at the
US Army Red River
Arsenal. Source:
https://w.wiki/7EFy
1953
The first maser (microwave laser;
microwave amplification by stimlated emission of radiation) was built
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 15
Fig.61: CBS engineer John Radis operating an Ampex VRX1000 videotape recorder on the 30th of November, 1956.
It was the first time this machine was used on a broadcast
program. Source: www.quadvideotapegroup.com/2015/12/
It stored 3.75MB and weighed about
one tonne.
The first commercial video tape
recorder, the monochrome VRX-1000,
was introduced by Ampex for studio use (see Fig.61). It used two-inch
(5.08cm) wide tape in the Quadruplex
format. It cost US$50,000, equivalent
to about $840,000 today.
The machine’s major innovation
was transverse recording, where the
video image was written across the
tape rather than linearly, allowing for
a reasonable tape speed of 38cm per
second. Before its introduction, the
only way to record TV programs was
with film. See our detailed article on
Quadruplex recording (March 2021;
siliconchip.au/Article/14782).
The first transatlantic telephone
cable was laid, TAT-1 (Transatlantic
No. 1). It could carry 35 simultaneous telephone calls with a 36th channel that carried 22 telegraph circuits.
R-7 ICBM, Sputnik 1 satellite etc
Silicon Chip
the reactor transmutes non-fissile fuel
into fissile fuel at the same time as producing power. It remained in operation until 1982.
The first ICBM (intercontinental ballistic missile), the Soviet R-7 Semyorka, was introduced. ICBMs were
later reused by multiple nations as
rockets for launching satellites and
other space missions.
The FORTRAN computer language
was commercially released. It is still
used by mathematicians, scientists
and engineers.
The Soviet Union launched the first
artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, using an
R-7 Semyorka rocket. See our detailed
articles on Sputnik’s radio transmitters
on page 86 (siliconchip.au/Series/407).
colour videotape, modems, pacemaker
1958
The first US satellite, Explorer 1,
was launched.
1957
The RCA Mark II synthesiser (Fig.62)
was a successor to the Mark I and much
easier to program. It had two punch
paper terminals for playing compositions. These stored data for playback;
the machine’s output was recorded on
lacquer-coated record-like discs. See:
https://youtu.be/rgN_VzEIZ1I
siliconchip.au/link/abnz
The world’s first large-scale civilian
nuclear power plant began operation
in Shippingport, Pennsylvania, USA.
Its primary purpose was to produce
electricity, but it was also a proof-ofconcept of the breeder reactor, where
16
Fig.62: the RCA Mark II synthesiser. Note the punch paper
terminals. Source: https://electronicmusic.fandom.com/
wiki/RCA_Synthesizer (CC-BY-SA).
The Ampex VR-1000B commercial colour videotape recorder was
released. It supported multiple international video standards. You can see
the product brochure at siliconchip.
au/link/abp0
Telephone-line modems (modulators/demodulators) were mass-
produced for the military in the USA as
the Bell 101 modem in 1958 (Fig.63),
used for the SAGE air defence system.
The technology was made available
to the public in 1959, with a 110bit/s
speed. They were a development of
the teleprinter multiplexers used by
news services and the like in the 1920s.
The first implantable cardiac pacemaker was released.
Australia’s first nuclear reactor for
research and radioisotope production,
HIFAR (High Flux Australian Reactor), was commissioned. It operated
until 2007.
The second computer game was created by William Higinbotham (19101994) at Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York, USA. It was called
Tennis for Two, similar to Pong.
Veroboard, Mosfet, planar process etc
Fig.63: the Bell 101 modem, released
by AT&T in 1958. Source: https://
history-computer.com/modemcomplete-history-of-the-modem/
Australia's electronics magazine
1959
The first American ICBM, the SM-65
Atlas, went into operation. It was also
used to launch Project Mercury astronauts.
What was to become Veroboard for
electronics prototyping and one-off
circuits was invented.
The first commercial plain-paper
photocopier, the Xerox 914, was introduced. See the video at https://youtu.
be/9xZYcWsh8t0
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.64: the ECHO 2 satellite undergoing testing and inspection,
dwarfing the people around it. The first transmission using
ECHO was from California to New Jersey in 1960. Source:
NASA.
Fig.65: the Anita Mk VII & VIII (pictured) were launched
simultaneously in 1961. VII was the first model because
they had used the previous numbers for their mechanical
calculators Source: https://w.wiki/7EFz (GNU FDL).
Mohamed Atalla and Dawon Kahng
at Bell Laboratories invented the Mosfet (metal-oxide-semiconductor field
effect transistor). See our May 2022
article on transistors (siliconchip.au/
Article/15305).
The semiconductor planar process
for fabricating integrated circuits was
invented by Jean Amédée Hoerni
(1924-1997). See our June-August 2022
articles for more on the history of ICs
(siliconchip.au/Series/382).
and played on a Digital PDP-1 mainframe computer. It was called Spacewar! – see Fig.66 and the video titled
“Spacewar! (1961) - First digital computer game”:
https://youtu.be/CwZAKJ8Y6YU
The Josephson effect was observed
but not recognised for what it was. It
led to a superconducting circuit called
the Josephson junction, with applications in quantum computers, voltage
standards and digital signal processNASA’s Project Echo, SMT components 1960
ing, among others. It was named after
NASA started Project Echo. Echo Brian David Josephson (1940~).
1 and Echo 2 (launched 1964) were
The IBM Shoebox speech recogniexperimental passive reflector com- tion system could recognise 16 spoken
munications satellites (Fig.64), 30m words (numerals and arithmetic operdiameter inflated balloons with some ators). It was a voice-operated printing
electronics onboard. They provided calculator (see Fig.67).
valuable data about atmospheric drag
The Telstar 1 communications satand other information.
ellite was launched into an elliptical
IBM first demonstrated surface- orbit (not geostationary). Telstar 2 was
mounting component technology launched in 1963. Both satellites were
(SMT) in a small computer. It was later experimental; neither are still in use
applied to the Launch Vehicle Digital
Computer in the Saturn IB and Saturn
V in the 1960s.
ANITA electronic calculators, LEDs
but are in orbit. Telstar 1 carried the
first transatlantic TV transmission via
satellite that same year; data was also
transmitted between two IBM 1401
computers via Telstar 1.
Philips compact casette, ASCII etc
1963
COMPAC (the Commonwealth
Pacific Cable System) undersea telephone cable was completed, linking
Australia, New Zealand and Canada
via Hawaii and Fiji. Parts had been
operating since 1961. This coaxial
cable could handle 80 phone calls or
1760 teleprinter circuits. It replaced
HF radio telephone calls, which had
to be booked and were delayed if transmission conditions were bad.
Philips introduced the first audio
cassette tape, the “Compact Cassette”.
See our article on this in the July 2018
issue (siliconchip.au/Article/11136).
The first transpacific television
transmission via satellite was made
between Japan and the USA, via the
1961
The first electronic calculators were
the ANITA Mark VII and Mark VIII,
released in 1961, using vacuum tubes
and cold cathode tubes (see Fig.65).
The first solid-state electronic calculator was the Friden EC-130 in 1963.
J. W. Allen and R. J. Cherry invented
the first visible light LEDs at SERL in
Baldock, UK.
Josephson junction, Telstar 1 etc
1962
The third computer game was
invented by Steve Russell (1937~)
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.66: Spacewar! Running on a
PDP-1 computer. Source: https://w.
wiki/7EF$ (CC-BY-2.0).
Fig.67: an IBM ‘Shoebox’ voice
recognition system/calculator. Source:
IBM.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 17
experimental Relay 1 communications
satellite in an elliptical orbit.
Nottingham Electric Valve Company in the UK released the Telcan
(Fig.68), a videotape recorder intended
for domestic use. It used ¼-inch audio
reel-to-reel tape running at 305cm per
second, a very high speed for this type
of tape, and could record up to 20 minutes of monochrome video on one of
two tracks. The recording bandwidth
of 2.6MHz provided 405 lines.
It was mainly sold as a kit, for £60,
equivalent today to about $2000. It was
a commercial failure; for more details,
see siliconchip.au/link/abp1
The first edition of the ASCII character encoding standard was published.
TPC-1, Xerox fax system, BASIC etc
1964
The Trans-Pacific cable system,
TPC-1, linking Japan, Guam, Hawaii
and the mainland USA became operational. It carried 128 telephone circuits.
Xerox introduced the first modern
commercial fax system, which they
called Long Distance Xerography or
LDX.
The BASIC computer programming
language was released.
The first prototype Moog electronic
music synthesiser was built by Robert
Moog (1934-2005). Commercial models were produced from 1967.
geosynchronous satellite Intelsat I etc
1965
The Dadda hardware binary multiplier was invented by Luigi Dadda
(1923-2012) for computer arithmetic
operations. It was smaller and faster
than the previous implementation.
Sony released the CV-2000 (CV =
“consumer video”), the first mass-
produced domestic video tape
recorder (see Fig.69). It recorded in
monochrome and used 13mm tape in a
reel-to-reel format. It had broad uptake
among business and educational institutions. Its inability to adjust head
tracking meant it was impossible to
swap tapes between machines; that
was corrected in later versions.
The first commercial geosynchronous satellite, Intelsat I, was launched.
It carried either 240 telephone circuits
or one TV circuit. It was in use for over
four years until it was deactivated,
with a temporary reactivation for use
for the Apollo 11 mission, and another
temporary reactivation in 1990 to mark
its 25th Anniversary. It is still in orbit.
Magnafax telecopier (fax machine)
PAL standard, ATM, WRESAT etc
Silicon Chip
1967
The SECAM colour television standard was released and adopted in
France.
PAL standard colour television
started broadcasting in the UK.
The world’s first automated teller
machine (ATM) was installed at Barclay’s Bank, Enfield, UK. It was operated by inserting cheques, previously
issued by a teller, marked with radioactive carbon-14 for machine readability and to confirm their authenticity.
Australia’s first locally made satellite, WRESAT, was launched. See our
article on WRESAT (October 2017;
siliconchip.au/Article/10822).
LCDs, Group 1 fax standards
1968
A team at RCA Laboratories demonstrated an 18×2 matrix liquid crystal
display (LCD) using dynamic scattering mode (DSM), invented by George
Heilmeier (see his entry last month).
Figs.68: a Telcan home video recorder, sold mainly
as a kit using ¼-inch audio tape. Source: www.
nottinghampost.com/news/history/20-best-thingsnottingham-given-192680
18
1966
Xerox introduced the first easy-touse fax machine, the Magnafax Telecopier, that used standard telephone
lines.
The ITU (International Telecommunications Union) released Group 1 fax
standards. Conforming machines took
about six minutes to transmit a page at
96 lines per inch (38 per cm).
MOS DRAM, Unix, ARPANET etc
1969
Commercial production of MOS
DRAM (metal oxide semiconductor
dynamic random access memory) was
started by Advanced Memory Systems, Inc, and was offered to selected
companies. The chips contained 1024
bits of memory. In the same year, Intel
produced the 1103 memory chip, also
with 1024 bits, and sold it on the open
market. It was used in popular computers such as the HP 9800 series and
the PDP-11.
For more on the development of
DRAM, see our articles on Computer Memory in the January & February 2023 issues (siliconchip.au/
Series/393).
The Unix operating system for computers was released.
The first commercial quartz oscillator watch was introduced, the Seiko
Quartz-Astron 35SQ. It had an accuracy of ±5 seconds per month and a
battery life of around one year.
The US Department of Defense
(DoD) Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) established a
packet-switched computer network,
ARPANET (see Fig.70), which eventually evolved into the internet we
have today.
digital fax machine, pocket calculator
1970
Dacom produced the first digital fax
machine, the DFC-10, that used data
compression and could transmit a page
in under one minute.
The Pascal computer programming
language was released.
Fig.69: the Sony CV-2000, the first mass-manufactured video
recorder for the domestic market. It used half-inch (12.7mm) reelto-reel tape. Source: www.smecc.org/sony_cv_series_video.htm
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
The first commercial handheld
pocket calculator, the Canon Pocketronic (Fig.71), became available. It
was influenced by the prototype Texas
Instruments Cal Tech calculator of
1967 and used three TI MOS integrated
circuits. It had no display; results were
printed on paper tape. For more information, see siliconchip.au/link/abp4
Intel 4004, Kenbak-1 PC, EPROM etc
1971
The first commercial microprocessor, the Intel 4004, was released. It
was mainly intended for calculators
and cash machines.
The US DoD funded a five-year program to make a speech recognition
machine that could recognise 1000
words within sentences. A machine
called Harpy was built that recognised
1,011 words; see the PDF: siliconchip.
au/link/abp5
Docutel introduced the “Total
Teller” machine, an ATM that could
accept deposits, transfer from one
account to another and dispense cash.
It operated offline using plastic cards
and had a mechanical display with
messages on a printed cylinder. By
1975, 3000 ATMs had been installed
worldwide, 80% from Docutel. In
1982, Docutel merged with Olivetti.
The first personal computer (without a microprocessor) was released,
the Kenbak-1 (Fig.72). Only 40 were
sold.
Intel released the first EPROM (Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory), invented by Dov Frohman. The
Intel 1702 could store 256 bytes of
data.
Sony released the U-matic video cassette format to market, the first commercial video cassette format. It used
¾-inch (19mm) tape. It was initially
intended for the consumer market but
was too expensive; it became popular in the institutional and industrial
markets, plus the television industry.
See our series on videotape recording (March-June 2021; siliconchip.au/
Series/359).
Intel 8008, C, Pong, blue LEDs etc
Fig.70: a map of ARPANET, the internet’s predecessor, as it appeared in 1973.
Source: https://w.wiki/7FPK
Fig.71 (below): the Canon Pocketronic, the
first commercial handheld electronic
calculator. Source: https://w.
wiki/7EG3 (CC-BY-SA-4.0).
Fig.72 (below): Kenbak-1, the first
personal computer from 1971. Source:
https://w.wiki/7FPV (CC-BY-SA-4.0)
1972
The Philips VCR (video cassette
recorder) format N1500 player/
recorder was introduced for the
domestic market. The last Philips VCR
recorder was released in 1979.
The eight-inch (20.3cm) floppy disk
was commercially released.
The ITU (International Telecommunications Union) Group 2 fax standards were published. Conforming
machines took about three minutes
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 19
to transmit a page at 96 lines per inch
(38 per cm).
Cartrivision, a consumer videotape
cartridge format, was introduced. The
machines were built into expensive
TV sets, which were a commercial
failure. See www.angelfire.com/alt/
cartrivision/
The Unix operating system was
rewritten in the C language, so 1972
could be considered a date when C
became mainstream. C was mainly
developed between 1969 and 1973
and is still widely used today (in its
original form and derivatives like C++
and C#).
The first microprocessor for personal computers was released, the
8-bit Intel 8008.
The world’s first scientific pocket
calculator was introduced, the HP-35.
Pong, the first commercially successful computer game, was released.
We published a project to recreate the
original game in the June 2021 issue
and a modernised, miniaturised version in August 2021. For more information, see www.pong-story.com
The first blue LED was invented at
RCA by Herbert Paul Maruska (1944~),
but the company was in turmoil and
the project was cancelled. Also, the
device was too dim for practical use;
see siliconchip.au/link/abp6
Eventually, Isamu Akasaki (19292021), Hiroshi Amano (1960~), and
Shūji Nakamura (1954~) won the
Nobel Prize in 2014 for their 1993
invention of high-brightness blue
LEDs at Nagoya University in Japan.
White LEDs are blue LEDs with a scintillator coating (similar to a phosphor).
SPICE, Ethernet, graphical interfaces
EDUC-8 computer, CP/M OS etc
20
Silicon Chip
1974
Electronics Australia published
what was thought at the time to be the
world’s first kit computer, the EDUC-8
(Fig.75), but it was later found to have
been beaten by a competitor by one
month, the Mark-8. However, the EA
design was considered superior.
Bravo was the first ‘WYSIWYG’ document preparation program, running
on the Xero Alto computer, an early
word processor.
The CP/M computer operating system was introduced, later displaced
by MS-DOS.
Kodak digital camera, Betamax etc
Fig.73: the Xerox Alto computer from
1973. Source: https://w.wiki/7EG4
1973
Micral released the first personal
computer with a microprocessor (the
Intel 8008).
The SPICE (Simulation Program
with Integrated Circuit Emphasis) analog circuit simulation program was
introduced. It and its derivatives (like
LTspice) are still widely used today.
Ethernet was invented by Robert Melancton Metcalfe (1946~) and
his team working at Xerox Palo Alto
Research Center (Xerox PARC) in California. It is one of the key technologies
of the internet.
Motorola demonstrated the cellular
mobile phone, although it took some
time to commercialise.
The first tuneable laser was demonstrated at Bell Labs.
The Xerox Alto computer (Fig.73)
was released, the first computer with
a graphical user interface and a mouse
(see Fig.74), ten years before the Apple
Lisa. It cost US$32,000, equivalent to
$330,000 today. It also had a portrait-
orientated display.
1975
The first self-contained digital camera was invented by Steven Sasson
(1950~) at Kodak. It had a 100×100
pixel resolution and images were
recorded digitally on cassette tape,
taking 23 seconds.
The Altair 8800 personal computer
kit was released, considered by many
to have started the microcomputer
revolution.
The Betamax home video recording
system was released (our series on videotape recording has all the details).
The Steadicam was invented by Garrett Brown and produced by Cinema
Products Corporation. It is used for
camera stabilisation, as it isolates the
operator’s movement from the camera
Australia's electronics magazine
(see our article on it in the November
& December 2011 issues; siliconchip.
au/Series/33).
VHS tape system, 5.25in floppy etc
1976
The first word processor for home
computers was released, called “Electric Pencil”, for use on computers such
as Altair 8800, Sol-20 and later, the
TRS-80 and the IBM PC.
The VHS home video tape system
was released.
5.25-inch (13.3cm) floppy disks
became available.
Apple II, Commodore PET, TRS-80 etc
1977
The first practical optical fibre link
was installed in Turin, Italy.
The influential Apple II, Commodore PET and TRS-80 home computers were released.
speech synthesis, LaserDisc etc
1978
Texas Instruments released the
first speech synthesiser chip, the
TMS5100. It used “pitch-excited linear
predictive coding” to greatly decrease
the volume of data required to generate speech. It was used in the “Speak
& Spell” educational toy.
The LaserDisc was released on the
market. Machines could play prerecorded videos but could not record.
Technology from LaserDisc was later
incorporated into Compact Discs,
DVDs and Blu-rays. It was never
hugely popular but offered good-
quality video reproduction for the
period, far superior to VHS.
Fairlight CMI, 1G phone networks etc
1979
The Australian Fairlight CMI
(Computer Musical Instrument) was
released. It was based on a design by
Tony Furse, licensed by Kim Ryrie
and Peter Vogel (ex ETI magazine). It
was “one of the earliest music workstations with an embedded sampler”,
considered revolutionary at the time.
See the video titled “How the Fairlight
CMI changed the course of music” at
https://youtu.be/jkiYy0i8FtA
The very popular WordPerfect word
processor was released.
Japan’s Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) deployed the first 1G cellular phone network.
Philips and Grundig released the
Video 2000 consumer video cassette
format, discontinued in 1988.
The VisiCalc spreadsheet program
was released. It was considered a
“killer application” for the Apple II
and ran on many other computers. It
is the predecessor to programs like
Excel. For more details, visit: http://
danbricklin.com/visicalc.htm
siliconchip.com.au
Commodore VIC-20 computer etc
1980
The ITU (International Telecommunications Union) Group 3 fax standards (digital) were released. The time
to transmit a page was reduced to 6-15
seconds, not including handshaking.
It supported a variable scanning resolution, up to 400 lines per inch (157
per cm).
The Commodore VIC-20 computer
was released.
MS-DOS V1.0, 16-bit DAC etc
1981
The MS-DOS V1.0 computer operating system was released, along with
the IBM PC.
The Osborne 1 was released, it is
considered to be the first commercial
truly portable/luggable computer. It
is not obvious what device should get
the credit for the first ‘laptop’; many
contenders exist.
The PCM53/DAC700 16-bit single-
chip audio digital-to-analog converter (DAC) was released. Designed
by Jimmy Naylor and a Texas Instruments/Burr-Brown design team, it
became the basis of nearly all audio
CD players.
RCA released its Capacitance Electronic Disc (CED), an analog video
disc playback system. A stylus with
mechanical tracking read the disc. The
discs were 30cm in diameter and could
record 60 minutes of NTSC video per
side. The product was unpopular and
discontinued due to competition from
LaserDisc players and other reasons.
CD player, Commodore 64
1982
The first audio Compact Disc (CD)
player (co-developed by Philips and
Sony) was released in Japan.
The Commodore 64 computer was
introduced.
3.5in floppy disk, C++ language etc
1983
The first 3.5-inch (8.9cm) floppy
disks became available, based on
the Microfloppy Industry Committee
(MIC) specification.
The C++ programming language was
released, an ‘object-oriented’ version
of C that’s still widely used today.
The first personal computer with
a built-in hard disk, the IBM PC XT
with 10MB standard capacity, went
on the market.
Motorola released the first ‘mobile’
phone, the DynaTAC 8000X. It
weighed nearly a kilogram, took
10 hours to charge and retailed for
US$3995 (about $18,750 in today’s
money) – see Fig.76.
Dr Mitsuaki Oshima at Panasonic invented electronic image
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.74: the Xerox Alto GUI from 1973. Source: https://interface-experience.org/
objects/xerox-alto/
Fig.75: the Electronics Australia EDUC-8 computer. Source: https://w.wiki/7EG6
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 21
thought that its capacity would never
be reached. Sharks also attacked the
cable, possibly due to them being able
to sense its electromagnetic radiation.
It was instrumental in the development of the internet, providing a
dedicated high-speed T1 connection
between CERN in Europe and Cornell
University in the USA.
GPS receiver, World Wide Web etc
1989
The first commercial handheld GPS
receiver was released, the Magellan
NAV 1000.
CDMA (Code Division Multiple
Access) was demonstrated for cellular telephone systems.
The World Wide Web was invented
by Tim Berners-Lee and released to the
public in 1991.
DragonDictate speech recognition
1990
The first consumer speech recognition software, DragonDictate, was
released. Nowadays it’s called “Dragon
NaturallySpeaking” and is now owned
by Microsoft.
2G networks, Linux, Python
Fig.76: a Motorola DynaTAC 8000X
mobile phone. Source: https://w.
wiki/7FPn (CC-BY-SA-3.0)
stabilisation. Panasonic released the
first video camera to feature electronic
image stabilisation later, in 1988.
Apple Macintosh, CD-ROM
1984
The Apple Macintosh was released.
The Commodore Amiga computer was
also introduced.
The CD-ROM for data storage, based
on the audio CD, was announced.
IBM Tangora speech recognition
1985
The IBM experimental speech recognition system Tangora became available. It ran on an IBM PC AT and recognised 20,000 words, converting
them to text.
Sony D-1 video recording format
1986
The professional studio Sony D-1
digital video recording format was
introduced.
Higher temperature superconductors
1987
“Higher temperature” superconductors were discovered. Currently,
the highest-temperature superconductor works at around -135°C at normal
atmospheric pressure.
TAT-8 transatlantic optical fibre cable
1988
The first transatlantic optical fibre
cable, TAT-8, became operational. It
had a capacity of 280Mbit/s, equivalent to 40,000 telephone circuits.
It was retired in 2002; it rapidly
reached capacity when it was initially
22
Silicon Chip
1991
2G (GSM) telephone networks were
introduced.
The Linux operating system for computers, a free/open-source version of
Unix, was released.
The Python programming language
was released.
TASMAN2 cable, Windows 3.1 etc
1992
Australia’s first undersea optical
fibre, TASMAN2, connected us to New
Zealand with a speed of around 1Gbps.
Windows 3.1 was released, marking
a shift away from the command-line
DOS interface on PCs towards graphical interfaces.
The Apple Newton MessagePad
was released, an early ‘personal digital assistant’ with handwriting recognition that helped form the basis of
later smart devices.
Windows NT, HAARP
1993
Windows NT was released. Its core
still underlies modern Windows versions such as 10 & 11. However, its
GUI was still similar to that of Windows 3.1.
HAARP (High-frequency Active
Auroral Research Program) was established for upper atmosphere and ionospheric research. See our article on
HAARP (October 2012; siliconchip.
au/Article/492).
CompactFlash memory cards etc
1994
The first CompactFlash memory
cards were produced by SanDisk, starting at 2MB. It was the first widespread,
dedicated flash memory card format.
Australia's electronics magazine
Apple released home and office
computers using IBM’s 32-bit PowerPC processors, marking a shift away
from the Motorola processors they previously used.
IBM released the Simon Personal
Computer (SPC), the first ‘smartphone’, although that term didn’t exist
at the time. It had an LCD touchscreen
and could be used to make or receive
phone calls, send and receive faxes,
emails and pages (‘instant messages’).
50,000 were sold for US$1099 (about
$3500 today).
1995
Windows 95, DAB radio
Windows 95 was released, with a
GUI reminiscent of modern Windows
versions.
DAB digital radio broadcasting
began in Europe.
DVD player, PalmPilot “smartphone”
1996
The first digital video disc (DVD)
player was released in Japan.
The ATSC digital television standard was released.
The PalmPilot was released, an
early predecessor to the modern smartphone.
MPMan F10 portable MP3 player
1997
The DVB-T digital television standard was released, with the first broadcast in Sweden.
The first portable MP3 player was
released, the MPMan F10 by Saehan
Information Systems.
1998
ADSL standard
ADSL (Asymmetric digital subscriber line) technical standard ANSI
T1.413 Issue 2 was released. ADSL
enabled high-speed data over standard
copper telephone lines. It was introduced in Australia in 2000.
1999
Bluetooth devices
The first Bluetooth device was introduced to the market.
SD memory cards, Windows 2000
2000
The first SD (Secure Digital) memory cards were released with 32MB
and 64MB capacities.
Windows 2000 was released, merging the core of Windows NT with the
graphical interface of Windows 95. It
was the basis of the modern Windows
operating system in 2023.
3G networks, Mac OS X, iPod
2001
3G telephone networks were introduced, offering high-speed mobile
data, up to 7.2Mbps.
Apple released Mac OS X, a cleansheet redesign of their graphical operating system based on FreeBSD, still
their primary operating system today.
Apple released the iPod MP3 player.
siliconchip.com.au
ISDB-T digital TV broadcasts
2003
Japan started digital TV broadcasts
using the ISDB-T standard.
LongPen remote signing device
2004
Margaret Atwood (1939~) invented
the LongPen, a remote signing device,
mainly for authors to sign copies of
books. It was released to the market in
2006. It is reminiscent of Elisha Gray’s
telautograph from 1888.
DMB standard
2005
South Korea adopted DMB (Digital
Multimedia Broadcasting), for mobile
video streaming, a development of the
DAB radio broadcasting standard.
DTMB standard, OPAL reactor
2006
The DTMB (Digital Terrestrial Multimedia Broadcast) TV standard was
adopted in China.
OPAL (the Open-pool Australian
lightwater reactor) was commissioned
to replace HIFAR for research and
radioisotope production (eg, for medical procedures and industrial applications).
Apple iPhone
2007
Apple introduced the iPhone, the
first truly modern smartphone (the
Blackberry was released in 2000, but
phones with inbuilt keyboards eventually fell out of favour).
Further reading
● “Phonogram Images on Paper, 1250-1950” at https://youtu.be/TESkh3hX5oM
● “Experiments and Observations on Electricity” made at Philadelphia in America by
Benjamin Franklin, 1751 – siliconchip.au/link/abpf
● Simple construction project video: “Voltaic Pile, the First Battery” at https://youtu.
be/pW4UUOgJX6k
● “Electric Incandescent Lighting” by Edwin James Houston and Arthur Edwin
Kennelly, 1896 – siliconchip.au/link/abpe
● “The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century” by Edward W. Byrn, 1900 –
siliconchip.au/link/abpc
● “A History of Wireless Telegraphy” by J.J. Fahie, Third Edition, 1902 – siliconchip.
au/link/abpd
● “How does a spark gap transmitter sound?” at https://youtu.be/VMdYte66D2Y
● The First Digital Voltmeters and the Birth of Test Automation – www.hp9825.com/
html/dvms.html
● The oldest surviving video recording: “The Edsel Show - CBS-TV (October 13, 1957)”
at https://youtu.be/Ze0Az9tdkHg
● “Oldest surviving color videotape recording: WRC-TV dedication May 22, 1958” –
https://youtu.be/4vBEMGTdDYc
DAB+ broadcasting began, starting
in Australia, using less bandwidth for
similar audio quality to DAB.
4G networks
2009
4G (LTE) telephone networks were
introduced.
Apple iPad
2010
Apple released the iPad, an early
touchscreen tablet computer.
2019
5G networks
5G telephone networks were introduced.
Apple Silicon (ARM CPU)
2020
Apple brought to market computers using its own Apple Silicon processors, the M1 series, using memory
package stacking for high performance
SC
with low power consumption.
GPS-Synchronised Analog Clock
with long battery life
➡ Convert an ordinary wall clock into a highlyaccurate time keeping device (within
seconds).
➡ Nearly eight years of battery life with a
pair of C cells!
➡ Automatically adjusts for daylight saving
time.
➡ Track time with a VK2828U7G5LF GPS or D1
Mini WiFi module (select one as an option
with the kit; D1 Mini requires programming).
➡ Learn how to build it from the article in the
September 2022 issue of Silicon Chip (siliconchip.
au/Article/15466). Check out the article in the
November 2022 issue for how to use the D1 Mini WiFi
module with the Driver (siliconchip.au/Article/15550).
Complete kit available from $55 + postage (batteries & clock not included)
siliconchip.com.au/Shop/20/6472 – Catalog SC6472
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 23
Review by Jim Rowe
Arduino UNO R4 Minima
A leap forward for Arduino
The R4 is the latest version of the
ubiquitous Arduino Uno. It is a
major upgrade as it has a 32-bit
microcontroller, part of the Renesas
RA4M1 series, with 256kB of
flash, 32kB of SRAM and 8kB of
EEPROM; significantly more than
previous versions. Other features
include a DAC with 12-bit precision,
an ADC with 14-bit precision, a USB
2.0 full-speed module and a real-time clock.
T
he Arduino Uno R4 Minima
resembles earlier versions, such
as the Uno R3. The PCB is identical in
size (68 × 53mm) and shape, and the
SIL header sockets along the sides are
compatible with those of the R3 and
earlier versions. However, if you look
a bit closer, significant differences
become apparent.
For a start, the USB connector at
the top is now a USB-C socket rather
than the Type-B socket used in earlier
versions. There are also fewer components visible; for example, only two
ICs instead of four, and no power transistor or large electrolytic capacitors.
The Uno R4 Minima is undoubtedly a
big step up from its predecessors like
the Uno R3 and the Nano.
The main reason for the improvements is that the R4 Minima no longer uses an Atmel ATmega328P 8-bit
microcontroller, but is now based
on a much faster and more powerful
microcontroller: the Renesas R7FA4M1AB#CFM#AA0. This is part of Renesas’ RA4M1 series, a 32-bit micro with
a 48MHz ARM Cortex core.
As shown in the block diagram,
Fig.1, the R7FA4M1 also has much
more internal memory than the
ATmega328: 256kB of flash vs 32kB,
32kB of RAM vs just 2kB, and 8kB of
EEPROM for data storage compared
with just 1kB. So it has eight times
the flash, 16 times the RAM and eight
times the EEPROM.
But that’s just for starters. The
R7FA4M1 also includes a floating-point
24
Silicon Chip
unit (FPU) for faster mathematical calculations, a USB 2.0 full-speed module, a 14-bit ADC (analog-to-
digital
converter) compared to 10-bit in the
ATmega328 and a 12-bit DAC (digital-
to-analog converter), which the
ATmega328 lacked entirely.
It also has an RTC (real-time clock)
module, a CAN communications module, and the familiar UART, I2C and
SPI serial interfaces. The CAN port
does need an external transceiver,
though.
With a clock rate three times that of
the older ATmega328, we expect it to
be more than three times faster since
its word size is four times larger (32
bits vs 8 bits). The floating point unit
should make the gulf in performance
even larger when working with decimal floating point numbers.
There are also four on-chip op amps
(another feature the ATmega328P
lacked) and a temperature sensor, plus
a choice of six different on-chip clock
oscillators: a main clock oscillator, a
sub-clock oscillator and high, middle
and low-speed clock oscillators, plus
a 15kHz on-chip oscillator dedicated
to the independent watchdog timer
(IWDT). There’s a clock trim function
for the high, medium and low-speed
oscillators.
The R7FA4M1 has two hardware
SPI (serial peripheral interface) serial
units, two I2C interfaces and four SCI
(serial communications) interfaces.
Also, the R4 Minima can easily simulate a mouse, keyboard or other HID
Australia's electronics magazine
(human interface device) when connected to a computer via a USB cable.
The new 12-bit DAC gives the R4
Minima the ability to produce analog
signals and waveforms without using
PWM (pulse-width modulation). That
means that the R4 Minima can generate
cleaner audio signals and waveforms.
It also means that the R4’s six PWM
outputs can be used for other things
like driving LEDs and Mosfets.
Another feature of the R7FA4M1
MCU is its serial wire debugging support. It has a very small 5×2-pin DIL
header near the 3×2-pin in-circuit
serial programming (ICSP) header,
labelled “SWD”. Serial Wire Debug is
a modified version of the JTAG protocol, designed specifically for ARM
processors.
It means that, with the right hardware and software, you can monitor
and even pause the operation of the
processor core without using or affecting any of its I/O pins.
As you can see, the R7FA4M1 microcontroller is very powerful indeed.
All those feature are packed inside
an unassuming 64-pin LQFP package
measuring only 12 × 12mm, including
the leads on all four sides.
For more information you can view
the Uno R4 Minima data sheet at:
siliconchip.au/link/abq0
Other features
But wait, there’s more! (No, you
don’t get a free set of steak knives…)
Like the earlier versions, the R4
siliconchip.com.au
Minima can be powered with 5V via
the USB socket, or it can be powered
via either the concentric barrel connector or the VIN pin. In the latter cases,
it can handle a DC voltage between
6V and 24V.
That wide range is thanks to the
Renesas ISL854102FRZ-T buck converter chip (the second IC on the
module PCB, up near the concentric
power connector), which retains good
efficiency even at higher input voltages. As a result, the R4 Minima can
be powered from almost any external
DC power source of no more than 24V.
Schottky diodes are also provided for
reverse polarity and overvoltage protection.
Another nice feature of the R4 Minima is that it has a five-in-one ESD
protection diode between the pins of
the USB socket, to protect the micro
and the rest of the module from electrostatic damage.
The device used is a Nexperia PRTR5V0U2X, which includes two pairs of
ultra-low-capacitance diodes between
the USB D- (DM) and USB D+ (DP) signal lines and the USB+5V and ground
lines. There is an additional ESD protection diode between the two power
lines to ensure signal line protection,
even if no supply voltage is present.
So the Arduino Uno R4 Minima is
a really impressive step up from the
R3 and earlier Unos. It has a faster and
more powerful MCU with much more
memory and many additional features
like an inbuilt USB 2.0 interface, a realtime clock and a 12-bit DAC capable of
providing smooth audio signals, plus
the ability to run from a wide range of
power sources.
Fig.1: the block diagram for the Renesas R7FA4M1AB#CFM#AA0 32-bit
ARM Cortex microcontroller. One of the biggest improvements over the old
ATmega328P is the extra storage space (256kB vs 32kB of flash etc).
How about compatibility?
As you can see from the pinout diagram in Fig.2, the R4 Minima is basically hardware-compatible with the
earlier versions of the Arduino Uno.
So, it should be capable of interacting
with most shields designed to work
with the earlier versions, especially if
they have the same operating voltage.
However, in their product reference
manual, Arduino states that they cannot guarantee that all sketches and
libraries intended for use with earlier
versions will be fully software compatible with the R4 Minima because
of the significantly different microcontroller used.
They advise that all sketches
developed to run on the Uno R3
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.2: the pinout diagram for the Arduino Uno R4 Minima. The board layout
is designed so that it is hardware-compatible with the earlier versions of the
Arduino Uno and its shields.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 25
should run on the R4 Minima, provided that they were developed using
the Arduino API. Still, changes will
be needed if your sketch uses instructions only suitable for the AVR architecture.
Similarly, they advise that not all
libraries written to suit the Uno R3
would be compatible with the R4 Minima. Apparently, some libraries have
already been ‘ported over’ as part of
their early adopters program.
Arduino has already produced
eleven tutorials demonstrating the various special features of the R4 Minima,
plus a guide to popular shields and
their compatibility with it. These are
all available on the Arduino website,
at siliconchip.au/link/abq1
The titles are:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Getting Started with Arduino Uno R4
Minima
Arduino Uno R4 Minima Real Time Clock
Arduino Uno R4 Minima ADC Resolution
Arduino Uno R4 Minima Digital-toAnalog Converter (DAC)
Arduino Uno R4 Minima EEPROM
Arduino Uno R4 Minima USB HID
Arduino Uno R4 Minima CAN Bus
Arduino Uno R4 Minima Shield
Compatibility
Arduino Uno R4 Minima Cheat Sheet
Arduino Uno R4 Shield Guide
Debugging the Arduino Uno R4 Minima
One was that the analog output of
the DAC appears on pin A0 of the Minima; another was that in the Arduino
programming language, the simplest
way of programming the DAC is by
using the instruction analogWrite(A0,
value); where ‘value’ can be any integer value between 0 and 255.
Why only values between 0 and
255? That’s because, although the DAC
does have a resolution of 12 bits, the
Arduino firmware gives it a default resolution of 8 bits. If you want to increase
it to the full 12 bits, this can be done
in the Setup() section of your sketch
by using this instruction:
analogWriteResolution(12);
This allows you to feed the DAC
with values between 0 and 4095, rather
than the previous 0 to 255.
Armed with this basic information,
I worked through the examples in
the Arduino tutorial on the Uno R4
Minima’s DAC. There were three
example sketches (see github.com/
arduino/ArduinoCore-renesas/
blob/main/libraries/AnalogWave/
examples/), all using a library called
analogWave. The first sketch generates a nominal sine waveform, the second plays “Frere Jacques”, while the
third generates any of the 88 notes on
a piano keyboard.
All three allow output frequency
adjustment by varying the voltage
fed to the A5 analog input pin using
a potentiometer connected between
+5V and ground. The analog output
from A0 can be either fed directly to
a small piezo sounder or the input of
a small amplifier driving a speaker; I
used a tiny low-cost amplifier module
based on an LM386.
Scope 1: the output
of the sketch
“DACEqual
TemperedScale”
which generates a
3.788kHz sinewave.
Trying it out
I ordered an Arduino Uno R4 Minima from a supplier on eBay. It cost
me US$20, roughly $31 at the current exchange rate. It arrived about
10 days later.
First, I tested its compatibility with
some sketches I had written for the
Uno R3 and found that they ran just
fine. The only thing I had to change
was to install the latest version (2.2.1;
siliconchip.au/link/abq2) of the Arduino IDE, because the version I had been
using (1.8.19) had trouble uploading
sketches to the Uno R4 Minima.
I think that was because the USB
interface of the R4 Minima is built into
the R7FA4M1 MCU itself, rather than
in a separate chip as in the R3 and earlier versions of the Uno.
I then decided to try one of the R4
Minima’s interesting new features:
the DAC. I learned a few basic facts
by reading the information on this in
the Renesas RA4M1 data sheet (pages
1149-1156; siliconchip.au/link/abq4)
and the brief information in the Arduino ‘Cheat Sheet’ on the R4 Minima
(siliconchip.au/link/abq3).
26
Silicon Chip
Scope 2: the output
of the sketch “Using_
the_R4_DAC_to_
gen_a_sawtooth.
ino” which generates
a sawtooth wave
with 63 rising steps
followed by a singlestep fall.
Scope 3: the output
of the sketch “Using_
the_R4_DAC_to_
gen_a_sinewave.ino”
which generates a
smoother sinewave
than the one shown
in Scope 1.
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
All three sketches use a previously
calculated set of samples to produce a
sine waveform, called wave.sine(freq).
Although the sketches all worked,
they did generate rather rough and
noisy waveforms, with a significant
amount of accompanying noise and
harmonic content. Scope 1 shows the
output from the first sketch generating
a 3.788kHz sinewave.
When I looked around on the Uno
R4 Minima section of the Arduino
Forum, I found others expressing reservations about the performance of
sketches using the analogWave library.
There were also a few suggestions on
how to get the R4 DAC to produce
smoother and cleaner waveforms, from
contributors like “Grumpy Mike” and
“susan-parker”.
Ms Parker (who also calls herself
‘TriodeGirl’) seems to be a very experienced programmer who has produced
her own sketch, using direct register
setup and interrupts. She explained
that one of the reasons why the analogWave library produces noisy or ‘hairy’
waveforms is because it performs DAC
initialisation each time it is called.
I also found a sketch from a contributor calling themselves “daueb” that
didn’t make use of the analogWave
library at all but instead used the basic
instruction analogWrite(A0, value).
After looking at daueb’s sketch, I
decided to write a small sketch of my
own to test the R4 Minima’s DAC.
The sketch is called “sketch_for_
testing_the_R4_DAC.ino”, and all it
does is prompt you to feed in a value
between 0 and 255 via the Arduino
IDE’s Serial Monitor, after which it
feeds this value to the DAC so you can
measure the output voltage from the
A0 pin using a DMM. The sketch uses
the default DAC resolution of eight bits
but also has provision for changing to
12 bits if you want.
Fig.3 shows what I found when I
used this sketch to plot the output of
the R4 Minima’s DAC over the full
range of input values from 0 to 255. It is
basically a straight line from 0.0034V
to 4.7468V.
Encouraged by this result, I wrote
a small sketch to generate a linear
sawtooth waveform, again using
the analogWrite(A0, value) instruction suggested by daueb. It is called
“Using_the_R4_DAC_to_gen_a_sawtooth.ino”, and like the first sketch,
you can download it from siliconchip.
com.au/Shop/6/306
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.3: the output from the Arduino sketch “sketch_for_testing_the_R4_DAC.ino”,
which plots the output for the R4’s DAC over an input range of 0 to 255.
This sketch generates a sawtooth
wave consisting of 63 rising steps followed by a single-step fall; the result
is shown in Scope 2. You can vary
the number of upward steps simply
by changing the step size in the ‘for’
instruction inside the sketch’s loop():
for (x = 0; x < 255; x += 4)
A smaller value in the place of 4 will
give a smoother sawtooth (at a lower
frequency), while a larger value will
give a ‘staircase’ sawtooth at a higher
frequency.
Next, I came up with a similar small
sketch to generate a sine waveform,
called “Using_the_R4_DAC_to_gen_a_
sinewave.ino”. Scope 3 shows the
waveform that this sketch can produce
– it’s much smoother than the waveform in Scope 1, but much lower in
frequency.
As before, you can change the waveform’s smoothness and frequency simply by changing the step size in the
‘for’ instruction inside the sketch’s
loop:
for (deg = -180; deg < 180; deg += 5)
If you increase the step size from
5 degrees to, say, 10 degrees, you’ll
get a more stepped sinewave at a
Australia's electronics magazine
higher frequency. If you decrease it
to, say, 1 degree, you’ll get an even
smoother sinewave but much lower
in frequency.
So there you have a demonstration
of the basic trade-off when you are
trying to generate waveforms using a
DAC: decreasing the step value gives
greater waveform smoothness but also
lowers the frequency.
These simple sketches are only suitable for generating smooth waveforms
at low frequencies. Unfortunately,
those using the analogWave library
are not much better.
As far as I can see, the only way to
get smoother waveforms at higher frequencies from the Arduino R4 Minima’s DAC would be to use Ms Parker’s
approach, using direct register setup
and interrupts. You can find her sketch
on GitHub: github.com/TriodeGirl/
Arduino-Uno-R4-code-DAC-ADCints-Fast_Pins/
Summary
The DAC is only one of the features of the R4 Minima that makes
it so attractive. There’s the much
larger flash memory, RAM and data
EEPROM; the faster CPU with an
inbuilt floating-point unit (FPU); the
December 2023 27
inbuilt real-time clock (RTC); the
inbuilt capacitive touch sensing unit;
the inbuilt USB 2.0 full-speed comms
module; an ADC with 14-bit resolution; and the inbuilt op amps and
CAN port.
We’ve only just scratched the surface of the Uno R4 Minima in this article. If you’d like to delve further, we
suggest you get one and explore all its
capabilities yourself. It really is a big
step forward in the Arduinosphere!
Where you can get it
You can buy the Arduino Uno R4
Minima directly from the main Arduino website, but it’s also available from
several suppliers on eBay. In most
cases the cost will be around US$20,
possibly with shipping costs added.
WiFi version
One last thing: the Uno R4 Minima isn’t the only new addition to the
Arduino Uno family. It also has a sibling, the Uno R4 WiFi.
That one has all the new features of
the R4 Minima plus more: the addition of an Espressif ESP32-S3 to provide WiFi and Bluetooth comms, plus
an onboard 12×8 LED matrix and a
While we’ve reviewed the Uno R4 Minima (shown enlarged), there’s also a WiFi
version of the board, see: https://store.arduino.cc/products/uno-r4-wifi
SparkFun Qwiic I2C+power connector that can be used to plug in their
add-on boards.
As you’d expect, the Uno R4 WiFi
costs more than the R4 Minima, at
US$27.50. Still, those extra features
are pretty tempting for an increase
in cost of less than 50%, especially if
you want wireless communications
SC
and networking.
Silicon
Chip
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Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
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SALAD BOWL SPEAKER CROSSOVER
PIC PROGRAMMING ADAPTOR
REVISED 30V 2A BENCH SUPPLY MAIN PCB
↳ FRONT PANEL CONTROL PCB
↳ VOLTAGE INVERTER / DOUBLER
2M VHF CW/FM TEST GENERATOR
TQFP-32 PROGRAMMING ADAPTOR
↳ TQFP-44
↳ TQFP-48
↳ TQFP-64
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K-TYPE THERMOMETER / THERMOSTAT (SET; RED)
PICO AUDIO ANALYSER (BLACK)
MODEM / ROUTER WATCHDOG (BLUE)
DISCRETE MICROAMP LED FLASHER
MAGNETIC LEVITATION DEMONSTRATION
MULTI-CHANNEL VOLUME CONTROL: VOLUME PCB
↳ CONTROL PCB
↳ OLED PCB
SECURE REMOTE SWITCH RECEIVER
↳ TRANSMITTER (MODULE VERSION)
↳ TRANSMITTER (DISCRETE VERSION
COIN CELL EMULATOR (BLACK)
IDEAL BRIDGE RECTIFIER, 28mm SQUARE SPADE
↳ 21mm SQUARE PIN
↳ 5mm PITCH SIL
↳ MINI SOT-23
↳ STANDALONE D2PAK SMD
↳ STANDALONE TO-220 (70μm COPPER)
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PRE-PROGRAMMED MICROS
As a service to readers, Silicon Chip Online Shop 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.
$10 MICROS
$15 MICROS
ATmega328P
110dB RF Attenuator (Jul22), Basic RF Signal Generator (Jun23)
ATtiny45-20PU
2m VHF CW/FM Test Generator (Oct23)
PIC10LF322-I/OT Range Extender IR-to-UHF (Jan22)
PIC12F617-I/P
Active Mains Soft Starter (Feb23), Model Railway Uncoupler (Jul23)
PIC12F617-I/SN
Model Railway Carriage Lights (Nov21)
PIC12F675-I/P
Train Chuff Sound Generator (Oct22)
PIC16F1455-I/P
Auto Train Controller (Oct22), GPS Disciplined Oscillator (May23)
PIC16LF1455-I/P New GPS-Synchronised Analog Clock (Sep22)
PIC16F1459-I/P
K-Type Thermostat (Nov23), Secure Remote Switch (RX, Dec23)
PIC16F1459-I/SO Multimeter Calibrator (Jul22), Buck/Boost Charger Adaptor (Oct22)
PIC16F15214-I/SN Digital Volume Control Pot (SMD; Mar23), Silicon Chirp Cricket (Apr23)
PIC16F15214-I/P Digital Volume Control Pot (through-hole; Mar23)
PIC16F15224-I/SL Multi-Channel Volume Control (OLED Module; Dec23)
PIC16F18146-I/SO Volume Control (Control Module, Dec23), Coin Cell Emulator (Dec23)
PIC16LF15323-I/SL Secure Remote Switch (TX, Dec23)
W27C020
Noughts & Crosses Computer (Jan23)
PIC16F18877-I/P
PIC16F18877-I/PT
PIC16F88-I/P
PIC24FJ256GA702-I/SS
PIC32MX170F256D-501P/T
PIC32MX170F256B-50I/SP
PIC32MX170F256B-I/SO
PIC32MX270F256B-50I/SP
USB Cable Tester (Nov21)
Wideband Fuel Mixture Display (WFMD; Apr23)
Battery Charge Controller (Jun22), Railway Semaphore (Apr22)
Ohmmeter (Aug22), Advanced SMD Test Tweezers (Feb23)
44-pin Micromite Mk2 (Aug14), 4DoF Simulation Seat (Sep19)
Micromite LCD BackPack V1-V3 (Feb16 / May17 / Aug19)
Battery Multi Logger (Feb21), Battery Manager BackPack (Aug21)
ASCII Video Terminal (Jul14), USB M&K Adaptor (Feb19)
$25 MICROS
PIC32MX470F512H-I/PT
Stereo Echo/Reverb (Feb 14), Digital Effects Unit (Oct14)
PIC32MX470F512H-120/PT Micromite Explore 64 (Aug 16), Micromite Plus (Nov16)
PIC32MX470F512L-120/PT Micromite Explore 100 (Sep16)
$30 MICROS
PIC32MX695F512H-80I/PT Touchscreen Audio Recorder (Jun14)
PIC32MZ2048EFH064-I/PT DSP Crossover/Equaliser (May19), Low-Distortion DDS (Feb20)
DIY Reflow Oven Controller (Apr20), Dual Hybrid Supply (Feb22)
KITS & SPECIALISED COMPONENTS
COIN CELL EMULATOR KIT (CAT SC6823)
(DEC 23)
MULTI-CHANNEL VOLUME CONTROL
(DEC 23)
Contains all parts and the optional 5-pin header (see page 77, Dec23)
- Control Module kit: see page 68, December 2023 (SC6793)
- Volume Module kit: see page 69, December 2023 (SC6794)
- OLED Module kit: see page 69, December 2023 (SC6795)
SECURE REMOTE SWITCH
(DEC 23)
- Receiver short-form kit: see page 43, December 2023 (SC6835)
- Discrete transmitter complete kit: see page 43, December 2023 (SC6836)
- Module transmitter short-form kit: see page 43, December 2023 (SC6837)
IDEAL DIODE BRIDGE RECTIFIER
- 28mm square spade: see page 35, December 2023 (SC6850)
- 21mm square pin: see page 35, December 2023 (SC6851)
- 5mm pitch SIL: see page 35, December 2023 (SC6852)
- Mini SOT-23: see page 35, December 2023 (SC683)
- D2PAK SMD: see page 35, December 2023 (SC6854)
- TO-220 through-hole: see page 35, December 2023 (SC6855)
MODEM / ROUTER WATCHDOG (CAT SC6827)
(DEC 23)
(NOV 23)
PICO AUDIO ANALYSER SHORT-FORM KIT (CAT SC6772)
(NOV 23)
$50.00
$55.00
$25.00
K-TYPE THERMOMETER / THERMOSTAT (CAT SC6809)
(NOV 23)
$35.00
$20.00
$15.00
PIC PROGRAMMING ADAPTOR KIT (CAT SC6774)
(SEP 23)
ARDUINO ESR METER
(AUG 23)
$30.00
$30.00
$30.00
$30.00
$25.00
$35.00
$45.00
Short-form kit: includes all non-optional parts, plus a 12V relay and unprogrammed
Pi Pico. Does not include a case (see page 71, Nov23)
$35.00
Includes most parts, unprogrammed Pi Pico and OLED screen. The case, battery, chassis
connectors and wires are not included (see page 41, Nov23)
$50.00
Short-form kit: includes most of the parts needed except the case, LCD, thermocouple probe,
cable gland and switches S4 & S5. A 10A relay is included to suit the 12V supply
(see page 58, Nov23)
$75.00
Includes all parts, except the optional USB supply (see page 71, Sept23)
- 20x4 blue backlit LCD with I2C interface (Cat SC4203)
- red & black PCB-mount banana sockets (two sets are needed; Cat SC4983)
- two 1nF ±1% capacitors (Cat SC4273)
VARIOUS MODULES & PARTS
- 0.96in SSD1306 cyan OLED (Multi-Channel Volume Control, Dec23; SC6176)
- 1.3in blue OLED (Coin Cell Emulator, Dec23; SC5026)
- 5V 3-pin boost regulator module (2m CW/FM Test Generator, Oct23; SC6780)
- 5V 3-pin buck regulator module (2m CW/FM Test Generator, Oct23; SC6781)
- 0.96in SSD1306-based yellow/blue OLED (RF Signal Gen, Jun23; SC6421)
$55.00
$15.00
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12/23
Ideal Diode
Bridge Rectifiers
By Phil Prosser
Rectifiers have evolved a lot over the last century, from selenium piles and
mercury arc rectifiers to vacuum tube diodes, then germanium and silicon diodes. Now, active
rectifiers offer much greater efficiency than silicon diodes, running much cooler. We show you
how to make up to six different Bridge Rectifiers depending on how much power you want.
n the simplest terms, an ‘ideal diode’
Icircuit
uses a power Mosfet with a control
to replace a rectifier diode.
Combining four such devices gives
you an ‘ideal bridge rectifier’.
While they are not truly ideal, they
are much closer than a regular diode,
with a forward voltage (and thus power
loss and heat dissipation) typically
around 1/10 that of a normal diode.
This idea caught my attention
because I realised it would allow us
to build devices like power amplifiers
or power supplies that operate more
efficiently and deliver more power,
as less is lost in the bridge. Bridge
rectifiers used in large power amplifiers need a lot of heatsinking! They
can dissipate tens of watts under
heavy load.
That all changes with this design,
which is a drop-in replacement for
many existing bridge rectifiers.
When designing my Dual Hybrid
Power Supply, (February & March
2022; siliconchip.au/Series/377), I
wished I had the time to delve into
these active bridges, as the power
loss in a high-current DC power supply bridge is also significant. For
example:
● The PB1004 10A bridge rectifier
(Altronics Cat Z0085) has a forward
voltage drop of over 1V at 5A, or 2V
across the bridge. This means it is dissipating 10W at 5A.
● The KBPC3510 35A bridge rectifier (Altronics Cat Z0091A) drops 1V
at 10A, resulting in a 2V loss and 20W
dissipation at 10A.
The 2V drop is manageable, if
annoying, by increasing the transformer voltage. However, transformers often come in 5V steps, meaning
you might be wasting a lot of power
to compensate for that relatively small
voltage loss.
On the other hand, that 10-20W dissipation is troublesome, as it demands
a substantial heatsink and forces
Lessons learned during the design process
The design of these modules served as a reminder on the need for attention to
detail and the value of peer review. I did the bulk of the PCB layout while I was on
holidays, and since there were only seven parts, what could go wrong? Plenty.
When I was making the CAD library for the LT4320 IC, I stuck the ‘pin’ that
denotes the thermal pad for the IC in the wrong spot. This led me to assume it
connected to the positive pin rather than the negative, where it belonged. I then
laid out seven variants of this board from the schematic, all with the pad connected to the wrong output.
I now know that the LT4320 will work for several minutes with the thermal pad
tied to the wrong pin, but after that, it will blow up, take out your Mosfets and
short your transformer! I found the bug after blowing many fuses, $100 worth of
bits, wasting a couple of days, and my whole budget of four-letter words.
To add insult to injury, I had to respin all the different prototype boards, another
$100 lesson. Ouch! All for about 2mm of misplaced PCB trace.
34
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
physical layout decisions to enable
this heat to be dissipated.
Pros and cons
By comparison, if we use an
LT4320 ‘ideal bridge’ controller and
TK6R9P08QM power Mosfets, we will
see 70mV maximum drop per device at
10A, which is a total of 1.4W or about
1/10th of the heat you get from a standard bridge rectifier!
So what is the catch, and why aren’t
these used everywhere? I suspect there
are a few reasons:
1. One of the complications that
needs to be dealt with is generating
the Vgs drive for the N-channel Mosfet, which requires a boost circuit to
drive the gates well above the source
voltages.
2. For a bridge, you need four
power Mosfets and a controller, which
increases parts count and cost.
3. The real benefits are accrued
when rectifying lower voltages at
high currents or if you cannot afford
losses in your system (or when high
efficiency is essential).
4. Because of how the control and
switching works, for the simplest off
the shelf solution, a dual-rail power
supply (such as for a power amplifier)
needs two bridges, each fed by one of
the two secondary windings.
5. Your rectified output voltage rail
needs to stay above 9V, or bad things
happen (more on that later).
The best use cases for an ideal diode
bridge rectifier are where space and
capacity to dissipate power are limited, where voltage drop from the
transformer is undesirable and where
siliconchip.com.au
One of our Ideal Bridge
Rectifiers on a Dual Hybrid
Power Supply board. This increases the
maximum output voltage by about 2V at full load while
increasing efficiency and allowing it to run much cooler under load!
lower voltages at higher currents need
to be rectified.
In terms of using Mosfets to replace
diodes, it is interesting to note the
growing use of ‘synchronous’ switchmode converters. In this case, the
usual schottky diodes are replaced
with power Mosfets. Many synchronous switch-mode controllers include
an output to drive the diode replacement Mosfets, resulting in increased
efficiency.
Design approach
Given the desire to investigate this
technology, our efforts turned to an
integrated solution. We wanted an
option that could be used in a range
of projects and showcase the potential
of this technology, without making
construction too tricky or the device
too expensive.
A survey of ideal diode controller
ICs shows that many are intended for
hot-swap and redundant power supply applications. In this case, multiple power supplies are combined in
an ‘OR’ function so that if one supply fails, the other picks up the load.
Supply currents can be very high in a
server application, so reducing diode
losses is critical.
We also found several controllers
for automotive applications, in alternators and circuit protection. These
are generally intended for single-rail
applications and are not suited to
more general AC rectification. In particular, most utilise the diode to operate the circuit itself. This limits their
application as generic diode replacements.
siliconchip.com.au
The range of available parts in this
field is growing, so new ICs that are
useful in a range of applications are
coming on the market. In this project,
we show how to use the most available controller IC and build a range of
‘ideal diode bridge rectifiers’ that can
replace conventional diode bridges in
various projects.
The controller we have selected is
the LT4320, as this allows simple and
compact boards to be built, ranging
from tiny SOT-23 Mosfet based bridges
through DPAK (TO-252) to very high
current TO-220 based through-hole
versions. Where might each of these
be used?
● The SOT-23-based bridge is only
9 × 15mm and can be used inline on
the DC power supply lead to a device
or soldered in place of a small bridge.
This can make the power lead for
your device polarity agnostic without affecting its operation noticeably.
● Our boards using DPAK SMD
Mosfets can replace the common 5mm
pitch 19mm SIL bridge or rectangular bridges with corner pins or spade
connectors (see the photo above) and
handle high currents.
● There are also two ‘standalone’
versions that are basically just small
boards you can mount in a chassis
to provide the rectification function.
One uses TO-220 Mosfets and other
through-hole parts and can handle
very high currents, limited mainly by
the PCB itself!
There are a few limitations or
requirements we need to work with
that initially may sound onerous.
However, in a real-world application,
Australia's electronics magazine
the following are not that hard to
meet:
● The LT4320 works in a ‘single-
rail’ configuration only.
● For an audio amplifier, you need
to rectify the outputs of the two secondary windings independently. You
then connect the negative output from
one bridge to the positive output from
the second bridge to get your split
supply, usually at the main capacitor bank.
● We have achieved pin compatibility for all the larger bridge types. But
DIP-8 and W02/W04 type bridges are a
bit small for us to match, so if replacing
one of those, you will need to mount
the SOT-23 version on leads.
● The minimum output voltage
allowed is 9V DC, while the maximum is 72V peak. This means that we
should limit the AC input to 40V RMS
to provide reasonable safety margins.
We must ensure that the rectified output’s minimum voltage does not drop
below 9V during operation.
How it works
Its operation is similar to a diode
bridge but with a controller IC that
turns the Mosfets on when required
to minimise losses. Fig.1 is the circuit
diagram while Fig.2 shows how current flows during the two main phases
when the bridge is conducting.
The Mosfets are arranged so the current flows from their source to drain
terminals in regular operation, the
opposite to a standard common-source
Mosfet switch application. This is so
that the current flows through the
Mosfet body diodes in the forward
direction.
Therefore, in the absence of the controller, current would flow through
those body diodes. However, there
would be a high typical 1V forward
drop at high currents, similar to a silicon power diode.
During operation, the LT4320 determines which of the input voltages (IN1
Ideal Bridge Rectifier Kits
SC6850 ($30) 28mm spade version
SC6851 ($30) 21mm square PCB
pin version
SC6852 ($30) 5mm pitch SIL version
SC6853 ($25) mini SOT-23 version
SC6854 ($35) standalone D2PAK
SMD version
SC6855 ($45) standalone TO-220
through-hole version
December 2023 35
& IN2) is lower and switches on either
Q3 or Q4 full to connect the input terminal with the lower voltage to the
negative rail and hence the negative
output.
The controller switches Mosfet Q1
or Q2 on when current flows through
them, reducing the effective forward
voltage to about 20mV. The drop is set
by the controller; if the LT4320 detects
a differential greater than 20mV
between the highest AC input voltage
and the output terminal, it switches
the respective Mosfet on harder.
If the Mosfets have a relatively
high Rds(on) figure resulting in more
than 20mV across the Mosfet, it will
be switched on fully, and the input/
output differential will be higher than
20mV.
The gate drive to the Mosfets is not
very ‘strong’ in that a fairly low current is supplied. This reflects the application for this IC in low-frequency
Fig.1: the circuit is slightly more complex than a conventional bridge
rectifier. Pin numbers in black are for the MSOP-12 package while those
in brackets in cyan are for DIP-8. Dashes in parentheses indicate pins that
don’t exist on the DIP-8 package.
(50/60Hz mains) or for the MT4320-1
(to 600Hz) operation.
With a 9V DC output voltage and
the top Mosfet (Q1 or Q2) Vgs at 2V,
the pullup current is only 500μA. Our
recommended DPAK SMD Mosfet, the
TK6R9P08QM, has an input capacitance of 2.7nF. So the gate voltage will
change at a rate of 180mV/μs.
That is terribly slow compared to
most Mosfet applications, but for
mains-frequency operations, if each
Mosfet is on for 10% of the cycle,
that’s 2ms. The switch-on time of
20μs or so is only 1% of that period.
The losses are minimal because this
switching is just as the mains cycle
crosses over.
The 1μF ceramic capacitor across
the OUTP and OUTN pins is important for the correct circuit operation
as it prevents the output voltage from
changing too rapidly. It should be kept
as close to the LT4320 as possible.
The Ideal Bridge Rectifier can operate from 9-72V. If the rectified output
goes below 9V, the LT4320 will not
drive the Mosfet gates, and rectification falls back to the body diodes in the
Mosfets. This is OK at startup, but we
must ensure the rectified rail remains
above 9V afterwards. We will come
back to this later on.
During tests where we were hammering the bridge and applied a load so
severe that the output voltage dropped
below 9V, we found that the Mosfets
were getting hotter than we expected.
However, that’s a fairly unusual situation for a real bridge rectifier.
Parts selection
Fig.2: during part of the mains waveform, when the upper AC input voltage
is higher than the lower, IC1 switches on Q1 & Q4 and current flows via the
red paths. During the opposite part of the waveform, the upper AC input
voltage is lower, Q2 & Q3 are on and current flows via the blue paths.
There were a few things to keep
in mind when choosing the Mosfets for this design. We have tested
the devices specified in the parts list
and in the panel titled “Ideal Bridge
Recitfier PCBs”, although there is no
doubt that many others would work.
Besides being in the correct package
for the board, they need sufficiently
high voltage and current ratings, low
on-resistances (for highest efficiency)
and a gate-source threshold voltage in
the correct range.
For the latter, the recommendation
is that it should be more than 2V. This
is required to ensure that the controller can switch the Mosfet off quickly,
to keep efficiency high.
Many modern Mosfets have a low
gate threshold to allow them to be controlled by lower voltage circuits (often
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
36
Silicon Chip
called ‘logic-level’ Mosfets), making
them unsuitable. These can sometimes
be spotted as they tend to have a lower
maximum Vgs rating, below the ±20V
to ±30V that used to be typical. However, there are still logic-level Mosfets
with a higher Vgs rating, so you need
to check the data sheet.
As for the current rating, in a bridge
rectifier, the current usually only
flows while the reservoir capacitors
are charging. With very large capacitor banks and a low internal impedance transformer, this can be pretty
short, resulting in peak charging currents much greater than the average
(or “DC”) current being drawn from
the power supply.
The recommendation is that the
Mosfets have a DC rating triple the
average direct current. Therefore, we
have selected Mosfets with higher current ratings than you might expect are
necessary.
However, we tried not to go overboard with this as ultra-high-current
Mosfets tend to have a high gate capacitance. The LT4320 does not have a
strong gate drive capability, so that
would slow switch-on and switch-off,
resulting in increased losses.
The Vds(MAX) rating should be well
above the voltage at which you want
to operate the bridge, with a solid margin to allow for ringing and spikes. We
looked for a minimum rating of 80V,
although our SOT-23 version is limited to 40V.
Mosfet heating is primarily determined by the average current and their
Rds(on). For the TK6R9P08QM DPAK
Mosfet we use in many module versions, the typical Rds(on) is specified
as 5.5mW for Vgs > 10V.
The LT4320 delivers about 11V
to the gates for voltages greater than
13V. For an average current of 10A,
this results in 550mW dissipation in
each conducting Mosfet, or 275mW
per Mosfet for an AC input, which
is easily manageable, and the boards
only get warm.
For a current of 20A, this dissipation increases to about 1W per Mosfet, making them very warm indeed,
at which point you should consider
building the TO-220 version.
The recommended TO-220 Mosfet
has an Rds(on) of 4.2mW at full drive
and, at 40A, will drop 160mV; it would
be closer to 1.2V in a regular bridge at
this sort of current. The power dissipation in each Mosfet would be 3.5W for
siliconchip.com.au
Ideal Bridge Rectifier PCBs
For maximum flexibility, we have produced six different PCBs that implement
essentially the same circuit, as follows:
#1 Square 28mm metal bridge using 6.3mm spade connectors
Compatible with KBPC3504
PCB code: 18101241 (28 × 28mm with a central mounting hole)
Current & voltage handling: 10A continuous (20A peak), 72V
Connectors: 6.3mm spade lugs, 18mm tall
IC1 package: MSOP-12 (SMD)
Mosfets: TK6R9P08QM,RQ (DPAK/TO-252 SMD)
Operates at 10A continuously and much higher currents intermittently but will get hot. In
a long-term 8A test, it reached 79°C in free air.
#2 Square 21mm plastic bridge with 13mm pitch pins
Compatible with PB1004
PCB code: 18101242 (22 × 22mm with a central mounting hole)
Current & voltage handling: 10A continuous (20A peak), 72V
Connectors: solder pins on a 14mm grid (can be bent to a
13mm grid)
IC1 package: MSOP-12 (SMD)
Mosfets: TK6R9P08QM,RQ (DPAK/TO-252 SMD)
A PB1004 leaded bridge replacement, typically capable of 5-10A. We used these to
upgrade our Dual Hybrid Power Supply module.
#3 5mm pitch SIL
Compatible with KBL604
PCB code: 18101243 (23 × 20mm)
Current & voltage handling: 10A continuous (20A peak), 72V
Connectors: solder pins at 5mm pitch
IC1 package: MSOP-12 (SMD)
Mosfets: TK6R9P08QM,RQ (DPAK/TO-252 SMD)
The 5mm pitch SIL bridge rectifier drop-in replacement module.
#4 Tiny inline bridge
Width of W02/W04
PCB code: 18101244 (9 × 15mm)
Current & voltage handling: 2A continuous, 40V
Connectors: solder pins 5mm apart at either end
IC1 package: MSOP-12 (SMD)
Mosfets: SI2318DS-GE3 (SOT-23 SMD)
The baby of the crew, the SOT-23 based version optimised for putting inline with lower-power
circuits. These Mosfets are rated at 40V & 3.9A, but we reckon a safer limit would be 1.5-2.0A.
#5 Standalone SMD version
PCB code: 18101245 (59 × 36mm with mounting holes in 49 ×
26mm rectangle)
Current & voltage handling: 20A continuous, 72V
Connectors: 5mm screw terminals at either end
IC1 package: MSOP-12 (SMD)
Mosfets: IPB057N06NATMA1 (D2PAK/TO-263 SMD)
The D2PAK version, which I have tested for half an hour at 12V AC and 8A (into a 35mF
capacitor with a 2Ω load across it). You can see this being stress tested on page 40.
#6 Standalone through-hole version
PCB code: 18101246 (38 × 28mm with 70μm-thick
copper and mounting holes 29mm apart)
Current & voltage handling: 40A continuous, 72V
Connectors: 6.3mm spade lugs, 18mm tall
IC1 package: DIP-8 (through-hole)
Mosfets: TK5R3E08QM,S1X (TO-220 through-hole)
The TO-220 version is a bit of a beast and, along with the D2PAK version shown
above, it will easily handle 8-10A RMS continuously. It uses a DIP-8 controller IC and
allows you to mount a heatsink to the Mosfets if you want to rectify some serious
currents. All the images here are not shown to scale.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 37
Fig.3: the cyan
trace is the positive
portion of the
incoming AC
waveform, yellow
is the filtered DC
output, while
mauve is the
positive Mosfet gate
drive. The cyan AC
trace is offset by
-2V; otherwise, the
mauve trace would
obscure it much of
the time.
Fig.4: a similar
setup to Fig.2, but
this time, we’re
monitoring the
gate of one of the
low-side Mosfets
(mauve). You
can see how it’s
switched on with a
duty cycle close to
50%, synchronised
with the zero
crossings of the AC
waveform.
an AC input, which is significant but
manageable with small heatsinks. In
this case, a regular diode-based bridge
would get toasty, as it would dissipate
48W per diode!
The LT4320 IC comes in an SMD
(MSOP-12) and through-hole (DIP8) version. These are available from
all the major component suppliers
and will be included in the Silicon
Chip kits.
For the Mosfets, we have tried to
stick to standard parts, with DPAK
(TO-252) being our overall preference
as they are large enough to handle a
decent amount of dissipation (~1W)
without being so large that they take
up a lot of space. The other Mosfets
we’ve used come in TO-220 packages
(for really high current applications)
and the tiny SOT-23 (for when space
is tight).
By sticking to these standard footprints, you can use alternative parts
if necessary.
PCB design
Most of the modules we present use
surface-mounting parts to fit into the
space we have. We have also resorted
to placing components on both sides
of the PCB, as doing that was essential
to match some of the common bridge
rectifier form factors.
For higher-current modules, we
need to be conscious of the current
rating of the PCB traces. To fit the
parts onto the KBPC3504 form-factor
board, along with the very wide tracks
that a 30-40A rating warrants, is quite
a challenge. Our version manages to
keep all high-current tracks short and
thick, but that forced the layout to be
slightly larger than the original rectifier.
There is no specific ‘rating’ for PCB
traces; there are guidelines, but too
many variables exist to realistically
put a simple, accurate number to a
track width. Still, voltage drop and
heating must be considered. In the
limiting case, tracks can fuse or melt.
We have specified ‘2oz’ (70μm
thick) copper traces on the TO-220
PCB, twice as thick as a standard ‘1oz’
(35μm) PCB. This will halve resistive
losses in the PCB at the price of it being
a lot harder to solder due to the thick
copper acting as a heatsink (although
that will have benefits during operation, drawing heat away from components faster).
It is evident that at high currents,
even an ‘ideal diode’ warrants careful
attention to power ratings, losses and
dissipation. But these are reduced to
a level where a practical solution can
be developed. We recommend that you
pay careful attention to losses and heat
if you use this at really high currents.
At least verify that the chosen module
doesn’t get overly hot at your expected
maximum current draw.
Waveforms & verification
Figs.3 & 4 show the input, output
and gate drive waveforms for the Ideal
Bridge Rectifier operating at 4A RMS.
Note that the AC input is offset -2V to
allow a clearer view – there is so little voltage drop across the Mosfet that
the output visually ‘tracks’ the input
AC much of the time. The gate drive
is over 10V, so the Mosfet is switched
fully on.
To illustrate the low voltage drop
across the power Mosfet even at 4A,
Fig.5 shows the input and output
waveforms with no offset.
Figs.6-11: use these overlay diagrams to guide the component placement on each version. The four smaller PCBs have
components on both sides. Generally, it’s best to fit all the SMDs on one side, then all the SMDs on the other, then any
remaining through-hole parts. Note that while we’ve specified non-polarised ceramic 10μF capacitors for the first four
variants, tantalums are shown in case you want to use them, in which case they must be orientated as shown.
38
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Having built the modules, we
decided to run some extreme tests as
we didn’t want our readers to make
them only to have them blow up!
We loaded the 28mm bridge design
(KBPC3504 compatible) to draw 5A
RMS from a toroidal transformer
and left it running for several hours.
The Ideal Rectifier stabilised at 42°C.
Ramping the current to 8A led to it
reaching 72°C, which is not unreasonable for the current.
Swapping in a regular KBPC3504
at 4A without heatsinking, it reached
79°C after a few minutes.
As shown earlier, we ‘upgraded’
our Dual Hybrid Power Supply with
Ideal Rectifiers, which saves 10W of
heat per board at full output or 20W
in total. For this, we used the PB1004
format modules and soldered them
on leads directly to the PCB, as at 5A,
they do not get hot enough to demand
a heatsink.
During testing, we had a test setup
with a 12V AC output transformer,
an Ideal Bridge Rectifier and a 22mF
capacitor. Things were going great
until we reduced the load resistance
to somewhere near 1W, and the output
voltage dropped below 9V due to the
capacitor discharging between cycles.
The LT4320 stopped driving the
Mosfets, and instead of there being
20mV across them, there was suddenly
about 1V across the body diodes at
about 15A. The smoke quickly escaped
from the DPAK Mosfets. We recommend that you avoid that situation.
Construction
With so few parts on the board,
construction is straightforward. Refer
to the PCB overlay diagram(s) for
whichever version(s) you are building, shown in Figs.6-11.
The principal challenge is that for
all but the TO-220 version, we’re using
the LT4320 IC in an MSOP-12 package
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.5: the same
waveforms as in
Fig.2 but without
the -2V offset on
the AC input.
The IPP083N10N
Mosfets on this
board stabilised
at 38°C in the lab.
The dummy load,
on the other hand,
measured 130°C.
with a thermal pad on its base. This
thermal pad makes this part a tad
harder to solder than your average
SOIC/SOP SMD part. There are two
(or three) practical soldering options:
1. Using a reflow oven. If you
already own one of these, chances are
you are all over how to mount the part.
Each oven has its own quirks, so we
will leave this to you.
2. Use a toaster oven as a ‘bodge’.
You can read articles on turning a
toaster oven into a reflow oven (April &
May 2020; siliconchip.au/Series/343),
but there is also a ‘quick and dirty’
method that works.
Buy a super-cheap toaster oven (we
often see these for sale under $50) and
stick a K-type thermocouple alongside
your board. Apply solder paste to the
pads and carefully place the parts on
top. Preheat the PCB to 100°C in the
oven, then turn the oven up to maximum. Watch closely until the temperature hits 220°C. At this point,
you should have seen the solder flow.
Immediately turn the oven off and
open the door.
3. Use a hot air gun. That is how we
built all the prototypes, to convince
ourselves that it would work for you
(see the photo overleaf). Even though
we have a reflow oven, we often use
the hot air gun as it is quick and easy
Australia's electronics magazine
(they’re also surprisingly inexpensive). We used this technique just for
the LT4320, leaving the easier capacitors and Mosfets to be hand-soldered.
The key steps are:
a
Apply a small amount of solder
paste to each pad and the central thermal pad. Do not overdo this; a modest
smear is sufficient. We use 60/40 tin/
lead solder paste as it melts at a lower
temperature, making it generally easier to work with. Nothing is stopping
you from using lead-free solder, but
remember that it requires higher temperatures.
b
Place the LT4320 using tweezers. There should be sufficient solder
paste to stick in place, but not so much
that it squishes everywhere.
c
Check that the LT4320 is the
right way around. Double-check, as
this is by far the most expensive part
in this project.
d
Put the board on a heat-resistant
surface, such as a PCB off-cut. Do not
use your desk as it will get quite hot!
e
Set your hot air gun to about
300°C.
f
Apply heat to the board in a gentle waving motion from about 15cm
away, so the board around the IC is
heated reasonably evenly. We want to
preheat the board to something in the
region of 100°C over a minute or so.
g
Once the board is well warmed
up, bring the hot air gun to about
5-10cm from the board and work
around the IC. Have your tweezers
handy; if the IC moves a lot, you might
need to nudge it back into position.
Having said that, surface tension will
typically pull it into place if you’re
blowing the air directly from above.
h
Watch the solder paste. As the
board approaches 220°C, you will see
the paste changing from dull granular
material to a shiny liquid. The change
is significant, so you shouldn’t miss it.
December 2023 39
My poor wirewound nichrome dummy load reached 320°C while the Mosfets on
the D2PAK standalone module only reached 67°C.
i
As the solder melts, it also creates a lot of surface tension and will
pull the IC into position.
j
Do not overheat the board. Once
all the solder has reflowed, take the
heat gun away.
k
Allow the board to cool naturally. Do not put any liquid on the
board to accelerate the cooling.
l
You might see several pins with
solder bridges across them. Fold some
solder wick across the tip of your iron
and ‘dab’ the pins to melt the bridge
into the wick. Adding a little flux paste
to the bridge first usually helps. With
a little practise, this is quick and easy.
We get quite a few bridges to fix as we
are too generous with the solder paste!
For the remaining SMD parts, a regular soldering iron works fine. We generally tack down one of the SMD leads
and make sure the part is straight. For
the two-pin passives, all that’s left is
to solder the second lead.
For the Mosfets, apply the iron to
the source (main tab) at the junction
of the tab and the PCB pad. Put a small
amount of solder between the iron and
the tab and wait until the solder flows.
Once both the pad and the component lead are hot, the solder will flow
freely under the component. After
that, you can solder the remaining
small pins.
The 6.3mm spades, screw connectors or wire leads are through-hole
parts, so solder them as usual.
Testing
Soldering the MSOP-12 LT4320 IC using a low-cost hot air ‘rework’ station.
These are invaluable for all sorts of jobs; they make it especially easy to
desolder SMDs. In this case, the killer feature is the ability to heat the IC enough
to solder the pad underneath.
40
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
Testing the Ideal Bridge Rectifier is
not complex and can be undertaken
at low power.
First, connect a 220W 1W resistor
across the output, or an alternative
resistor with a power rating that can
withstand the DC voltage we will
apply in the following steps. Connect
a multimeter across the test resistor
with the meter’s positive line to the
positive output of the ideal bridge
rectifier.
Connect a 12V DC power supply
to the input of the Ideal Bridge Rectifier and verify that the output gives
a +12V reading on the meter. Verify that the voltage drop is less than
100mV. Then swap the polarity of
the input voltage and verify that the
output is still giving a +12V reading
on the meter, and the voltage drop is
still less than 100mV.
If this does not work:
● Check all solder connections.
siliconchip.com.au
● Check the orientation of the
LT4320 IC.
● If using TO-220 Mosfets, check
their orientations.
● If building the through-hole
board, check the orientation of the
electrolytic capacitor.
● Check your test setup; is the
power supply in current limiting?
Check the input voltage.
Using it
Among the six different modules,
you will likely find a ‘drop in’ solution. The SIL and 19mm pin bridges
should solder straight to a PCB that’s
designed for a regular bridge rectifier.
For an audio amplifier, you would
ideally mount two of the standalone
versions in the chassis and run individual windings to each.
Remember that the LT4320 operates
from 9V to 72V. If your output voltage
falls below this, the LT4320 will not
drive the Mosfets, and the bridge will
only operate using the body diodes.
That is OK to get the circuit started,
but at high currents, the dissipation
can be very high.
This is only a concern if your design
uses low rail voltages, or you are likely
to do something as silly as we did
and drive the rectifier so hard that
your capacitor discharges massively
between 50Hz cycles. That won’t
happen in a typical power supply or
power amplifier.
Conclusion
The Ideal Diode Bridge Rectifier can
significantly improve the efficiency of
just about any circuit that requires a
rectifier for only a modest increase in
the device’s overall cost.
Best of all, for devices like power
supplies and audio amplifiers, you
can get even more output voltage or
power than you would with a standard diode-based rectifier.
Don’t forget, though, that for applications like an audio amplifier with
split rails (positive and negative),
unlike a diode-based rectifier, you
will need two of these devices, one for
each supply rail. The transformer also
needs to have two separate secondary
windings. That’s because the control
chip only monitors the voltage across
the upper two Mosfets.
With six different designs in a range
of sizes, current and voltage ratings,
you’re bound to find one that suits
your application.
SC
siliconchip.com.au
Parts List – Ideal Diode Bridge Rectifier
Common parts for versions #1 to #4 (from Mouser, DigiKey or element14)
1 LT4320IMSE#TRPBF ideal bridge controller IC, MSOP-12 (IC1)
1 1μF 100V X7R M3216 SMD ceramic capacitor [CL31B105KCHNNNE]
1 10μF 100V X7S M3225 SMD ceramic capacitor [GRM32EC72A106KE5K]
#1 28mm spade version
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101241, 28 × 28mm
4 6.3mm PCB-mounting vertical spade connectors
[Altronics H2094, pack of 10]
4 TK6R9P08QM,RQ, IPD50N06S4-09 or TK5R1P08QM,RQ
N-channel Mosfets, DPAK/TO-252 (Q1-Q4)
#2 21mm square PCB pin version
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101242, 22 × 22mm
1 10cm length of 1.5mm diameter tinned copper wire
4 TK6R9P08QM,RQ, IPD50N06S4-09 or TK5R1P08QM,RQ
N-channel Mosfets, DPAK/TO-252 (Q1-Q4)
#3 5mm pitch SIL version
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101243, 23 × 20mm
1 10cm length of 1.5mm diameter tinned copper wire
4 TK6R9P08QM,RQ, IPD50N06S4-09 or TK5R1P08QM,RQ
N-channel Mosfets, DPAK/TO-252 (Q1-Q4)
#4 Mini SOT-23 version
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101244, 9 × 15mm
1 10cm length of 0.7-1mm diameter tinned copper wire
4 SI2318DS-GE3, SI2316BDS-T1-BE3 or SI2316BDS-T1-E3
N-channel Mosfets, SOT-23 (Q1-Q4)
#5 Standalone D2PAK SMD version
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101245, 59 × 36mm
2 mini horizontal terminal blocks, 5mm or 5.08mm pitch
1 LT4320IMSE#TRPBF ideal bridge controller IC, MSOP-12 (IC1)
1 1μF 100V X7R M3216 SMD ceramic capacitor [CL31B105KCHNNNE]
1 10μF 100V radial electrolytic capacitor, 2.5mm pitch, ≤6.3mm diameter
[Kemet ESL106M100AE3AA]
4 IPB083N10N3GATMA1 N-channel Mosfets, D2PAK/TO-263 (Q1-Q4)
[ESL106M100AE3AA]
#6 Standalone TO-220 through-hole version
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101246, 38 × 28mm, with 70μm-thick copper
4 6.3mm PCB-mounting vertical spade connectors
[Altronics H2094, pack of 10]
1 LT4320IN8#PBF ideal bridge controller IC, DIP-8 (IC1)
4 TK5R3E08QM,S1X (80V) or RFB7545PbF (60V)
N-channel Mosfets, TO-220 (Q1-Q4)
1 1μF 100V X7R radial ceramic capacitor, 5mm pitch
[RDER72A105K2M1H03A]
1 10μF 100V radial electrolytic capacitor, 2.5mm pitch, ≤6.3mm diameter
[Kemet ESL106M100AE3AA]
Silicon Chip
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a Back Issues
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All back issues after February 2015 are in stock, while most from January 1995 to
December 2014 are available. For a full list of all available issues, visit: siliconchip.com.
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We also sell photocopies of individual articles for those who don’t have a computer
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 41
Part 1 of John Clarke’s
Secure Remote Switch
This UHF remote switch uses a secure rolling code
system. The receiver uses all through-hole parts, fits in a compact plastic
case and can be powered from 12V or 24V DC. Up to 16 transmitters can be
used per receiver; they fit into handy keyfob cases, and you can use a prebuilt transmitter module or discrete components.
T
his project is an update to the Secure
Remote Mains Switch described in
the July & August 2022 issues. It uses
the same rolling code system but the
receiver is smaller and simpler; it is
designed with a DC power supply and
low-voltage switching in mind. That
makes it ideal for applications like a
garage door controller.
Finding new remotes compatible
with many garage door controllers can
be challenging. However, most controllers have terminals for the external
triggering of the garage door, and many
also have 12V or 24V power outputs.
That means you can build the Secure
Remote Switch, wire it to your garage
door controller and add up to 16 more
remotes!
Other potential applications include
gate control, remote operation of door
strikes or switching DC-powered
Transmitter
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
»
Professional keyfob enclosure
Secure rolling code communication
Up to 16 transmitters per receiver
Powered by a 12V 55mAh A23 battery, giving more than two years of life with
typical use
Range: 22m line-of-sight
Standby current: typically 3μA (26mAh/year)
Transmitting current: 10mA average over 1s (2.77μAh per transmission)
Registration current: 10mA average over 2.75s (7.6μAh per registration)
Transmission rate: 976.5 bits/s (1.024ms per bit)
Data encoding: Manchester code with a transmission time of 82ms
Unique code generation: secure UHF rolling code control with 48-bit seed, 24-bit
multiplier and 8-bit increment value
Receiver
»
»
»
»
42
12V or 24V DC operation
Supply current: 15mA with relay off, 45mA with relay on
Relay contact rating: 10A (can handle up to 60V DC/42V AC)
Relay-on timer range: 250ms to 4.5h (see Tables 1 & 4)
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
appliances on and off, such as water
pumps, fans, LED lights etc. It is compatible with most 12V or 24V solar
power systems or can run from mains
power via a suitable supply.
The transmitters have also been
redesigned compared to the 2022 project. There are now two versions: one
that uses a prebuilt 433.9MHz transmitter module and another which is
slightly cheaper to build and uses all
discrete parts for those who like to
‘roll their own’.
Also, the transmitter fits into a nice
little keyfob case that we will supply in
kits for the transmitters. We’ll have kits
for the discrete and module-based versions; the discrete kits are complete,
while the module-based kits come
with everything but the transmitter
module, for compliance reasons (you
can get it from Jaycar or Altronics).
The new transmitters also use small
A23 alkaline batteries rather than lithium coin cells; this is mainly due to
the design of the cases, but it has the
advantage that the quality of A23 alkaline batteries is more consistent than
lithium coin cells. This also avoids the
serious ingestion hazard that coin cells
pose for small children.
The discrete transmitter circuit is
based on the Remote Control Range
siliconchip.com.au
The receiver switches
an onboard SPDT relay when
triggered, either for a fixed time or toggled
with each button press.
Extender (January 2022; siliconchip.
au/Article/15182). However, in that
design, tiny components were used
(some as small as 0.6 × 0.3mm!), which
made it a real challenge to assemble,
even for us. This time, we have used
much larger components that are easier to solder, so only modest soldering
skills are required.
Low-voltage switching
This design can only directly switch
low voltages. You have two options
if you require a remote switch that
controls mains voltage. The simplest
is to build the Secure Mains Switch
described in the July and August
2022 issues (siliconchip.com.au/
Series/383). That project is still perfectly valid, and you can use the transmitters described here with the Mains
Switch receiver if you want to.
Alternatively, you can use the
onboard relay in this design to switch
12V or 24V DC to an external mainsrated relay. It will need to be in its own
box with suitable mains connectors,
wiring and insulation.
We have decided also to offer a
short-form kit for the receiver. You’ll
need to get a handful of parts yourself,
like the case and a few switches, but
the kit will save you time and effort
siliconchip.com.au
gathering the parts to build the Secure
Remote Switch.
Security
The Secure Remote Switch uses
rolling code wireless transmission to
ensure security. That makes it very difficult for someone to trigger the relay
on the receiver without having one of
your registered remotes. So if it is used
to trigger remote-controlled doors,
gates and door strikes, the security of
your home or premises is maintained.
While secure codes are required for
security applications, they also ensure
that a similar remote control does not
inadvertently switch your appliance
on or off. This could happen due to
someone close by controlling their
own equipment. We’ve experienced
spurious operation of security shutters that we think must have been due
to someone using a different remote
nearby. That’s almost impossible with
a rolling code system!
Other controls will not operate the
Switch because the transmitter and
receiver must be paired before they
will work together. Additionally, the
code sent between the transmitter and
receiver changes each time it is used.
That thwarts anyone who might try
to capture the code and subsequently
Australia's electronics magazine
resend it in an attempt to control the
Switch.
Since the captured code immediately becomes obsolete after use,
the Switch will not respond if it is
repeated.
You can also build more than one
Switch without being concerned
about interference between them. The
unique transmission code ensures that
the Switch receiver will not be activated by anything other than one of
the paired handheld remote controls.
The remote control code sent by the
handheld remote units can be considered an electronic lock similar to a
physical key, except that the key and
lock combination changes each time
it is used. For the Switch, this key is a
specific code the transmitter sends to
the receiver. It comprises a long digital data sequence sent in a particular
order over a set period. The code must
be correct for the receiver to respond.
With a fixed remote control code, an
intending thief can receive and store
the code sent by the remote control and
re-transmit it in an attempt to operate
the receiver. However, with a rolling
code, the reused code will not trigger
the receiver because it requires a different code each time.
Each code that’s transmitted differs
markedly from one transmission to the
next. The codes sent are based on an
algorithm (calculation) the transmitter
and receiver have in common.
An initial seed value is based on
a Microchip Unique Identifier (MUI)
value in the transmitter IC. This IC
produces a unique set of values that is
synchronised with the receiver during
registration. These values change each
time the Switch is used. Since the
handheld remote will have a unique
identifier different from any other
handheld remote, the uniqueness of
the code is ensured.
The odds of picking a correct
code at random for our rolling code
Receiver short-form kit (SC6835, $35):
comes with the PCB and most onboard
components, including a 12V or 24V
relay (specify), except receiver module
RX1, switches S1 & S5 and the case.
Discrete transmitter complete kit
(SC6836, $20.00): comes with all parts
including the case.
Module-based transmitter short-form
kit (SC6837, $15.00): comes with all
parts except the transmitter module
but including the case.
December 2023 43
Parts List – Secure Remote Switch (Transmitter)
1 Supertronic PP43 keyfob enclosure
1 A23 12V battery
1 PIC16LF15323-I/SL programmed with 1010923A.HEX, SOIC-14 (IC1)
1 MCP1703-3302E/DB 3.3V low-dropout regulator, SOT-223 (REG1)
[element14 2113888]
1 1N5819 40V 1A schottky diode (D1)
3 SPST two-pin momentary PCB-mount tactile switches (S1-S3)
[Jaycar SP0611, Altronics S1127]
1 3mm high-brightness red or green LED (LED1)
2 1μF 25V SMD X7R ceramic capacitors, M3216/1206 size
2 100nF 50V SMD X7R ceramic capacitors, M3216/1206 size
1 220W 1% SMD resistor, M3216/1206 size
– up to 16 transmitters can be used per receiver
Extra parts for the module-based version
1 double-sided PCB coded 10109232, 29.8 × 39.4mm
1 433.9MHz UHF ASK transmitter module (TX1)
[Jaycar ZW3100, Altronics Z6900]
1 147mm length of 0.8mm enamelled copper wire
Extra parts for the discrete version
1 double-sided PCB coded 10109233, 29.8 × 39.4mm
1 MICRF113YM6 UHF ASK transmitter, SOT-23-6 (IC2) [element14 2810141]
1 13.56MHz 5 x 3.2mm SMD crystal (X1) [element14 1611805]
1 470nH SMD inductor, 610MHz SRF, M2012/0805 size (L1)
[Coilcraft 0805HT-R47TJLB; element14 2286517]
1 68nH SMD inductor, 1.7GHz SRF, M1608/0603 size (L2)
[Coilcraft 0603CS-68NXJLU; element14 2286005]
1 1μF 25V SMD X7R ceramic capacitor, M3216/1206 size
2 18pF 50V SMD C0G/NP0 ceramic capacitors, M3216/1206 size
1 12pF 50V SMD C0G/NP0 ceramic capacitor, M3216/1206 size
1 5pF 50V SMD C0G/NP0 ceramic capacitor, M3216/1206 size
1 167mm length of 0.8mm diameter enamelled copper wire
transmitter is one in 2.8 trillion, making any attempt to break the code by
sending out guessed codes unrealistic. The code must also be sent at
the correct data rate, with the correct start and stop bit codes and other
transmission requirements, including
data scrambling that changes for each
transmission.
Other features
Our Switch system has two parts:
a professional keyfob-style transmitter and a separate receiver. The keyfob has three pushbutton switches
and an acknowledge LED that briefly
lights each time one of the switches
is pressed. Up to 16 different keyfob
transmitters can be used with one
receiver.
The receiver has a 10A-rated relay,
making it suitable for switching many
items. Relays with even higher ratings
(eg, 16A) are available if needed. The
relay can be controlled by a remote
control or a switch on the receiver, and
either way, it can be toggled on and off,
or switched on for a fixed time. The
on-period can be adjusted from 250ms
to 4.5 hours in two ranges.
Security and registration
Each keyfob transmitter is allocated
an Identity number from 0 to 15, set by
coding links on the PCB. Each transmitter is registered to the receiver by
sending a synchronising code to the
receiver when the receiver is in registration or learning mode.
A facility is included to lock out a
particular transmitter after registration. This is useful if a transmitter
has been lost. If the lost transmitter is
found, it can be easily re-registered.
If the identity of the lost transmitter
is not known, all transmitters can be
locked out, and the ones still in use
can be re-registered.
Circuit details
Fig.1: in the module-based transmitter circuit, microcontroller IC1
monitors buttons S1-S3. When one is pressed, it lights LED1, powers up the
transmitter module by bringing its pins 8 and 9 high, then produces the ASK
data to transmit at its pin 3. When finished, it brings pins 5, 8 and 9 low
again and returns to sleep mode.
44
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
The transmitter circuits are shown
in Figs.1 & 2. They have many common
parts; each mainly comprises a microcontroller, IC1, and a 433.9MHz UHF
transmitter. The UHF transmitter can
be either a prebuilt module (Fig.1) or
a discrete circuit using a Micrel UHF
transmitter IC and associated inductors and capacitors (Fig.2).
Both versions have the same transmission range and fit into the same
keyfob enclosure. So which version
you wish to build depends on whether
siliconchip.com.au
you prefer to source the module or
solder the discrete parts onto the
PCB. The discrete version does
have the advantage of potentially
being less costly. Both versions
utilise a similar wire coil antenna.
The PIC16LF15323 was chosen
for IC1 due to its very low standby
current and the inclusion of a unique
identifier called the Microchip
Unique Identifier (MUI). We use the
MUI to generate a unique rolling code
sequence for each IC; no two transmitters will have the same sequence.
IC1 is usually kept in sleep mode
with its internal oscillator stopped
and most of its internal circuitry
switched off.
Switches S1, S2 and S3 connect to
the RA5, RC4 and RC3 digital inputs
of IC1, which have internal pullup currents enabled, so those pins are usually high but are pulled low when a
button is pressed.
The Identity links (1, 2, 4 & 8) connect to the RA0, RA1, RA2 and RC0
digital inputs, respectively. These are
used to differentiate between multiple transmitters used with a given
receiver. If only one transmitter is
used, it can be set to Identity 0, so
none of the Identity pins need to be
connected to ground.
At power-up, each Identity input is
held high by pullup currents/resistors
(within IC1) to the 3.3V rail, similar to
the pushbutton inputs. The software
then switches off the pullup current
for any identity input that is found to
The module-based (left) and discrete
(right) versions of the transmitter PCB
shown enlarged. We have used an A23
12V battery, which fits snugly with the
recommended battery clips.
be at a low level. That prevents the IC
from continuously sourcing current
from those pins, which would otherwise add some 25-200μA battery draw
per Identity input that’s tied low.
The pullups for pushbutton
switches S1-S3 are left on permanently since they are only pressed
momentarily. IC1 is programmed
to wake up from its sleep condition
when any one of switches S1-S3 is
pressed and the corresponding input
goes low. It then runs the program to
send the rolling code for the function
associated with the pressed switch.
When a button is pressed, the
micro drives its RC2 and RC1 digital outputs high, to 3.3V. These
are connected in parallel to power
the UHF transmitter (module or
discrete components). This way,
UHF transmit circuitry only draws
current from the battery when it is
in use.
With the transmitter powered up,
IC1 sends the rolling code and registration codes on the data line from its
digital output RA4 (pin 3). This feeds
the data input of the UHF circuitry.
UHF code transmission switches
between two different carrier wave
amplitudes, a technique known as
amplitude shift keying (ASK). In this
case, there is no UHF transmission
when the digital signal is low, but
the 433.92MHz carrier is transmitted
when the digital signal is high.
After sending the code, IC1 powers
down the UHF transmitter and returns
to sleep mode.
Discrete UHF circuitry
Referring to the additional UHF
transmission circuitry in Fig.2, the
MICRF113 is a single-chip ASK UHF
transmitter IC. Its transmission frequency is set using a crystal oscillator
multiplied by 32 within IC2 to produce the UHF carrier. So the 13.56MHz
crystal results in a 433.92MHz carrier.
This matches the carrier frequency
used by most UHF ASK transmitter/receiver modules available for
Fig.2: the left side of the discrete version of the transmitter circuit is identical to Fig.1. This time, the MICRF113 ASK IC
generates a 433.9MHz carrier from the 13.56MHz crystal and switches it on and off based on the digital signal at its ASK
input (pin 6). Inductor L1 is its output load, while L2 and the 12pF & 5pF capacitors filter out unwanted harmonics.
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 45
Parts List – Secure Remote Switch (Receiver)
1 double-sided plated-through PCB coded 10109231, 70 × 96.5mm
1 set of front and rear panel labels
1 Ritec 105 × 80 × 33mm plastic enclosure [Altronics H0191]
1 433.9MHz UHF ASK receiver (RX1) [Jaycar ZW3102, Altronics Z6905A]
1 10A SPDT relay (12V or 24V coil) (RLY1) [Jaycar SY4066 (12V) / SY4067
(24V), Altronics S4160C (12V) / S4162C (24V)]
1 subminiature SPDT PCB-mount momentary horizontal pushbutton switch
(S1) [Altronics S1498]
1 button cap for S1 [Altronics S1481]
2 SPST PCB-mount tactile micro switches (S2, S3)
[Jaycar SP0600, Altronics S1120]
1 4-bit (0-9 & A-F) 6-pin BCD PCB-mount rotary switch (S4)
[Jaycar SR1220, Altronics S3000A]
1 subminiature SPDT PCB-mount horizontal toggle switch (S5)
[Altronics S1421]
1 PCB-mount barrel socket, 2.1mm or 2.5mm inner diameter (CON1)
1 2-way screw terminal, 5/5.08mm pitch (CON2)
1 3-way screw terminal, 5/5.08mm pitch (CON3)
1 10kW miniature single-turn top-adjust trimpot (code 103) (VR1)
3 2-way pin headers, 2.54mm pitch (JP1-JP3)
3 jumper shunts (JP1-JP3)
1 20-pin DIL IC socket (for IC1)
1 PG7 (3-6.5mm cable) or PG9 (4-8mm cable) cable gland for rear panel
1 169mm length of 0.8mm diameter enamelled copper wire
1 169mm length of 1mm diameter heatshrink tubing (optional)
Semiconductors
1 PIC16F1459-I/P programmed with 1010923R.HEX, DIP-20 (IC1)
1 7805 5V 1A linear regulator, TO-220 (REG1)
1 BC337 500mA NPN transistor, TO-92 (Q1)
2 1N4004 400V 1A diodes, DO-41 (D1, D2)
1 3mm high-brightness red LED (LED1)
2 5mm high-brightness LEDs (eg, red & green) (LED2, LED3)
Capacitors
1 100μF 25V PC electrolytic ●
1 100μF 16V PC electrolytic
1 10μF 35V PC electrolytic ●
2 100nF MKT polyester or ceramic (code 104 or 100n)
● can be 16V rated for 12V supply
Resistors (all 1/4W, 1% metal film unless noted)
5 10kW
3 560W
1 330W
470W 1W for 24V supply, 100W 1/2W for 12V supply (R1)
low-power UHF data transmission.
IC2’s power rail at pin 3 is bypassed
with 100nF & 1μF ceramic capacitors
while the supply current for IC2’s RF
output stage is via a 470nH inductor
acting as a driver load. The following
12pF series capacitor and 68nH inductor plus the 5pF capacitor to ground
act as a filter to remove second and
third harmonics from the UHF signal
before it passes to the antenna.
Any inductor used for the output
stage and filter circuit must have a
self-resonance (SR) frequency above
433.92MHz; otherwise, it will not
function as an inductor at that frequency. This is a critical requirement
for any substitute components to those
specified in the parts list.
Power supply
In both cases, IC1 is powered using
an A23 12V battery and a 3.3V low-
quiescent-current low-dropout voltage regulator (REG1). This supplies
the UHF transmitter section as well
as the microcontroller. REG1 typically
draws a 2μA quiescent current at 25°C,
although that could be as high as 5μA
over the range of -40°C to +125°C.
With IC1 in sleep mode, it draws a
typical standby current of 60nA from
its 3.3V supply and so can essentially
be ignored compared to the regulator’s
quiescent current.
We measured the quiescent current
draw from the 12V battery on our two
prototypes at 2.7μA and 3μA, respectively. When a switch is pressed on
the transmitter, that increases but only
briefly, so that does not affect the longterm battery life much.
During transmission, the current
draw from the battery briefly rises to
about 10mA. If you keep holding one
of the buttons down after the transmission is complete, the current will
drop to about 220μA until the button
is released. This is due to the pushbutton switch pullup current.
Considering the low quiescent current and intermittent bursts of higher
current when transmitting, battery life
should be more than two years with
typical use.
Receiver circuit
The rear of the receiver case includes the power socket and cable glands for
wiring to the relay terminals.
46
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
The receiver circuit (Fig.3) uses
a PIC16F1459-I/P microcontroller
(IC1) and UHF receiver module with
an onboard wire antenna to provide a
good reception range.
When no signal is present, the
siliconchip.com.au
receiver’s output produces random
noise since the module’s automatic
gain control (AGC) is at its maximum.
Upon reception of a 433.92MHz signal, the receiver gain is reduced for
best reception without overload, and
the coded signal from the data output
of the module is delivered to the RC7
digital input of IC1 (pin 9).
IC1 flashes the Acknowledge LED
(LED2) whenever a valid signal is
received. This also doubles as a
relay-on indicator. It is lit when the
relay is on and off when the relay is off.
The RC5 digital output of IC1 (pin
5) drives NPN transistor Q1, which
switches the relay coil. When RC5 goes
high, it delivers current to transistor
Q1’s base, and Q1 powers RLY1. Diode
D2 clamps the back-EMF that causes a
voltage spike at the collector of Q1 as
the relay switches off. The relay contacts are rated at 10A for AC or DC.
The unit can be set up to power
the relay for a fixed period when a
transmitter button is pressed (or S1 on
the receiver) or toggle it on or off for
each button press. This on/off functionality can be set differently for the
transmitter buttons and the onboard
pushbutton, S1. Since the transmitters have three buttons, they can provide different functions (more on that
shortly).
When jumper JP3 is closed, the relay
switches on with one press of onboard
button S1 and off with the next. When
JP3 is open, the relay is switched on
for a fixed time with a press of S1 and
switches off automatically at the end
of this period – see Table 3.
The remote control has three buttons; usually, S1 on the remote
switches the relay on, and it is then
switched off with the timer. S2
switches it on continuously (or for a
much longer time if JP2 is inserted),
and S3 switches it off – see Table 2.
The timer period is set using trimpot VR1. The trimpot wiper can be
Table 1 – JP1 timer settings
JP1 Timer range
Out 0.25-60s (1x)
In 1m-4.5h (255x)
Table 2 – JP2 settings
TX Function with Function
button JP2 out
with JP2 in
S1 Relay on with Relay on
a timer, range with a timer,
per JP1
0.25-60s
S2 Relay on
continuously
Relay on
with a timer,
1m-4.5h
S3 Relay off
Relay off
adjusted from 0V through to 5V; this
voltage is monitored at the AN6 analog input of IC1, which converts the
voltage into setting a period from 0.25
seconds to 60 seconds or one minute
to four hours and 30 minutes, depending on the settings of JP1 & JP2 (see
Tables 1 & 2).
Fig.3: the receiver circuit is based on a prebuilt 433.9MHz receiver module, shown at left, and a 20-pin 8-bit PIC
microcontroller, IC1. When IC1 receives a valid rolling code, it brings its pin 5 high to power NPN transistor Q1 which
switches the relay coil. The relay is a 12V or 24V DC coil type to match the supply voltage.
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 47
Table 3 – JP3 settings
JP3 Onboard S1 function
Rolling code transmission format
The rolling code is transmitted using UHF ASK in Manchester code. A zerobit is sent as a 512μs period of no transmission followed by a 512μs burst
of 433.9MHz carrier. In contrast, a one-bit is transmitted as a 512μs burst of
433.9MHz carrier followed by a 512μs period of no signal.
Each transmission consists of four start bits, an eight-bit identifier, a 48-bit
code and four stop bits, for a total of 64 bits. The start bits include a 16.4ms
gap between the second and third start bit, while the code scramble value is
altered on each transmission with 32 variations.
Unique codes are generated with a 48-bit seed, 24-bit multiplier & 8-bit increment value. That is initially set by a unique identifier within IC1 on the transmitter.
The registration code is sent as two blocks. Block 1 sends four start bits,
the eight-bit identifier, a 32-bit seed code and four stop bits. Block 2 sends four
start bits, the 24-bit multiplier, the eight-bit increment and eight-bit scramble
values and four stop bits. Again, the start bits include a 16.4ms gap between
the second and third start bit.
IC1’s digital input RC0 for JP1 has
an external 10kW pullup resistor. If JP1
is inserted, this pin is held low. IC1
senses that and, in that case, changes
the maximum timer setting from one
minute to 4 hours and 30 minutes.
You can monitor the timer setting
voltage between test points TP1 and
GND. Table 4 shows the typical periods for five different voltages in each
range.
Transmitter Identity
The receiver Identity selection is
made using a BCD rotary switch (S4)
with 16 positions, labelled 0-9 and
then A-F. Those hexadecimal values
correspond to 0-15 in decimal, with
A-F representing 10-15. This switch
is only monitored by IC1 for lockout
Out Off if already on, otherwise
on for a time set by JP1 and
VR1 (see Table 1)
In Toggle on/off
Table 4 – period vs TP1 voltage
TP1 Time with
JP1 out
0V 0.25s
Time with
JP1 in
1m
1.25V 15s
1h 7.5m
2.5V 30s
2h 15m
3.75V 45s
5V 60s
3h 22.5m
4h 30m
selections; it plays no part in the keyfob transmitter registration.
S4’s four contacts connect to the
RB7, RB6, RB5 and RB4 digital inputs
of IC1. These all have internal pullups,
so the inputs are at 5V when the corresponding switch is not closed. All four
inputs are high when the BCD switch
is set at 0. Position 1 on the switch
has the ‘1’ output at RB7 pulled low,
while position 15 (or F) sets all four
pins to 0V.
be acknowledged by the Learn/Clear
LED (LED1) lighting. Table 5 shows
the identity selection coding for both
the transmitter and receiver.
The Learn switch (S2) tells the program within IC1 to be ready to accept
the synchronising signal from a handheld remote. The Learn/Clear LED
(LED1) stays lit while waiting for a
signal from the remote unit. It extinguishes once the synchronising signal
has been correctly received.
Deregistration & registration
Power supply
S3 is used for deregistering a transmitter. Pressing S3 for more than one
second will deregister the transmitter specified by the BCD switch, preventing it from operating the receiver
again. Successful deregistration will
Receiver
Transmitter
Transmitter
Transmitter
Transmitter
S4
‘1’
‘2’
‘4’
‘8’
0
open
open
open
open
1
shorted
open
open
open
2
open
shorted
open
open
3
shorted
shorted
open
open
4
open
open
shorted
open
5
shorted
open
shorted
open
6
open
shorted
shorted
open
7
shorted
shorted
shorted
open
8
open
open
open
closed
9
shorted
open
open
closed
A (10)
open
shorted
open
shorted
B (11)
shorted
shorted
open
shorted
C (12)
open
open
shorted
shorted
D (13)
shorted
open
shorted
shorted
E (14)
open
shorted
shorted
shorted
The receiver can be powered from
12V or 24V DC, from a DC plugpack or
similar DC supply; some garage door
controllers have DC supply terminals
that could also be used. Regardless of
the source, power can be connected
via CON1 (a barrel socket) or two-way
screw terminal CON2.
Reverse polarity protection is via
diode D1, which only allows current
to flow into the circuit if the supply
polarity is correct.
The relay has a 12V or 24V DC coil,
matching supply voltage. For 24V, a
470W 1W resistor (R1) reduces the voltage applied to 5V regulator REG1. For
a 12V DC input, a 100W ½W resistor
is used instead.
The 470W resistor reduces the dissipation in REG1 when the supply is
at 24V. This resistor also filters the DC
supply to REG1 in conjunction with
the 100μF input capacitor, removing
most of the noise from a switchmode
supply that could otherwise affect the
UHF receiver sensitivity.
Note that for a 24V DC supply, the
100μF capacitor is rated at 25V, and
the 10μF capacitor bypassing the relay
supply is 35V. For a 12V supply, the
capacitors can all be rated at 16V. SC
F (15)
shorted
shorted
shorted
shorted
siliconchip.com.au
Table 5 – Transmitter Identity selection
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Shenzhen’s
Electronics Markets
By Edison Zhang
Have you ever seen an entire shopping mall dedicated to electronics?
Shenzhen has two right next to each other! The larger one features not just
consumer electronics like cameras, drones and so on but also bustling floors
full of almost every electronic component you can think of.
T
he Huaqiangbei Commercial Street market is
described as the world’s largest electronics market.
It is about six stories tall, with component sales mainly occurring on the ground floor and a couple of floors above it. Beyond
that, the shops mostly sell consumer electronics. While that isn’t
what I went there to see, they are well worth a visit, especially
the drone vendors.
One of the things you’ll immediately notice upon entering the
ground floor is shop after shop packed to the rafters with reels and
boxes of components. Another is the people constantly wheeling
trolleys full of boxes of components in and out. There must be
millions of individual parts on some of those trolleys!
While there is a lot of wholesale-type activity, the market is
open to the public, and any vendor will happily deal with you.
The local dialect is Cantonese, although many people also speak
Mandarin. It is possible to shop at the market even if you can’t
speak either language, especially if you have a smartphone equipped
with a translation app. A human translator would be even better. I
found one large vendor selling semiconductors with an employee
who could speak English fairly well, but it is uncommon.
In some cases, the vendors are happy to sell you just a handful of
parts, but many of them deal in volume. While you don’t need to
buy full reels or boxes of parts, you might need to start at around
a hundred pieces. Don’t feel that would be too expensive, though;
depending on what they are, those hundred parts might only cost
you one or two Australian dollars; sometimes less than a dollar!
Reels with thousands of components that, in my estimation,
were of decent quality started at around $10.
Shops in the market tend to be specialised; for example, many of
siliconchip.com.au
the shops sell just one or two of the following component types:
◼ SMD ceramic capacitors
◼ SMD resistors
◼ Inductors
◼ Transformers
◼ SMD transistors
◼ SMD ICs
◼ LEDs
◼ Switches
◼ Solid electrolytic capacitors
◼ Through-hole plastic film and ceramic capacitors
◼ Crystals
◼ USB and SD connectors
◼ Cables
Where is Shenzhen?
The Chinese city of Shenzhen in Guangdong province was created to complement neighbouring Hong Kong. When Hong Kong
was still under British rule, they created a ‘special economic zone’
outside its borders, right next to the ‘New Territories’ of Hong
Kong, to bring similar economic benefits. The Sham Chun River
separates Shenzhen and Hong Kong.
Today, both cities are part of the Pearl River Delta region, a
densely populated area with around 85 million people. It has significant industry, including electronics manufacturing. There are
11 major cities in this area, but a lot of the PCB manufacturing
and electronics assembly is concentrated in and around Shenzhen.
Hong Kong has a great deal of economic activity. Still, with its
relatively limited land area, it is more of an international trade
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 57
The markets are housed in a building that spans a small road.
Electric scooters are popular here!
The other side of the building. Some entrances are at ground
level while others take you straight up a floor or two.
and finance hub (like London or New York) than a manufacturing
powerhouse. Most of the manufacturing occurs in the adjacent
mainland China area.
will see those types in large numbers, even though you might not
have heard of them.
For example, the S8050 NPN transistor is quite popular there,
with several vendors selling it in quantity. They are rated at 20V
and 700mA, so they are useful as general-purpose NPN transistors in low-voltage circuits, where we might use a BC328 (25V,
800mA) instead.
Similarly, in terms of Mosfets, certain types will crop up often,
usually from the AO (Alpha & Omega brand) or Si (Vishay Siliconix) series; for example, the AO3400-3407 series are popular
high-current Mosfets in SOT-23 SMD packages. I am unsure if these
are genuine brand-name parts or clones, but from the testing I’ve
done, they meet all the relevant specifications.
ICs and regulators are similar; you will find a certain subset of
parts that Chinese manufacturers appear to have standardised on
are widely available, while other parts that you might be used to
seeing will be special-order types.
Available brands
You might be wondering whether the parts sold at the markets
are genuine brand-name devices, or some sort of clone/knockoff.
Virtually all the parts I saw seemed genuine, although they didn’t
always have the expected branding. In some cases, it had been
purposefully removed or crossed out, possibly to avoid betraying
the ‘grey market’ source of these parts. By that, I mean that they
likely come from a factory making brand-name parts, but perhaps
not through official sales channels that the manufacturer endorses.
Some of the brands that I saw represented at the markets
included AVX, EPCOS, Kemet, muRata, Panasonic, Samsung, TDK,
Vishay, Wima & Yageo (capacitors), Abracon (crystals), Atmel, Analog Devices, Fairchild, Infineon, Maxim, Nexperia, onsemi, Rohm, ST
Micro, Texas Instruments & Toshiba (semiconductors) and MEAN
WELL (power supplies).
Subjectively, the quality of everything I saw was good. For example, the USB connectors didn’t have a brand name I recognised.
However, the materials used seemed appropriate, and the forming
of all the leads, shells, plastic mouldings and so on appeared to be
done with as much accuracy as you’d want for such complex and
detailed assemblies.
Similarly, the semiconductors I saw were in modern packages
loaded into reels on tape, and they all appeared to have good lead
finish, plastic package deflashing and so on. It’s clear that they are
being made in modern factories with up-to-date equipment.
I would have no hesitation buying and using the parts sold by
most vendors there, as long as you use common sense. It’s clear
that many manufacturers are buying these parts by the thousands,
if not millions. They would be rightly upset if they made a heap
of TVs, computers or similar, only to discover that even a small
percentage didn’t work!
China is full of factories, including numerous silicon fabs, many
of which are in the Pearl River Delta and crank out components
by the millions. There’s a lot of competition, and I don’t think anyone selling sub-par parts would survive for long.
Still, the markets are probably not for you if you need your
parts to come with an audit trail. You’re better off ordering from
a vendor like DigiKey, Mouser or element14.
One thing that takes a little getting used to is that what is considered a ‘standard’ part in China is a little different from in Australia or New Zealand. Manufacturers there have clearly settled
on specific parts or series and stuck with them. As a result, you
58
Silicon Chip
The AliExpress connection
I have no proof of this, but I suspect that many electronics vendors on websites like AliExpress and eBay, a significant proportion
of which are based in Shenzhen, are official or unofficial agents
for the markets.
Locals could easily make money by advertising products they see
at the markets on one of those websites at a markup. If someone
places an order, they can pop down to the markets, make a purchase and stick it in an envelope addressed to you. They probably
do the same for many people all at once for greater time efficiency.
I even noticed shops in the markets selling packing materials like
I took this photo early, with some shops yet to open. Check out
how many reels are in the small shop on the right!
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
The upper floor shops mostly sell consumer electronics and
gadgets. Watch out for knockoffs, unless that’s what you’re after!
Some of the large component vendors also have shops upstairs,
which they seem to use as local warehouses.
boxes and bubble wrap. It’s possible that people can fulfil orders
on eCommerce platforms without having to go very far outside
of the market building.
but it is still worth visiting. I noticed more hifi stores there compared to Huaqiangbei, for example, plus plenty of shops selling
devices like cameras and smartphones.
Buying from the market
Local area
While many vendors will accept cash payments, it is more common to pay with a smartphone app like AliPay or WeChat (which
isn’t just a messaging app). Both are very convenient for buyers
and sellers and generally involve one or the other scanning a QR
code with their phone or POS system.
You need a Chinese mobile phone number to set up either app,
but AliPay now has an English translation. Once in China, it is possible to set up the app and transfer some money from your bank
account. That makes purchases much easier throughout China,
as virtually all shops offer those two apps as payment options.
One of the vendors told me renovations are planned for the
lower floor of the markets in late 2023, so they could have changed
somewhat by the time this article is published. Still, given how
much activity I saw going on there and the evident links to manufacturing, I expect most of the same vendors will be back once
renovations are complete.
If you want to visit the Huaqiangbei markets, there is an excellent four-star hotel right next door called the Huaqiang Plaza
Hotel. It is affordable by Australian standards. The Hotel and the
markets are just off Huangqiang Lu, a pedestrian mall with many
shops, restaurants and attractions. So there are plenty of other
things to see in the area and it is quite tourist-friendly.
Like Hong Kong, Shenzhen is an international city where Westerners will feel somewhat at home, although it is not exactly a
tourist destination. Still, as I wrote earlier, don’t expect many people to speak English. I found it easy to get around Japan without
understanding Japanese (there are many English signs there), but I
cannot say the same about China (yet).
Conclusion
Another building called the Seg Communication Market is across
the street from the Huaqiangbei Commercial Street market (www.
hqew.com). It is located at 1015 Hua Qiang Bei Lu, Futian District, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China 518028 (https://maps.app.
goo.gl/fAAKEci7fFjkqG7V7).
It is smaller and is mainly concentrated on consumer electronics,
I really enjoyed looking around the Shenzhen electronics markets to see what was available. The massive amount of parts surrounding you makes you feel like a kid in a lolly shop. If you are
travelling to Asia, it is very much worth a visit.
If you plan to visit Shenzhen from Hong Kong, although they
are right next to each other and part of the same country, they
operate under the ‘one country, two systems’ scheme.
Other places you could consider visiting if in the area include
Foshan (famous for food, ceramics & martial arts), Guangzhou
SC
(zoo, architecture & shopping) and Macao (casinos).
This photograph gives you a good idea of how many components
are going in and out at one time.
While I visited the markets, the ground floor was filled with
smaller stalls packed with electronic components.
The Seg electronics market
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 59
Part 1 by Tim Blythman
Many people now have home theatre/
surround sound systems and need to
control the volume of six or more audio
channels. This Multi-Channel Volume
Control has a touchscreen and receives
infrared remote signals. It can be
expanded up to 20 channels, although
six or eight will suit most applications.
Multi-Channel
Volume Control
T
he Multi-Channel Volume Control can
be built as a stand-alone unit in its
own enclosure, or as a modular system that can be incorporated into a
multi-channel preamplifier or amplifier. It can control up to 20 channels
in synchrony.
A microcontroller senses inputs
from the touchscreen, rotary encoder
or infrared remote control and drives
digital potentiometers to control the
volume of each channel.
One of the reasons behind this project was our publication of the Hummingbird Amplifier module in the
December 2021 issue (siliconchip.
au/Article/15126). That small, lowcost 100W amplifier module makes it
easy to build an amplifier with four,
six or even more channels. You need
something like this design to adjust the
volume of all those modules together.
The alternative would be a fourganged or six-ganged potentiometer,
but then you would have poor tracking and messy wiring. Pots can also go
scratchy after a while, unlike a digital
pot, which generally continues working flawlessly for decades.
This design is based on the Touchscreen Digital Preamp (September &
October 2021; siliconchip.com.au/
Fig.1: the performance is similar to the Touchscreen Digital
Preamp, with THD+N typically less than 0.002% across
much of the range. The dashed lines show the degradation
with 1μF ceramic coupling caps instead of 2.2μF tantalums.
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Silicon Chip
Series/370), which only sports two
channels and is not expandable.
Besides this design, another option
is Phil Prosser’s “The Digital Potentiometer” (March 2023; siliconchip.
au/Article/15693). While it is a two-
channel design, it does allow you to
gang up multiple boards. However, it
is a more ‘bare bones’ design than this
one, lacking the touchscreen option or
any onboard audio sockets.
Performance
The Multi-Channel Volume Control is based on a Baxandall-style volume control circuit but uses a digital
Fig.2: a plot of THD+N against input level. The sweet spot
for input levels is ~1.5V, but anywhere in the range of 1-2.3V
RMS is fine. Above 2.3V RMS starts to cause clipping while
lower levels suffer due to the closer noise floor.
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siliconchip.com.au
potentiometer rather than the regular
kind. Handily, this circuit provides a
logarithmic response from a linearly
changing resistance, making it easy
to map the volume settings to levels
in decibels.
Figs.1-4 show the resulting performance. Fig.1 plots total harmonic distortion plus noise (THD+N) against frequency for an input signal level of 1.6V
RMS. As you’d expect, the plots are
similar to those for the Touchscreen
Digital Preamp.
The red plot was taken with a
20Hz-22kHz bandwidth, which best
represents the normal audible range
and thus what you would hear.
The cyan/blue plot was taken with
a wider bandwidth, up to 80kHz,
which includes the harmonics of
higher-frequency signals. They are not
directly audible but could intermodulate to affect audible frequencies.
As you can see, THD+N is below
0.001% for up to 2kHz and below
0.002% up to about 7kHz.
Fig.2 shows the total harmonic distortion plus noise (THD+N) against
signal level for three volume (gain)
settings. The distortion is higher at
lower signal levels as the fixed noise
dominates the smaller signals. The
sharp rise around 2.5V RMS is where
the Volume Control enters clipping.
The sweet spot is with an input signal around 1.5V RMS.
Fig.3 shows the crosstalk between
channels. The two plots show the
extremes that can be expected within
a single Volume Module (explained
Features & Specifications
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Can control the volume of four, eight, 12, 16 or 20 channels
RCA sockets for inputs and outputs
Volume levels/gain settings: mute (-100dB) and -48dB to +16dB
1dB or smaller steps from -30dB to +16dB
Digital controls, including touchscreen, rotary encoder and IR remote
2.8in LCD screen shows the volume and mute status
Can be programmed to support many NEC-compatible IR codes
Each channel can have a preset offset applied
Volume and mute settings kept in EEPROM for next power on
Optional small OLED status display with rotary encoder
THD+N: typically less than 0.002% (see Fig.1)
Channel separation: >80dB (see Fig.3)
Signal handling: 0.1-2.5V RMS
Image source: unsplash.com/photos/HLhmbBw6xpY
later). The cyan/blue plot shows the
crosstalk from adjacent channels and
is around -80dB or better; these channels share some components. The red
plot shows the separation between
channels at opposite ends of a module, which is a little better.
Fig.4 shows the frequency responses
at three gain settings: +5dB (red), 0dB
(green) and -5dB (cyan/blue). There is
a slight but uniform roll-off at lower
frequencies, but the level difference
is uniform across the audible band. In
other words, the volume adjustment is
consistent, as is expected.
Modular design
While we are boasting up to 20 channels, most constructors will not need
that many. So rather than offering a
design based around a single PCB,
Fig.3: channel separation is about 80dB at worst and only
for adjacent channels that share an op amp in their audio
paths.
siliconchip.com.au
the Volume Control is modular. The
three modules are the Control/Power
Supply Module, the four-channel Volume Module and an optional OLED
Module.
The main Control and Power Supply
Module incorporates a microcontroller
that converts the user input into the
necessary actions to implement the
volume control. It also contains all
the power supply circuitry needed to
drive any other connected modules.
The power supply section only
needs a 12V AC supply, which can
be provided from a small mains transformer or AC plugpack if your system doesn’t already have a suitable
source. You probably won’t need a
separate transformer if your system
has a larger transformer incorporating
12V AC taps.
Fig.4: a frequency response plot at three different volume
settings (-5dB, 0dB and +5dB). There is only a slight roll-off
at the bottom end, and the effect of the volume settings is
very uniform across the spectrum.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 61
The Control and
Power Supply Module has
parts on both sides. This side mostly
has the power-supply components.
Although we haven’t tested it, a
pair of ±15V DC rails could be fed to
the Control and Power Supply Module instead.
The Control/Power Supply module
also incorporates an infrared receiver
and a 2.8-inch LCD touchscreen. The
Module’s PCB is the same size as the
LCD panel at 50mm tall, making it a
comfortable fit for a 3U rack case, or
anything taller.
The Volume Module can control
the volume of up to four channels
and incorporates an AD8403 precision quad digital potentiometer. This
Module also has four input and four
output RCA sockets, plus other components to buffer and drive the audio
signal as it passes through.
A third type of module, the OLED
Module, is a simple and compact alternative (or supplement) to the touchscreen display. It includes a small
OLED screen for those who want something smaller and simpler; its input
control is a rotary encoder.
The various modules are connected
by a ribbon cable punctuated by IDC
connectors. This carries all power and
control signals between the modules.
The simplest configuration is a single Control and Power Supply Module with between one and five Volume
Modules, allowing 4-20 channels to
have their levels adjusted as they pass
through.
If the OLED Module is added, only
four volume modules can be connected, which limits the number of
controlled channels to sixteen. Still,
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Silicon Chip
we don’t see that as a major limitation!
Due to the various ways this project can be arranged, and the fact that
many will be building it as part of a
larger system, we will not specify a
particular enclosure. You can choose
an enclosure based on your requirements that will also fit any amplifier
modules, transformers and other necessary bits.
We’ll start by describing how each
module works. Then, next month,
we’ll follow up by outlining the assembly of each type of module, along with
instructions on how they are wired
together, tested and used.
Control and Power
Supply Module
Fig.5 is the circuit diagram for the
Control and Power Supply Module. It
receives 12V AC via CON7 or CON8.
CON7 is a barrel socket and thus can
only accept a single 12V AC input. On
the other hand, CON8 has three terminals and is intended to connect to
a 24V AC centre-tapped transformer,
or two 12V AC phases; however, you
could connect a single winding via
CON8 if that’s all you had.
Either way, the AC supply passes
through bridge rectifier BR1 and a
pair of 1000µF electrolytic capacitors
to provide a nominally ±17V DC supply to be regulated. Feeding in two
AC phases via CON8 is preferred as
the capacitors only need to hold up
through the 10ms of each half-cycle
rather than 20ms for a full mains cycle.
The board generates five regulated
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DC rails. REG2 (78L12) and REG4
(79L12) provide +12V and -12V,
respectively, to power the analog circuitry. Their outputs are filtered by
100µF capacitors and taken to CON11,
which feeds the ribbon cable bus noted
earlier, for distribution to the other
modules.
The +12V rail is further regulated
to 5.5V by REG5, an LM317L and
its accompanying components. The
accompanying resistors and VR2 allow
its output voltage to be trimmed to
account for resistor tolerances.
A 220µF capacitor sits on the output of REG5, and this voltage is also
taken to CON11. If the 5.5V rail is
adjusted too high, zener diode ZD1
conducts and protects other circuitry
downstream.
The unregulated positive rail is also
dropped via a 22W 5W resistor (to
spread dissipation) and reduced to 5V
by REG1 (7805). It has a 100µF bypass
capacitor on its input and a 220µF filter capacitor on its output.
This 5V rail is used on the Control
and Power Supply Module to power
the LCD touchscreen; the power
needed by the LCD backlight, and the
resulting higher dissipation, is the
main reason why this regulator is a
larger TO-220 type, while the others
are in smaller TO-92 packages.
The 5V rail is reduced to 3.3V by
REG3 (MCP1700) to power microcontroller IC9. The 3.3V rail is also available on CON11 to power the microcontroller on the OLED Module.
Broadly, the +12V and -12V rails
power analog components, while the
5.5V rail primarily powers the digital
potentiometers. The 5V and 3.3V rails
power the digital components. The
separate power domains help to minimise any intrusion of digital signals
into the analog, which would affect
audio quality.
On the Control and Power Supply
Module, the remaining circuitry consists mainly of the microcontroller,
the LCD touchscreen and their essential ancillaries. IC9 is a 20-pin, 8-bit
PIC16F18146 microcontroller. It is
powered from the 3.3V rail, so it can
easily interface with the LCD controller, which also runs at 3.3V from its
own regulator on the LCD’s PCB.
A 10kW resistor pulls IC9’s pin 4
MCLR pin to the 3.3V rail, preventing spurious resets, while a 100nF
capacitor bypasses its supply to pins
1 and 20. These three pins, plus the
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.5: the Control and Power Supply Module circuit derives +12V, -12V, +5.5V, +5V and +3.3V rails to power the
control circuitry and external modules. The microcontroller handles the LCD touch panel and receives inputs from an
infrared receiver. It also sends signals to the two other module types over a 20-way bus via CON11.
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 63
PGC and PGD programming pins, go
to ICSP header CON10 for in-circuit
programming if needed.
Another nine of the micro’s digital
pins are wired to CON11 to control
the other modules. The SCK, MOSI
and MISO pins form the SPI serial
bus that controls the other modules.
The PIC16F18146 can remap its digital
peripherals to any digital pin, so the
pin allocation was chosen to simplify
the PCB routing.
Five CS (chip select) lines are
also broken out, allowing up to five
different slave modules to be independently addressed for the SPI bus.
The SHDN (shutdown) line allows the
micro to signal to all Volume Modules
that their outputs should be muted.
The SPI bus pins are also wired to
the LCD touchscreen via CON9, along
with the other four digital control
lines it needs. A pair of Mosfets plus
pullup and pulldown resistors power
the LED backlight in the LCD touchscreen, controlled by a digital signal
(LED_CON) from IC9.
Infrared receiver IRRx1 takes its
power from the 5V rail, smoothed by
the 100W resistor and 1µF capacitor. Its
output goes to the last of IC9’s unused
pins via a 1kW resistor.
These receivers typically have a
30kW internal pullup, so even though
it is powered from 5V, it can safely
interface to the microcontroller
expecting 3.3V levels. That’s because
the 5V drive is quite weak and easily clamped by the microcontroller’s
internal input protection diodes.
Volume Module
The circuit diagram for a single
Volume Module is in Fig.6. CON5
connects to the Control and Power
Supply Module’s CON11 via a 20-way
ribbon cable.
An adjustable padded divider that
includes trimpot VR1 is used to derive
a 2.75V rail from the 5.5V supply. VR1
trims this voltage, which is bypassed
by a 220µF capacitor. Test points are
provided to allow easy measurement
during setup. The 2.75V rail must be
Fig.6: the Volume Module circuit contains four substantially identical volume control stages, each using one channel of
the AD8403 precision digital potentiometer. It receives SPI control signals over the 20-way bus via CON5.
Up to five of these Volume Modules can be connected together, allowing
the volume of up to 20 channels to be controlled. The modules can be
incorporated into a larger system with other parts, like amplifiers.
set accurately to maximise the signal
swing and ensure symmetrical clipping if the signal level is excessive.
The Volume Module has a single
AD8403 quad precision digital potentiometer (IC10) powered from the
5.5V rail bypassed by a 100nF capacitor. The potentiometer’s RS (reset)
pin is pulled up to the 5.5V rail by
10kW since we do not use this feature
(which forces the potentiometers to
their midpoints).
The remaining digital pins of IC10
(SCK, MOSI, MISO and SHDN) connect to the corresponding lines on
the control bus via CON5. The CS pin
goes to five-way jumper JP2, so you
can choose which of the five CS lines
from the microcontroller on the Control Module will control this Volume
Module. Each ‘slave’ module in the
system is assigned a different CS line.
The SHDN pin is also connected to
a 47kW pulldown resistor to ground.
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Silicon Chip
This ensures that the Volume Control is muted until the microcontroller initialises and decides otherwise.
The microcontroller can also drive the
pin low to enforce muting, helping to
eliminate noises during startup.
The remainder of the Volume Module consists of four practically identical analog sections, each using one of
the 10kW potentiometers internal to
IC10. This combination of four potentiometers (on each Volume Module) and
five CS lines gives us the 20-channel
limit of the Multi-Channel Volume
Control.
Analog circuitry
We will describe the operation of the
first channel only, as they all work the
same. All 16 op amps (in eight IC packages) are high-performance (low noise
and distortion) LM833 types powered
from the ±12V rails. Each op amp has
a 100nF bypass capacitor.
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A 100kW resistor biases the input
from the RCA socket to ground so it
doesn’t float if disconnected. The 100W
resistors, 470pF capacitor and ferrite
bead before the first op amp stage protect the inputs from excessive voltage
swing and filter out RF noise and ultrasonic frequencies.
The first op amp stage is a unity-gain
buffer to provide a high input impedance and low source impedance for
the subsequent stages. The output signal is AC-coupled and biased to the
2.75V rail.
Dual diode D1 clamps the signal if
it happens to deviate below the 0V
rail or above the 5.5V rail, with the
2.2kW resistor limiting the current
that flows in this case. The 0V to 5.5V
span has been chosen as the widest
that the AD8403 can handle in normal operation.
The 2.2kW resistor also forms a
divider with the 10kW of the digital
potentiometer, meaning that signals
up to 2.3V RMS (or 6.5V peak-to-peak)
are accepted at the input without clipping via D1.
The following two op amp stages
implement the Baxandall volume
control. The first stage is a unity buffer while also being a type of mixer,
while the second stage is an inverting amplifier with a gain of 14.7. One
effect of this is that this stage has its
output polarity inverted with respect
to its input.
The potentiometer is connected
between the input (‘A’ end) and output
(‘B’ end) of these two stages, providing logarithmic gain changes despite
the circuit using a linear potentiometer. Another dual diode at the other
end of the digital potentiometer’s track
to protects it from excessive voltages
from the output of the gain stage.
When the SHDN signal is asserted
(low), the digital potentiometer disconnects the A end of each potentiometer and connects the wiper to the
B end of the track; this means that output is fully muted.
The potentiometer exhibits a small
amount of resistance at the end of each
wiper, so even at the extreme ‘low’
setting, a small amount of signal will
pass through to the output unless the
SHDN signal is used.
Another capacitor and resistor bias
the signal back to its original ground
reference, and the final op amp stage
for each channel applies more gain to
allow us to get an output swing of up
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to 2.5V RMS, despite the 5.5V peak-topeak limitation imposed by the digital
pot ICs. A 100W resistor between the
output and RCA socket isolates the op
amp from capacitive loads.
There is an option to use a jumper to
bypass the last op amp stage to reduce
the gain, saving a handful of components in the process.
An important feature is that the
four digital potentiometers can all be
set independently, allowing the channels to have different levels if needed
to maintain audio balance.
OLED Module
The OLED Module provides an
optional set of compact, tactile controls. Its circuit is very simple (see
Fig.7) as it has been designed so that
the PCB also forms a front panel with
its components on the back. This
Module is intended to be mounted
like a bezel over a cutout in an existing panel.
It connects to the ribbon cable bus
via its CON12, using the same 20-way
IDC box header as the other modules.
On this Module, only the SPI control
lines, the five CS lines, and 3.3V power
and ground are connected; its operation is entirely digital and does not
require the other supply rails.
This optional OLED Module
provides a more compact status
display and a rotary volume
control. If you don’t want to
use the touchscreen, you could
leave it off and make this as the
full interface (and with an IR
receiver wired back to the Control
Module).
A 14-pin 8-bit PIC16F15224 microcontroller (IC11) is connected to the
SPI bus as a slave, with its CS line
picked from the five on the bus by JP7.
JP7 uses solder shorting pads rather
than pin headers and a jumper to keep
this module compact.
A further three pins of IC11 are connected to a rotary encoder, which provides the user input. Two of these pins
are for the quadrature encoder and are
either pulled to ground by the contacts
in the rotary encoder or pulled up by
the 10kW resistors.
The pushbutton in the rotary encoder
is connected to a similar arrangement,
with each of these three pins also having a 100nF capacitor to ground to help
filter out contact bounce.
Two further pins from IC11 are also
used to drive the OLED via an I2C serial
interface. This OLED shows the Volume Control’s state as it is updated.
The typical arrangement for 8-bit
PICs is also present, consisting of a
supply bypass capacitor between 3.3V
and ground with a pullup to the MCLR
pin. These three pins and the PGC and
PGD pins used for in-circuit programming are also taken to the in-circuit
programming header, CON13.
Volume control
range limitations
Using a quad 8-bit digital potentiometer (IC10), rather than a purpose-
designed volume control IC, helps
keep costs down. However, it imposes
a limitation on the effective volume
control range.
A dedicated volume control IC
might give a range of 100dB or more,
Fig.7: the OLED Module circuit; it is a simple microcontroller-based board with an OLED and rotary encoder. Since it
only requires the 3.3V rail and the SPI bus, only 13 of the 20 pins on CON12 are connected
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 67
but an 8-bit digital potentiometer
only has 256 steps, meaning it has
an effective volume control range of
about 60dB.
That’s enough for most applications.
Still, you should check that the highest output level makes sense, or you
might end up without good control at
lower volume settings.
The default configuration has a
maximum gain of 16dB, giving a fullscale output of around 2V RMS from
an input signal close to 300mV RMS.
That’s well below line level, which is
typically more like 775mV RMS.
In this configuration, the lowest signal output level with a 1V RMS input
before muting is 4mV RMS or -48dB.
The steps above that are 9mV (-41dB),
15mV (-36.5dB), 21mV (-33.5dB),
27mV (-31.4dB), 33mV (-29.6dB) and
steps of about 1dB or less from there up.
While -48dB is 64dB below the maximum output level, the steps are pretty
large until around -30dB, giving a useful control range of about 46dB.
A variation of, say, 10dB between
different input signal sources will
reduce the effective volume control
range to 36dB. That gives a 4000:1
ratio between the highest and lowest
power output with decent control; if
maximum volume results in 100W
from your amplifier, you will have fine
control down to just 25mW.
That’s certainly good enough, but
the more the maximum possible gain is
above what you need, the more apparent the steps at lower volume levels
will become.
The system’s overall gain is set with
resistors, so you can easily adjust it
at the construction stage. Practically
speaking, if your power amplifier
will reach full power with less than
2V RMS (as many will, and all your
input-signals are at least line-level),
we suggest you omit the final 6dB op
amp gain stages. That will give you
6dB more room at the lower end of
the volume range.
Control firmware
We’ve chosen an 8-bit microcontroller for the Control Module as the
requirements are not too burdensome.
Although it is driving an LCD panel,
the user interface is not complex, with
only a single screen configuration
needed (no menus etc).
The LCD screen is overlaid by a
touch panel, which the micro scans
for user input.
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Silicon Chip
Parts List – Multi-Channel Volume Control
1 Control and Power Supply Module (see below)
1-5 Volume Modules (each handles four channels; see below)
1 OLED Module (optional; see below)
1m length of 20-way ribbon cable (cut to suit application)
1 universal IR remote control (optional; see text) [Jaycar XC3718]
1 12V AC single winding or 24V AC centre-tapped transformer and appropriate
wiring/fusing
RCA cables to interface to existing hardware
Other mounting hardware to suit your application
Control and Power Supply Module
1 double-sided PCB coded 01111222, 87 × 50mm
1 2.8in LCD touchscreen [Silicon Chip SC3410]
1 2.1mm or 2.5mm DC jack socket (CON7; optional)
1 3-way 5mm/5.08mm pitch screw terminal block (CON8; optional)
1 14-way 0.1in female header (CON9; for LCD touchscreen)
1 5-way right-angle pin header (CON10; optional, for ICSP)
1 20-way box header and IDC inline plug (CON11) OR
1 20-way IDC transition header (CON11)
1 500W mini top-adjust trimpot (VR2)
1 3-pin infrared receiver, 38kHz (IRRx1)
[TSOP4138, TSOP33438, Jaycar ZD1952, Altronics Z1611A]
9 M3 × 5mm panhead machine screws
4 M3 × 12mm tapped spacers
1 M3 hex nut and washer (for mounting REG1)
Semiconductors
1 W04M bridge rectifier (BR1) [Jaycar ZR1304]
1 PIC16F18146-I/SO microcontroller programmed with 0111122B.HEX,
wide SOIC-20 (IC9)
1 IRLML2244TRPBF or SSM3J372R 20V 1A+ logic-level P-channel Mosfet,
SOT-23 (Q1)
1 2N7002 60V 115mA N-channel Mosfet, SOT-23 (Q2)
1 7805 +5V 1A linear regulator, TO-220 (REG1)
1 78L12 +12V 100mA linear regulator, TO-92 (REG2)
1 MCP1700-3.3 3.3V 250mA linear regulator, SOT-23 (REG3)
1 79L12 -12V 100mA linear regulator, TO-92 (REG4)
1 LM317L 100mA adjustable linear regulator, TO-92 (REG5)
1 5.6V 1W zener diode (ZD1)
Capacitors
2 1000μF 25V electrolytic
2 220μF 10V electrolytic
4 100μF 16V electrolytic
1 1μF 10V X7R ceramic, SMD M3216/1206 size
2 100nF 50V X7R ceramic, SMD M3216/1206 size
Resistors (all SMD M3216/1206 size 1% except as noted)
2 10kW
2 1kW
1 910W
1 560W
1 110W
1 100W
1 22W 5% 5W axial
We know of two otherwise interchangeable versions of this panel with
touch panels rotated by 180° compared
to each other. Our workaround is to
display the user control buttons in the
bottom half of the screen. Touches in
the top half of the panel are assumed
to correspond to touches on the bottom
half of the rotated display, so either
should work with no changes.
In retrospect, we might have chosen a more powerful (and faster)
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microcontroller, such as the 16-bit
PIC24FJ256GA702. At the time of
writing, they are not dissimilar in
price, although the SSOP version of
the PIC24FJ256GA702 is somewhat
more tricky to solder than the SOIC
part we are using.
The lesser flash memory available
on the PIC16F18146 meant that we
needed to compress the large font
that’s necessary to provide a clear and
legible display.
siliconchip.com.au
Volume Module
1 double-sided PCB coded 01111221, 82 × 94mm
2 quad right-angle RCA socket assemblies (CON1, CON2) [Altronics P0214]
1 20-way box header and IDC inline plug (CON5) OR
1 20-way IDC transition header (CON5)
4 SMD ferrite beads, M3216/1206 size (FB1-FB4) [Fair-Rite 2512066017Y1]
1 5×2 pin header and a jumper shunt (JP2)
1 500W mini top-adjust trimpot (VR1)
8 M3 × 6mm panhead machine screws
4 M3 × 12mmm tapped spacers
(or other mounting hardware to suit the application)
Semiconductors
8 BAT54S dual series schottky diodes, SOT-23 (D1-D8)
8(6) LM833 low-noise dual op amps, SOIC-8 (IC1-IC8)
1 AD8403ARZ10 quad precision digital potentiometer, SOIC-28 (IC10)
Capacitors (all SMD M3216/1206 size unless noted)
1 220μF 10V electrolytic
4 22μF 16V electrolytic
4 10μF 16V electrolytic
4 2.2μF 25V SMA size SMD tantalum 🔷
11(9) 100nF 50V X7R
4 470pF 50V C0G/NP0
4 100pF 50V C0G/NP0
Resistors (all SMD M3216/1206 size 1%)
8 100kW
5 47kW
4 22kW
5 10kW
4 2.2kW
10(2) 1kW
4 680W
12 100W
n numbers in brackets refer to requirements if the last op amp gain stage is
omitted
🔷 not recommended but 22μF 4V+ X5R/X7R ceramics in M3216/1206 can be
substituted (see panel on “Lessons learned during development”)
OLED Module
1 double-sided PCB coded 01111223, 51 × 76mm
1 0.96in I2C OLED module (MOD1)
1 PIC16F15224-I/SL microcontroller programmed with 0111122C.HEX,
SOIC-14 (IC11)
1 pulse-type rotary encoder with 18 tooth spline shaft (RE1)
[Silicon Chip SC5601]
1 knob to suit RE1
1 20-way SMD box header or 20-way dual-row SMD header (CON12) 🔵
1 20-way IDC inline plug
1 5-way pin header (CON13; optional, for ICSP)
4 M3 screws, washers and nuts to suit mounting requirements
4 100nF 50V X7R M3216/1206 size SMD ceramic capacitors
4 10kW M3216/1206 size SMD 1% resistors
several short pieces of solid wire (eg, component lead offcuts)
🔵 can be made by cutting 10 rows from Altronics P5415
The PIC16F18146 microcontroller we used for this project can store
around 16kB of font data in its flash
memory, so you can see how important careful managing font data is. We
were very close to running out of flash
memory before we started looking into
compression.
Font compression
To display text on a graphical screen
requires some form of font data to
siliconchip.com.au
encode the ‘glyphs’ (character representations) to show. The glyphs
usually correspond to a subset of the
ASCII character set, perhaps with
minor alterations to suit the project,
such as including the degrees (°) symbol instead of some other less-used
character.
The font data format we typically
use is widely known. It consists of two
header bytes describing the width and
height of the font in pixels, followed
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Control Module Kit
SC6793 ($50): also comes with 1m
of ribbon cable
Volume Module Kit
SC6794 ($55): includes all the listed
parts
OLED Module Kit
SC6795 ($25): includes all the listed
parts
Each kit includes all the parts listed
under each module in the parts list.
The only other items needed are
a case, power supply and remote
control.
by another two bytes denoting the first
ASCII character code point (eg, 32 for
a space is typical) and the number of
characters within the font.
This is followed by bits of pixel
data in bitmap form for each character
within the font. Since each byte can
hold eight pixels, a small 8×8 pixel
font of 95 characters (the full ASCII
set) takes up 764 bytes.
Fig.a (in the panel overleaf) shows
how such a font is translated from
bitmap data into the corresponding C
code. Other languages, such as MMBasic, use a similar format adapted to the
syntax of the specific language.
A 16×24 pixel font, our typical
choice for legible text on a typical
3.5in LCD panel, uses around six
times as many bytes or just over 4kB.
Larger fonts are possible by upscaling
smaller fonts, but the result does not
look as good.
The flash memory of these 8-bit
PICs uses 14-bit words. They are
often described as having 28kB of
flash memory, but it is arranged as
16k x 14-bit words rather than 28k x
8-bit bytes.
The ideal font size for the large dB
display in this project is 44×60 pixels;
that would take 31,354 bytes to store
as a full ASCII font, which obviously
wouldn’t fit in the PIC16F18146.
We can reduce the space required by
only encoding the characters we need.
For example, truncating the 12×16 font
we use for buttons and smaller text to
only include from the space character
up to the capital letters brings its size
down from 2284 bytes to 1420 bytes.
Similarly, we reduced the font used
for the dB display to the digits 0-9, a
blank space, a negative sign, a decimal point (or full stop) and the ‘d’ and
‘B’ characters. That takes it down to
December 2023 69
RLE compression
RLE stands for run length encoding and takes advantage of
repetitive values in data; in this case, runs of the same pixel
colour. RLE has existed in displays and computing for at least
50 years. RLE is used in the JPEG image standard (although it
is only part of the compression used there). It was also used
by fax machines (remember them?).
For our implementation, rather than storing bitmap data,
the data encodes a run of pixels of the same state (on/off).
The top bit indicates whether the pixels are on or off (ie, add
128 for on pixels), while the remaining seven lower bits encode
the number of consecutive pixels with that property.
Fig.b shows a glyph encoded using our RLE strategy. This
small font is not a great example for this sort of compression, as the resulting data has ballooned from eight bytes up
to 25 bytes.
RLE could be seen to encode how often the pixel state
changes on each line. So characters such as “1” should encode
better than “0” and, indeed, the RLE data only comes to 15
bytes for “1” in this particular font.
The space character for this font is encoded as a single
byte of value 64, meaning all 64 pixels are off.
This variability in glyph size is accounted for by adding a
header specifying the number of bytes before each group of
RLE data. It’s easy to write code to step through the data
jumping forward by the header’s byte count until we reach
the glyph we need to display; we then have the count of the
number of bytes we need to decode.
The RLE-compressed font we ended up with only uses 2013
bytes (including all header data) compared to the 4954 bytes
for the uncompressed version.
As an extreme example, the space character for this large
font (which consists of 2640 black pixels) takes up 330
bytes uncompressed, but only 22 bytes after compression.
Another extreme, the ‘0’ character, takes up the same 330
bytes uncompressed but only 196 bytes when compressed,
a 40% saving.
For the numerals 0-9 and space, the RLE encoding provides
a notable saving for fonts as small as 16×24 pixels. Different
font subsets, including letters like M and W, will not compress
as well as they include shorter runs.
Other advantages
The microcontroller can copy the RLE-compressed data to
the screen faster than bitmap data. There is less data to be
read from flash in the RLE case and the decoding is simpler too.
The uncompressed bitmap data needs to be decoded one
bit at a time. Each individual bit has its value checked, then
the appropriate colour pixel is written to the LCD. For the
RLE data, a group of consecutive pixels is decoded and can
be efficiently sent to the LCD in a tight loop.
Similarly, the code to show the RLE-encoded font is smaller
0b01111100
→
0b11000110
0b11000110
0b11000110
0b11000110
0b11000110
0b01111100
0b00000000
0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 →
1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0
1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0
1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0
1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0
1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0
0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
const
0x08,
0x00,
0x18,
0x66,
0x6C,
0x18,
0x00,
0x38,
...
0x7c,
char TinyFont[764] = {
0x08, 0x20, 0x5F,
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00,
0x3C, 0x3C, 0x18, 0x18,
0x66, 0x24, 0x00, 0x00,
0x6C, 0xFE, 0x6C, 0xFE,
0x3E, 0x60, 0x3C, 0x06,
0xC6, 0xCC, 0x18, 0x30,
0x6C, 0x38, 0x76, 0xDC,
0x00,
0x00,
0x00,
0x6C,
0x7C,
0x66,
0xCC,
0x00,
0x18,
0x00,
0x6C,
0x18,
0xC6,
0x76,
0x00,
0x00,
0x00,
0x00,
0x00,
0x00,
0x00,
//
//
//
//
//
//
//
Space
!
"
#
$
%
&
0xC6, 0xC6, 0xC6, 0xC6, 0xC6, 0x7C, 0x00, // 0
Fig.a: bitmap font data is encoded with a ‘1’ bit indicating a pixel is
set to the foreground colour or a ‘0’ bit if the pixel is the background
colour. The last line shows the bitmap data for the number 0.
than its bitmap equivalent, about half the size in program
flash memory. The bitmap routine also calls another function
to perform a multiplication; there would be further savings if
the same routine were not needed by other code.
Being able to update the display more quickly is a clear
upside. We suspect the effect would not be so pronounced
with a faster microcontroller, but it would still be present.
OLED fonts
We have not used RLE fonts in the firmware for the OLED
Module. Firstly, these displays are monochrome, so they do
not require individual pixel colours to be written. Instead,
they expect data to arrive in blocks of eight bits at a time,
which maps to eight pixels on the screen. In other words, they
natively work with bitmap data.
Also, the OLED has a much lower resolution, so it does not
need to display very large fonts as often. Given that larger
fonts benefit more from RLE, there is less incentive to apply
it to the smaller fonts.
Bitmaps image compression
The Silicon Chip logo shown on the LCD screen is a bitmap
and is stored similarly to the bitmap fonts. So, we experimented with a different encoding that stores a run of pixels (from 0 to 15) in each nibble of a byte. The top nibble is
assumed to be the background colour, while the lower nibble
is the foreground colour.
The code to decode this data is similar in speed and program flash memory usage, and we found this algorithm offered
about 40% compression on the Silicon Chip logo. So we used
this encoding for the logos and icons that are displayed.
Conclusion
RLE encoding a larger font gives superior image quality
than upscaling a smaller font, is faster and can use a similar
amount of flash or even less. So it seems like the way to go.
The only downside is the extra complexity in the initial encoding.
Some font examples can be found at:
www.rinkydinkelectronics.com/r_fonts.php
Download the FontTweak Font editing program from:
www.c-com.com.au/MMedit.htm
convert to RLE encoding
0111110011000110110001101100011011000110110001100111110000000000
↓
1x0,5x1,2x0,2x1,3x0,2x1,1x0,2x1,3x0,2x1,1x0,2x1,3x0,2x1,
1x0,2x1,3x0,2x1,1x0,2x1,3x0,2x1,2x0,5x1,10x0
↓
1,133,2,130,3,130,1,130,3,130,1,130,3,130,1,130,3,130,1,130,3,130,2,133,10
Fig.b: mapping of the pixels to bitmap data is from top left to bottom right in horizontal rows. For an eight-pixel wide
font, each row maps to one byte of data. With RLE encoding, each run of same-coloured pixels maps to a byte of data,
so one byte can encode up to 127 pixels. It is much more effective for fonts that have more glyphs.
70
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
4954 bytes before we apply RLE compression.
The compression technique used
is called run-length encoding (RLE).
Rather than storing simple bitmaps
for the characters to show on the display, RLE stores a run of pixels as its
count and on or off state (hence runlength encoding).
The resulting font data is less than
half its original size. That is helpful
when the font uses up nearly a third
of the available flash memory. Another
advantage is that the encoding is easy
to decompress for display, making
screen updates faster! We’ve gone into
this in greater detail in a panel, for
those interested in that sort of thing.
Infrared remote control
The IR decoding routine is designed
to receive signals encoded with the
NEC protocol. It uses pulse position
encoding with 38kHz modulation; the
IR receiver demodulates this carrier,
so the microcontroller only needs to
decode the pulse encoding.
The microcontroller uses a timer/
counter to measure the pulse lengths
and thus extract the necessary data.
The NEC protocol transmits 32 data
bits, including a device byte, its
inverse, a command code and the
command code’s inverse. The inverses
allow the microcontroller to reject corrupted codes.
The Control Module can be programmed to accept different device
and command codes, so it can be used
with fixed or programmable IR remote
controls. We’ll get more into those
details later.
The Control Module communicates
over the SPI bus on the ribbon cable.
If an OLED module is present, data is
sent out from the Control Module to
update its display; the Control Module also receives data back if there has
been activity on the rotary encoder or
its button.
The micro on the control module
signals the digital potentiometers to
set a new volume level whenever the
volume is changed. If the mute function is activated, the volume is ramped
down as low as possible, after which
the SHDN pin is pulled low to mute
the audio fully.
Unmuting is simply the reverse. The
SHDN pin goes high, then the volume
level ramps up. The same process
occurs when the unit is powered on,
avoiding clicks and pops.
siliconchip.com.au
Lessons learned during development
We solved two significant but subtle problems in developing this design. The first
was that, to save components and simplify setup, we generated the +2.75V rail
on the Power Supply & Control board and fed it via the ribbon cable to the Volume Modules.
The problem with this was that any tiny amount of noise or ripple picked up in
the ribbon cable ends up getting injected into the signals because this is a virtual ground rail. Adding extra capacitance to ground for this rail on each Volume
Module didn’t fix it. The only way to get acceptable performance was to move the
+2.75V rail generation circuitry onto the Volume Modules.
The other problem we ran into was that we accidentally used 1μF X7R multilayer ceramic capacitors to couple the signal to the last op amp stage (eg, from
pin 1 of IC2a to pin 3 of IC3a). This type of capacitor simply isn’t very linear and
the result was a significant rise in distortion below 200Hz, shown by the dashed
portions of the curves in Fig.1.
There are two solutions to this. Our preferred solution is to switch to using
2.2μF tantalum capacitors, which luckily are available in the same size (the SMA
tantalum case is basically the same dimensions as M3216/1206 ceramic chip
capacitors). Being electrolytic capacitors, these are not as linear as say plastic
film types, but significantly more linear than X7R ceramics.
Unlike ceramic capacitors, tantalum capacitors are polarised. There is 2.75V
between these points, so the capacitors are orientated with the positive leads
to the op amp pin 1 outputs.
As a less-desirable alternative, X7R multi-layer ceramic capacitors can still be
used but with a significantly higher value; at least 10μF, and ideally 22μF or more.
That pushes the distortion down so instead of starting below 200Hz, it starts
below 20Hz, which is in the inaudible part of the frequency range.
There usually won’t be much signal below 20Hz; our concern is that, if there is,
the resulting distortion harmonics could be in the audible range. Hence our preference for the tantalum capacitors.
Otherwise, the main loop updates
the display when necessary and reads
input from the touch panel.
We had provision for an IR receiver
on the OLED Module, but since the
Control Module is mandatory and
already has an IR receiver, we have not
fitted it to our prototypes and there is
no support for it in the firmware.
OLED module firmware
The microcontroller on the OLED
Module monitors the rotary encoder
and button for action, sends and
receives data to and from the Control
Module and updates the OLED screen
as required.
It acts as an SPI slave device, meaning it must be ready to respond whenever the Control Module wants to communicate. For simplicity, we designed
the communication between these two
modules to only use a single byte in
each direction.
The Master sends out the volume
level (in steps of 0.5dB) relative to a
value of 128. A value of zero means
that the mute is active. Thus, the OLED
Module doesn’t need to retain any
state data; it simply updates its display
whenever data is received.
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The data that the OLED Module
sends back to the Control Module is
in a similar format. The OLED module
counts the number of rotary encoder
steps (forward or backward) that have
accumulated and sends that to the
Control Module, offset from a value
of 128.
The offset helps avoid receiving spurious commands if no OLED Module is
connected. The data is designed not to
use the values of 0 or 255 (00000000
and 11111111 in binary) as might
occur if the data line was pulled up
or pulled down permanently.
A special value of 51 (00110011 in
binary) indicates a press of the rotary
encoder’s button. This works as a toggle, so the OLED Module does not need
to know the current state and simply
reports to the Control Module that the
mute state needs to change.
Next month
That’s all we can fit in this month’s
article; we will describe construction and assembly in the next issue.
Short-form kits for all three modules
are available, so you might like to
gather the parts together in preparation.
SC
December 2023 71
Project by Tim Blythman
When designing or testing a device that runs
from a coin cell, you need to know how
much current it draws to determine the
cell’s life. That can be difficult given the
low currents often involved. This device
will power such a circuit while showing the
voltage, current and other helpful statistics.
Coin Cell Emulator
W
e have published many designs
powered by coin cells (usually
the CR2032). They must not draw
an excessive current; a high current
draw reduces the cell life and causes
its voltage to sag due to internal resistance. Coin cells also exhibit a reduced
capacity at high discharge rates, compounding the effect.
While many circuits can be characterised with a standard multimeter,
that doesn’t work well for this type of
circuit. A typical multimeter’s shunt
on the microamp range has quite a
high resistance; values around 100W
are typical.
That is OK for readings in the
microamp range, but when the current draw might briefly jump to 5mA
or so, the meter is suddenly dropping
half a volt, which can change the circuit behaviour substantially. In other
words, the burden voltage starts to
dominate the reading.
One possible solution is the MicroCurrent DMM Adaptor (April 2009
issue, siliconchip.au/Article/1400).
That article discusses burden voltage
in detail.
However, this Coin Cell Emulator
does more than just measure current.
It can accumulate the current readings
to calculate a capacity value in mAh. It
can also produce a varying voltage, so
you can test how your circuit behaves
as the cell discharges.
The Emulator can also mimic some
of the non-ideal characteristics of coin
cells, such as internal resistance & voltage fall-off as the battery discharges.
Design
Like the MicroCurrent DMM Adaptor mentioned earlier, the Coin
Cell Emulator uses the MAX4238/
MAX4239 ultra-low offset, low noise
precision op amp to sense very small
currents without influencing them.
This op amp has a typical input offset of 0.1µV and an input offset current of 1pA. These are a few orders of
magnitude lower than we are trying to
Features & Specifications
» Emulates the properties of a coin cell, including internal resistance and
discharge over time
» Emulates reduced capacity at high currents
» Adjustable voltage
» Current and charge measurement
» Stopwatch/Timer
» Automatically stops when a threshold voltage is reached
» Dummy PCB can be slotted into a coin cell holder
» Voltage setting: in 0.1V steps
» Typical accuracy: 1%
» Current measurement: 0.1μA resolution up to 200mA
» Charge measurement: 1μAh resolution up to 9Ah
» Voltage measurement: 0.01V resolution up to 3.4V
» Time measurement: 1s resolution up to 999 days
72
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
measure, so they are unlikely to interfere with our readings.
This is a necessary feature but insufficient to ensure we can measure a
wide range of currents. Our design has
an upper limit of around 200mA but
can measure down to 0.1µA. To do this
across a single range would require an
ADC (analog-to-digital converter) with
21 bits of resolution.
Instead, our design uses two ranges
and a 12-bit ADC that’s built into the
microcontroller. Oversampling (making multiple measurements and averaging them) gives us a few more bits
of resolution, providing the necessary
dynamic range.
Circuit details
Fig.1 is the circuit diagram for the
Emulator. 5V power comes in via
mini-USB connector CON1, with a
10µF capacitor providing board-level
supply bypassing. IC1 is an eight-bit
PIC16F18146 microcontroller that
controls and monitors the Emulator’s
operation.
IC1’s internal DAC (digital-to-analog
converter) can deliver 0-4V from pin
17. Unlike some older PICs, the DAC
on the PIC16F18146 has an internal
buffer and thus has a reasonable drive
strength.
The DAC voltage goes to NPN transistor Q1’s base via a 1kW resistor. Q1
is configured as an emitter follower,
so its emitter ranges from 0V to 3.4V,
about one diode drop below the 4V
maximum from the DAC. Its collector
is connected to the 5V rail.
The emitter-follower relies on the
reasonably constant base-emitter forward voltage of around 0.6V. Assuming the base voltage is constant, the
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.1: the cunning part of this circuit is the op amp feeding current back
into the output through the 10kW resistor to cancel out the voltage drop
across the 22W resistor. This allows the circuit to work with two current
measuring resistances of vastly differing values, giving it a very wide current
measurement range.
transistor switches on harder if the
voltage at the emitter drops, increasing
the collector-emitter current and raising the voltage at the emitter.
If the emitter voltage rises, the transistor base current decreases, and less
current comes in through the collector. So the circuit maintains the emitter voltage at a steady ~0.6V below the
base voltage.
A 1µF capacitor provides some filtering and can provide brief bursts
of current to the load. The 1kW emitter resistor provides a stable load
and ensures that the output voltage
decreases if the base voltage decreases.
The 22W resistor acts as a current
measuring shunt, with two of the
microcontroller’s ADC pins monitoring the voltage across the shunt via
10kW resistors. Each ADC pin also
has a 100nF capacitor to ground to
present a low impedance to the ADC
sampling stage.
The ADC pins are labelled VSHUNT,
upstream of the shunt resistor, and
VOUT, downstream.
siliconchip.com.au
The downstream side of the 22W
resistor is the positive side of the
emulated coin cell, with circuit
ground being the negative side. This
is available at a pair of 2-pin connectors (CON3 and CON4) and a couple
of large pads on a circular part of the
PCB. This part of the PCB has a pad on
each side and can be slotted into some
2032-sized coin cell holders.
Op amp IC2 has its input pins (pins 2
and 3) connected across the 22W shunt,
with its output (pin 6) feeding back
into the low side of the shunt via diode
D1 and a 10kW resistor. A third ADC
pin of IC1 (pin 10; labelled ILSENSE)
monitors the voltage at the diode’s
cathode via another 10kW resistor and
100nF capacitor arrangement.
A 100nF capacitor bypasses IC2’s
5V supply (pin 7) and ground (pin 4).
Pin 1 (SHDN) is also pulled up to the
5V rail, allowing the op amp to operate normally when powered.
Op amp operation
If a small current flows through the
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22W resistor, a voltage appears across
the op amp’s input terminals and its
output rises. Current flows through
the diode and 10kW resistor back to its
inverting input and the downstream
end of the shunt resistor. The diode
ensures the op amp can only source
and not sink current.
Effectively, the op amp overrules
the shunt and supplies current to the
output of the Emulator. Smaller currents can be sensed by measuring the
voltage across the 10kW resistor and
applying Ohm’s Law.
Eventually, the op amp output saturates and cannot supply enough current. It has nearly rail-to-rail operation,
so its maximum output is around 4.9V.
Assuming the Emulator output is at
about 3V, there is around 1.3V across
the 10kW resistor, with the op amp
supplying around 130µA.
Coin Cell Emulator Kit
SC6823 ($30 + postage): contains
all parts and the optional 5-pin
header.
December 2023 73
The Coin Cell Emulator is a
compact but handy development
and testing tool. Even if you
don’t design circuits for coin cell
operation, it’s a useful low-voltage
PSU with current monitoring.
The voltage across the 22W resistor
can now develop and is measured by
the ADC channels connected across
it. We can thus measure across a wide
dynamic range since we are effectively
using two shunts with vastly different
resistances. Combining the currents is
as simple as adding them.
Using a high-side measuring shunt
also means that the ground circuit
is uninterrupted and can be shared
with any other gear that needs to be
attached (programmers, debugging
gear or other meters) without affecting current readings. This is handy,
especially if you are running everything from a computer.
The test point labelled RST was
originally included to allow the Emulator to control a connected circuit by
pulsing its reset line low. But since the
Emulator can power cycle the circuit,
we did not implement this feature.
Instead, a nominal 1Hz clock signal is available at this pin. This can
be used to trim IC1’s internal timer for
accurate timekeeping.
Short circuit handling
Let’s examine what happens when a
short circuit is applied to the output of
the Emulator. With the DAC set to its
maximum of 4V, around 140mA flows
through the 22W resistor.
With a typical transistor β (gain) of
around 400, the base current is around
350μA and the 1kW resistor on Q1’s
base drops 0.35V, so the voltage at the
emitter falls from 3.4V to around 3V.
The transistor thus dissipates around
280mW (2V × 140mA), comfortably
within its 500mW rating.
The remaining voltage is across the
74
Silicon Chip
22W resistor and it dissipates around
400mW. That’s a bit on the high
side for the typical 1/4W rating of an
M3216/1206-size SMD part.
Our prototype got quite
hot around that resistor with the output
short-circuited, but it
was not damaged.
1/2W resistors are available in this size, so that’s
what we’re specifying. That allows
the Emulator to handle a short circuit
on its output indefinitely.
ADC input impedance
One design consideration was
ensuring that the ADC sampling did
not unduly load the Emulator’s output. A load of even 1MW to ground
would be measurable, as it would
draw 3µA at 3V.
Two ADC channels are fed directly
from low-impedance sources and
unaffected by loads; transistor Q1
and op amp IC2 drive the VSHUNT
and ILSENSE lines, respectively.
Effectively, they are upstream of their
respective shunts.
On the other hand, any load applied
to the VOUT line would be indistinguishable from a load at the Emulator
output. The ADC input used to sense
the VOUT voltage is such a load.
The ADC input consists of a small
capacitor, nominally 28pF, which is
connected to the ADC pin to sample
the voltage. The capacitor is then connected to the internal ADC circuitry
(and disconnected from the pin) to
perform the conversion.
The ‘switched capacitor’ model can
be used to calculate an equivalent DC
resistance. A switched capacitor is
simply a capacitor that is switched
between two different connections at
a known frequency. The resistance of
such an arrangement is simply 1/CF,
where C is the capacitance in farads
and F is the frequency in hertz.
With our 100Hz sampling, this
comes out to around 350MW, which
is more than high enough. Higher sampling rates would reduce this apparent resistance.
Another point to consider is that
the ADC capacitor is not discharged
between samples, so the load presented by the switched capacitor is
not equivalent to a load to ground,
but rather as a resistance between the
different sampling points. That raises
its effective resistance.
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The PIC16F18146 has an ADCC
(analog to digital converter with computation) module. We previously used
some of its advanced features in the
Digital Boost Regulator (December
2022; siliconchip.au/Article/15588).
The differential ADC inputs make it
much easier and more accurate to measure the difference between two voltages, as we are doing here. The sampling time is also programmable, so we
have extended it slightly to ensure the
sampling capacitor can fully settle at
the input voltage.
There is also a DIA (device information area) that holds information
such as the measured value of the
chip’s internal voltage references.
This means we can measure voltages
against this reference without a separate calibration step.
The DAC mentioned earlier is an
8-bit type with a 4.096V (nominal)
voltage reference. It can deliver up
to around 4V in 16mV steps and can
produce a voltage with 0.1V precision.
The output voltage at VSHUNT and
VOUT is thus limited by design to
around 3.4V. This works well with circuits using 3.3V microcontrollers that
typically have a 3.6V upper limit. The
MAX4238 op amp specifies a common
mode voltage up to around 3.6V (with
a 5V supply) and the op amp inputs
stay within that range.
Microcontroller and interface
IC1’s pins 2, 3 and 5 connect to
switches S1, S2 and S3, respectively,
with their other sides grounded. The
micro applies an internal weak pullup
current to each, so it can detect button
presses as level changes on those pins.
An I2C OLED module is connected
to IC1’s pins 12 and 13 for the SDA
and SCL signals. The OLED is powered from 5V; it has an onboard 3.3V
regulator with I2C pullups, allowing
it to interface with a microcontroller
running from 3.3V or 5V.
IC1 has a local 100nF bypass capacitor between its pin 1 supply and pin
20 ground. Pin 4 (MCLR) is pulled up
to 5V by a 10kW resistor, allowing the
microcontroller to run.
These pins and pins 18 and 19 (PGC
and PGD) are taken to CON2 for in-
circuit serial programming (ICSP) of
the microcontroller.
Coin cell behaviour model
As the saying goes, all models are
incorrect, but some are still useful!
siliconchip.com.au
There are several characteristics of
coin cells that we are explicitly modelling. We’re not claiming that the
model is comprehensive, but it mimics
the behaviour of a real coin cell well
enough to be useful.
Our model is based mainly on a
CR2032 cell, as that is what we have
used the most. We fitted graphs provided by several CR2032 manufacturers to curves described by simple equations, adjustable by a single parameter.
There is a lot of variation between
manufacturers and even between cells
from the same manufacturer under
different conditions. The default
behaviour of the Emulator is similar
to a typical coin cell.
Firstly, coin cells have internal
resistance. For CR2032 cells, the value
is around 20W, but it can change with
load and state of charge.
Other 20mm diameter cells, such as
the CR2016 (half as thick as a CR2032
at 1.6mm), appear to have a similar
internal resistance. So the Emulator
will also be suitable for thinner cells
of the same diameter but might not be
as accurate for those with a smaller
diameter.
A simple way to model the internal
resistance is with a fixed resistor, and
we chose the 22W part that we have
already explained. One advantage of
using a fixed resistor is that this resistor can also be used as a current measuring shunt.
The actual circuit appears to have
an internal resistance of around 24.5W,
as the 1kW base resistor carries a current in proportion to the load current
divided by the β (gain). So it adds
We have used a
socket header to attach
the OLED module in
our prototype, but
the Emulator will be
much more robust if
you solder the display
directly to the main
PCB.
around 2.5W (1000W ÷ 400) of resistance for a β of around 400.
The next factor is that, like most batteries, the terminal voltage drops as the
cell discharges until it is flat. For coin
cells, the voltage drops a little at the
start, then is quite steady for most of
the cell life. Once it starts to fall after
that, it does so quite dramatically.
While we looked at using a curve
to model this, curves that fit all three
stages were complex, and we found
that they weren’t helpful for observing circuit behaviour as the cell goes
flat.
Instead, we have implemented a
simple model that maintains a flat voltage and then linearly changes the output voltage as the cell’s state of charge
(SoC) nears its endpoint. For example,
with this set to 10%, the voltage is flat
from 100% to 10% SoC, then drops to
half by 5% SoC. Finally, the voltage
is ramped to zero when the Emulator
determines the cell is flat.
This feature can be turned off (set
to 0%) to disable this behaviour. Fig.2
shows the graph of the data sheet
behaviour compared with the emulated behaviour.
Fig.2: our emulated cell voltage curve is much simpler than
that seen in many coin cell data sheets, but it still mimics
the cell going flat. Otherwise, we prefer to manually adjust
the voltage and observe what happens.
siliconchip.com.au
While we could have more closely
emulated this with, say, four linear
sections, we decided not to do that.
We found that a constantly changing
voltage during use interfered with
monitoring the device’s operation. In
other words, we have sacrificed reality for usability. Our simple voltage
curve provides a voltage that behaves
very predictably.
It does omit the higher voltage at
the start, but that can easily be emulated manually by initially setting the
voltage to 3.2V, observing the operating, then manually dropping the voltage to 3V.
Another well-known aspect is that
a cell’s apparent capacity (in mAh) is
reduced if it needs to supply a heavier
load. The manufacturers also provide
graphs to characterise this behaviour.
One typical graph we saw showed
that a nominally 240mAh cell provides only 150mAh with a continuous
discharge of 3mA, nearly halving its
effective capacity.
We found quite a few curves that
demonstrate this behaviour. The data
varied quite a bit, but it was clearly
some form of polynomial relationship.
Fig.3: the reduction in useful capacity is modelled as a
straightforward quadratic curve. It’s a compromise between
simplicity and accuracy.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 75
Firmware
The Coin Cell Emulator
shown at actual size, along
with the wire added to the back of the
PCB (right). This increases the thickness
of the PCB to bring it nearer to that of a
CR2032 cell (3.2mm thick vs 1.5-1.6mm thick for
the PCB). You’ll need to apply a bit of heat to get the solder
to take to the large copper area.
A good technique for finding the order
of polynomial relationships is to take
a plot of the logarithms of the variables in question. The order of the
polynomial is related to the slope of
this graph.
Consider the quadratic equation y
= x2. The value of log(x2) is equal to
2log(x), for positive values of x, so the
graph of log(y) or 2log(x) against log(x)
would have a gradient of two, suggesting a quadratic equation of some sort
(a quadratic is a second-order polynomial).
We found that the slopes of these
log/log plots were just over two. So
we modelled this with a quadratic
equation and found that it fit quite
well to the manufacturer data and was
simple enough for the 8-bit micro to
calculate.
We didn’t see any charts that show
behaviour much above 5mA but this
model also allows us to extrapolate.
This extrapolation suggests severely
degraded capacity as the current enters
this region. Our experience is that
coin cells discharge very quickly if
you draw much more than 5mA from
them, so this makes sense.
Our model takes a parameter equal
to the current at which the cell capacity is halved. We have used a default
value of 3.5mA, which matches the
CR2032 data sheets we examined. It
also makes it easier to match your
Emulator to a specific cell if required.
If this value is set to zero, then there
is no modelling and the Emulator will
show the same capacity no matter
what current is drawn. Fig.3 shows
the graph of the model against typical
data from a cell data sheet.
Regarding the short circuit behaviour
noted earlier, it should be apparent
that, like a real coin cell, the Emulator
will quickly ‘go flat’, effectively ending
the short-circuit condition.
Fig.4: the rise time of the output is limited by the capacity of
the circuit to supply the current to charge the 1µF capacitor
at its output (the timebase is in µs here). The DAC that
controls the voltage has a settling time of around 10µs.
76
Silicon Chip
For the most part, the microcontroller allows the user to set the output
voltage, although it can modify that
based on the discharge modelling. It
monitors the voltages around the circuit and calculates and sums the currents in the two measuring shunts.
A timer keeps track of time intervals and allows the current to be accumulated over time for the charge and
capacity calculations. The measured
charge (in mAh) is taken from the
actual value, while the SoC calculation
is based on the modified behaviour at
higher currents.
All this information is displayed on
the OLED screen. There are modes to
allow a test to be started and paused.
These tests turn on the output voltage, start the timer and start the charge
accumulator. The test can be ended
manually or automatically at a previously set endpoint voltage.
Alternatively, the Emulator can simply be used as a power supply that can
monitor the current consumed by the
circuit under test.
A settings screen can be used to trim
the parameters used to set the output
voltage. Since the Emulator can measure its output, a calibration routine
can set these automatically. You can
also trim the resistance values of the
shunt resistors and adjust numerous
parameters that control the coin cell
emulation.
Since the PIC16F18146 has an internal EEPROM memory (which can
withstand more write cycles than flash
Fig.5: the longer fall time of the Emulator output is almost
entirely due to the 1ms time constant of the 1kW/1µF RC
combination. After about 4ms (four time constants), the
voltage settles near its 0V endpoint.
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Assembly
The Emulator is built on a small PCB
with surface-mounting components.
They are the typical range of SOIC,
SOT-23 and M3216/1206 parts that are
fairly easy to solder. Fig.6 is the PCB
overlay diagram; you can also refer to
the photo of the PCB before the OLED
module is attached.
We recommend using a fine-tipped
soldering iron, solder flux paste, thin
solder wire, tweezers, a magnifier and
good lighting. Solder wicking braid
is helpful for removing bridges and
excess solder. Work outside if you
don’t have good ventilation or fume
extraction.
1 double-sided PCB coded 18101231, 78 × 44mm
1 Mini-USB SMD connector (CON1)
1 5-way right-angle male header, 2.54mm pitch (CON2; optional, for ICSP)
1 1.3in I2C blue OLED module (MOD1) [Silicon Chip SC5026]
3 2-pin SMD tactile switches (S1-S3)
4 small self-adhesive rubber feet
Semiconductors
1 PIC16F18146-I/SO microcontroller programmed with 1810123A.HEX,
wide SOIC-20 (IC1)
1 MAX4238 or MAX4239 low-offset op amp, SOIC-8 (IC2)
1 BC817-40 NPN transistor, SOT-23 (Q1)
1 LL4148 SMD diode, SOD-80/MiniMELF (D1)
Capacitors (all SMD M3216/1206 X7R)
1 10μF 10V
1 1μF 16V
6 100nF 50V
Resistors (all SMD M3216/1206 1% ¼W unless noted)
5 10kW (code 1002 or 103)
2 1kW (code 1001 or 102)
1 22W ½W (code 22R0 or 22R)
MAX4239
K
CON3
1
10 m F
100nF
100nF
+
10kW
BC817
–
+
CON4
–
1kW Q1100nF10k 1kW 1mF 22W 10k 100nF
Start with the mini-USB socket,
CON1. Apply flux to all its pads and
rest the part on top. Its locating pegs
should lock into holes in the PCB,
aligning it.
Clean your iron’s tip and add a small
amount of fresh solder, then touch it
to where the pins meet the PCB pads.
After that, apply a generous amount of
solder to the four larger pads that affix
the connector’s shell.
If you have bridges between the
pins, add some extra flux and press
some fresh braid against the bridge
with the iron. When the braid has
taken up solder, slowly draw both
away together. If the part is flat against
the PCB, surface tension should leave
enough solder to form a solid joint.
Fit Q1 next by spreading flux on its
PCB pads and resting it in place, being
sure to align the body with the silkscreen printing. Tack one lead, ensure
the part is flat and aligned within all
pads, then solder the remaining leads.
Solder the two ICs next, using a similar process, starting with one lead to
locate the part. Both ICs should have
Parts List – Coin Cell Emulator
IC1
PIC16F18146
D1
4148
100nF
10kW LL4148
CON1
RS T
GND VCC SCL SDA
10kW
MOD1
IC2
Figs.4 and 5 show the rise and fall
times of the output voltage in response
to a change in the setpoint. These
charts were taken in an unloaded state
(although the Emulator accurately
indicated the expected 0.3µA draw
from the 10MW scope probe at 3V!).
As expected, the rise time is short,
about 20µs from 0V to 3V. About half of
this is due to the 10µs settling time of
the DAC, with the other half being the
time to charge the 1µF capacitor with
the 200mA available. The fall time is
dominated by the 1ms time constant
of the 1kW/1µF pair and takes about
4ms to settle near its final value. An
external load will speed this up.
CON2
100nF
Response time
Fig.6: assembling the PCB
mainly involves fitting
SOIC and M3216/1206
SMD parts. Take care
with the orientation
of the two ICs and D1.
‘Mousebites’ are provided
so you can separate the
PCB between CON3 and
CON4; the two halves can
be rejoined with some
light-duty figure-8 wire.
ICSP
memory), the calibration and setup
parameters are immediately stored in
EEPROM when modified.
S1
S2
S3
a small pin 1 divot in one corner, so
align that with the PCB markings.
For IC2, this might be a notch at the
pin 1 end.
For diode D1, ensure its cathode
stripe aligns with the ‘K’ marking on
the PCB. After this, none of the components are polarised. The capacitors
will not be marked, so be careful not
to get them mixed up. The resistors
will be marked with codes, as shown
in the parts list.
The PCB will now need a thorough
cleaning to remove flux residue. At
the minuscule currents the Emulator measures, any contaminants can
cause leakage and interfere with measurements.
Your flux might recommend a solvent, but we find that isopropyl alcohol works well (another great option
is Chemtools Kleanium G2). Wipe
away any excess solvent and allow the
remainder to evaporate thoroughly.
Give the PCB a thorough check now
that it has been cleaned, as any problems will be easier to spot and repair
before the OLED is fitted, as it covers
many of the components.
Now solder on the three tactile
switches, being sure to align them
within their silkscreen outlines and
keep them flat against the PCB. If you
need to program your microcontroller,
add the CON2 ICSP header.
Next, solder the OLED module in
place using its four-pin header, aligning the pin markings and spacing it
above the other components on the
PCB. When you are happy with its
location, solder stiff wires to the lower
corners of the OLED module and
secure them to the through-hole pads
in the PCB below.
Finally, attach the rubber feet to
the underside of the PCB so it won’t
scratch your work surface.
Programming
PICs supplied in kits or purchased
separately from our Online Shop come
December 2023 77
Table 1 – Settings
Page – Parameter
Notes
Set Cap
The default allows for brief tests. It
can be set from 1-10mAh steps of
1mAh or up to 250mAh in steps of
5mAh.
Endpoint
It can be set from 0 to 3.4V in
0.1V steps, the same as the output
voltage.
Current Comp.
The current at which the effective
cell capacity is halved. It can be set
in steps of 0.1mA; if set to 0mA,
there is no compensation. 3.5mA is
typical for CR2032 cells.
Voltage Fall
Below this level, the cell voltage
setpoint is linearly decreased to
reach 0V at 0% SoC. If set to 0%, then
there is no decline in voltage.
Nominal emulated cell
capacity
Default = 10mAh
The voltage at which
tests stop
Default = 2V
Determines how cell
capacity is affected by
high currents
Default = 3.5mAh
SoC at which the
cell voltage starts to
decline
Default = 5%
Screen
Calibrate
Ensure the output is not connected
to any loads and press S1 to start.
This sets the Q1 Vbe and DAC span
automatically. Pressing S2 sets all
parameters back to their defaults.
Set Q1 Vbe
Set by the Calibrate step. If voltages
across the range are still too high,
increase this value. There is a slight
offset below 0.3V output; voltages
are not as accurate in that range.
Set DAC span
If the voltage offset increases
across the range, decrease this; if it
becomes lower, increase it.
Set R(hi) (22W)
It can be set in steps of 0.01W within
10% of 22W. 1% parts should not
need calibration.
Set R(lo) (10kW)
It can be set in steps of 1W within
10% of 10kW. 1% parts should not
need calibration.
Trim Timer
The Emulator’s 1Hz clock is available
at the RST pin (with respect to
ground). This can be measured to
help trim the timer. Each step will
change the frequency by about 0.4%.
Exit Setup
All values are saved to EEPROM as
soon as any changes are made and
new settings are used immediately.
Start automatic
calibration voltage
Transistor Q1 baseemitter junction
voltage
Default = 588mV
The nominal span of
the DAC output
Default = 4002mV
Actual value of 22W
resistor
Default = 22.00W
Actual value of 10kW
resistor
Default = 10000W
The displayed value is
the period of the timer
counter
Default = 243
Press S1 to return to
normal operation
78
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
programmed, so skip this section if you
have one of those.
The PIC16F18146 requires a PICkit
4, PICkit 5 or Snap programmer. If you
are using a Snap (which does not provide power), you can supply power
using a USB cable connected to CON1.
You might need to use some short
extension wires to prevent the Snap
from fouling the USB cable.
You can use the Microchip IPE to
program the 1810123A.HEX file. If you
don’t have the IPE installed, it can be
downloaded and installed for free as
part of the most recent MPLAB X IDE.
Once programmed, the startup
OLED screen should look like Screen
1.
Setup
The Coin Cell Emulator is usable
without calibration, but we recommend doing it since it is easy and only
needs to be done once. Hold in S3 until
the screen goes blank, then release it
to enter SETUP mode.
Table 1 summarises the individual
setup pages you can cycle through by
pressing S3. In general, S1 decreases
a parameter while S2 increases it.
On some pages, they trigger specific
actions, such as starting the automatic
calibration process or returning to normal operation from SETUP.
The first four SETUP screens relate
to the emulation settings and can be
skipped to reach the calibration settings.
We recommend just running the
automatic “Calibrate” step. If the Emulator’s other measurements are off, you
could consider changing other values,
such as the resistances or timer trim.
Cycle to the Exit Setup page and press
S1 to return to regular operation.
Connections
CON3, CON4 and the circular pads
can all be used to connect to a circuit
under test. For most of our prototyping, we simply used a header socket
for CON3 and ran jumper wires to
our circuit.
The circular section of the PCB is
designed to be slotted into the side
of a cell holder. The photo opposite
shows the Emulator connected to our
Advanced Test Tweezers. It probably
won’t work with other cell holder
types where the cell is inserted from
above.
Since the PCB is only 1.6mm thick,
it will not be a tight fit for holders that
siliconchip.com.au
Screen 1: the initial screen seen when
the Emulator powers on allows the
output voltage setpoint to be changed
with pushbuttons S1 and S2. S3
switches to the other screens. Holding
S3 for three seconds enters the Setup
mode, shown in Table 1.
Screen 2: the output can be toggled
on and off when this screen is shown.
Note also the supply voltage display
at upper right. If this is flashing, the
supply is lower than 4.5V or higher
than 5.5V, and the Emulator may not
function correctly.
Screen 3: S1 and S2 start and
reset the stopwatch timer and
charge accumulator measurement,
respectively. If the timer is running,
this screen will show PAUSE instead,
with S1 pausing the timer if pressed.
expect a 3.2mm-high CR2032 cell,
although many holders are designed
to accept 1.6mm thick CR2016 cells.
You could carefully bend the cell holder’s tabs to add more tension. We also
added some thickness to the Emulator
by soldering on some pieces of wire,
as shown on page 76.
Another option is to carefully break
the PCB between CON3 and CON4
(there are ‘mouse bites’ in the PCB to
facilitate this). You could then run a
pair of wires between CON3 and CON4
to join them.
the emulated cell is nearly flat.
The fourth line (in larger text) shows
the measured current. It is in a larger
font as it is the most important parameter to observe. If “I(lo)” is shown,
the reading is expected to be accurate
to 0.1µA as only the 10kW resistor is
being used as a shunt.
When “I(hi)” is shown, the Emulator
has switched to the higher range and
the 22W resistor comes into play. When
this happens depends on the output
voltage and supply voltage (which
relates to IC2’s headroom). At 3V output, it will occur at around 130μA.
The second-last line shows the stopwatch timer, which measures up to
999 days, or almost three years. The
text on this line indicates if the timer
is running and, if so, the charge measurements on the next line are also
accumulating.
The µAh reading on the last line
measures actual charge consumption
(not adjusted). It can be used to validate the total current consumption and
estimate potential capacity losses due
to high current usage. The SoC figure
does take into account the adjusted
current.
Pressing S3 shows Screen 2, which
allows the output voltage to be
switched on and off; S1 switches it
off, while S2 switches it on.
Screen 3 is reached by pressing S3
again; it allows the timer and charge
accumulator to be paused, started and
reset. S1 will start and pause the timer,
while pressing S2 resets the timer and
accumulator when the timer is paused.
Press S3 again to reach Screen 4.
Pressing S1 (“GO”) on this screen
will switch on the output voltage and
start the timer and accumulator; S2
(“PAUSE”) will pause the timer and
switch the output off. Thus it can be
used to start and stop testing cycles.
Once you’ve started a test, the current draw will be shown, and the timer
and accumulator will go up while the
SoC goes down. As the SoC passes 5%,
the output voltage will drop to simulate the cell running flat. When the output voltage reaches the endpoint, the
test will pause, as if S2 were pressed
on this screen, allowing the statistics
to be recorded.
Operation
Screen 1 shows the default Emulator cell voltage of 3V, which can be
changed on that page.
Other features on Screen 1 are common to the operating Screens. The
third line of text shows the status of
the output voltage; the first figure is
the setpoint (target) output voltage and
whether it is on or off.
The other voltages are the values
upstream and downstream of the
shunt, respectively. They can be considered the internal cell voltage and
external ‘terminal’ voltage, respectively. The first should be very close
to the set voltage (when on), except if
Conclusion
We’re already making good use of
the Coin Cell Emulator in designing
an upcoming project. It’s also coming
in handy as a general power supply
SC
for low voltages and currents.
The circular section of the PCB is designed to slot straight into the cell holder
we’ve used for various projects, including the Advanced Test Tweezers
shown here. In this case, testing would be easier if we separated the
PCB between CON3 and CON4 for a more flexible connection.
Screen 4: pressing S1 here starts the
timer and charge accumulator and
switches on the output voltage. S2
pauses the test, allowing the results
to be recorded. The test will be
automatically paused if the Emulator
reaches its endpoint voltage.
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 79
SERVICEMAN’S LOG
Mixing it up a bit
Dave Thompson
It’s frustrating when there is a flawed product on the market, and instead
of recalling or fixing it, the manufacturer blames the user instead. Your
mobile phone has no reception? You must be holding it wrong! This time,
it was our blender, and I had to turn to other users for a solution…
It’s hard to be a serviceman these days without hearing ominous stories about the ‘right to repair’, especially
regarding large US corporations. This has become a really
hot-potato topic and indeed has been commented on with
some insight by the Editor and other contributors to this
magazine.
One of the most serious concerns is the increasing use
of subscription models for hardware, which is becoming
more and more ‘de rigueur’. I think that is terrible news
for consumers and repair people.
Court cases and laws preventing monopolies and protecting the right of repair for consumers have driven some
companies to introduce subscription models, so they are
assured of continued income as well as protecting their
‘intellectual property’. One way they do that is by trying
to maintain control of their products after they are sold.
I suspect this will put many local repair people and servicemen out of work, often in very small communities,
unless, by some miracle, they can score a maintenance
contract with the vendors. No doubt they would demand
exclusivity anyway. If the manufacturer designs products
so that only they can reactivate them after a part is changed,
how is anyone else supposed to fix them?
The repair business isn’t what it used to be
So, a bleak outlook, then. My own computer repair business, almost 30 years old now, has seen the wave and wane
of the industry. Throw in a deep recession in the late 2000s
and the city and my workshop being ruined by earthquakes
in 2011, and it’s a wonder we still have a business at all.
At one point in the mid-2000s, we were averaging 65
calls a day. I employed four guys and two vans on the road.
These days, it is just me, and I’d be lucky to get 65 calls in
six months. It turned out this way because computer service and repair have long been sunset industries. These
days, it’s all mobile devices, and they are consumable, so
if one is dropped and broken, insurance or savings pays
for a new one.
In some cases, data recovery may be required, but even
that is moot as much of our stuff is backed up in ‘the cloud’
anyway. Every bread-and-butter job we had in the 2000s
has long since disappeared, only to be done now by techsavvy householders or the advent of self-install plug-andplay internet.
That’s OK with me, as I am nearing that age where I’ll
hang up my floppy drive anyway. But for dozens of other
companies and service guys, this really is the end of an era.
Manufacturing for unrepairability
It’s the same with just about everything these days. Most
appliances, for example, are manufactured without repair
in mind (or, if you are a bit cynical, with anti-repair in
mind). If you can even source replacement logic or controller boards, they are usually hellishly expensive because
they just aren’t made as available as they were in the past.
The manufacturer wants you to buy a whole new unit,
not fix the broken one. That’s one reason why repair being
monopolised by manufacturers is so troubling. There is a
conflict of interest, so they are more likely to quote you
unreasonably high repair prices in an attempt to convince
you to give up and buy a new one instead.
My wife bought a high-end food blender/mixer type
thing a while back, and overall, it works pretty well. It has
this thing called “wireless detect”, which took us a while
to figure out, but all we really use the thing for is blending and mixing, using the various controls on the front of
the machine.
One thing that always annoyed me is that it will only
run with a jug or attachment sitting in it. Actually, many
blenders have such a safety feature that prevent them from
being used with nothing attached to them. In this particular
80
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Items Covered This Month
•
•
•
•
Overly complex food mixer ‘repair’
Tracking down interference using an SDR
Three different antenna repairs
Dual tracking power supply excessive ripple
Dave Thompson runs PC Anytime in Christchurch, NZ.
Website: www.pcanytime.co.nz
Email: dave<at>pcanytime.co.nz
Cartoonist – Louis Decrevel
Website: loueee.com
model, this wireless detection feature allows the mixer to
detect different-sized attachments and adjust pre-set programs automatically.
In other words, it detects the particular attachment
and adjusts things accordingly. As there are quite a few
different-sized glass grinder bowls and cups available as
optional extras, it seemed like a handy feature to have.
These attachments are basically glass bowls that screw
into the base that has the blades built into it. The whole
thing then mounts on the blender. The glass bowl part is
removed from the hard-plastic blade-driver section for
loading whatever you want to grind into it.
Let’s say you want to make some powdered salt. You fill
the glass bowl with the desired amount of granular salt,
invert the blade-holder part and screw it blades-first to the
glass bowl. You then flip the whole thing up the other way
and plop it, blade side first, onto the top of the blender,
engaging the splined drive socket.
You can then use one of the pre-programmed routines
or manually drive the mixer using the controls.
An exercise in frustration
It all seems simple enough. Except, on this model, with
the wireless detect feature, you have to have the main mixing jug, one of these herb grinders or any of the other attachments installed on it to even power up. And it turned out
to be so finicky that it made it almost unusable.
The main jug – the one that comes with it – seems solid
enough in operation. However, those optional glass bowl
attachments have what I discovered are NFC (near-field
communication) chips buried inside them that are read
by electronics inside the device.
In practice, though, the majority of the time we tried to
use these attachments, the mixer would not detect that the
bowl was in place, so it would not start. It was the same
with all the attachments we bought for it. Obviously, this
was not going to fly.
The attachments have arrows moulded into them that
show how much the two halves should be torqued for
the thing to work, but even when the arrows are perfectly
aligned, it just will not switch on most of the time. That
certainly created a lot of blue language from the kitchen!
Another problem is that, given the size of the smaller
attachments, cranking them up to have the arrows aligned
means crushing a large O-ring type seal between the two
halves. Trying to undo them once torqued is nigh on impossible for my wife and almost impossible for me. The whole
thing was starting to reek of poor design and implementation.
siliconchip.com.au
Of course, this whole idea is product protectionism
cleverly disguised as a safety mechanism because thirdparty fittings and attachments that don’t have the correct
NFC tag will not work. Only original attachments can be
used on this mixer, and they’re not cheap. When it works,
it works well, but getting it to work was often highly frustrating for us.
Our first stop was the big-box store where we had bought
the main unit, along with these extra fittings we thought
we’d need. Of course, the guy there, while extremely knowledgeable when we were shopping for it in the first place,
now seemed to be struck dumb and claimed he’d not heard
anything from customers about it.
Perhaps our one was faulty, and if we liked, he could
feed it back through the warranty system and in just six
short weeks, we could have it back.
It was only a month old at this time, so I suggested that
if he thought it was faulty, perhaps they could see their
way clear to replace it under the Consumer Guarantees Act.
Well, you’d think I’d suggested sending his grandmother
on a one-way trip to Switzerland!
That solution apparently wasn’t going to happen, for
various reasons, first and foremost because we had used
the mixer! I contemplated going through the finer points
of finding faults without actually using an appliance. Still,
this guy had obviously been down the annoyed-client road
before and, like a debating team captain, had a pat answer
prepared for everything and anything I could say.
At this point, my serviceman’s lizard brain kicked in,
and I thought I’d open it up, have a look and see if there
was anything I could do. Perhaps the sensor had fallen off
or had been glued in at an angle, or something silly that I’d
be able to fix with my rudimentary knowledge of blender
repairs. I mean, how hard could it be?
We all know the answer to that, and you’d think that
after all these years, I’d know too!
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 81
At least it was well made
Pulling this thing apart was not that difficult. These are
‘proudly’ made in the USA and using American-made parts,
or so the blurb states. That means no dumb security screws,
just straight-forward, meat-and-three-veg screws that can be
undone with a longish-reach Posidrive screwdriver. Everything came apart so easily. No breakaway clips, no hidden
screws under mouldings. Very refreshing!
I did have to pop out the rubber feet from the bottom to
reveal some case screws, but I’ll give them that as a neat
design.
Once the screws were out, the two halves of the case
came apart easily. There are no warranty-voiding stickers
across the join or any of those breakable foil screw covers
over anything. At least these appliances are designed to be
repaired, and I like that a lot. Spares are apparently widely
available from what the sales guy told me the first time we
were at the shop looking into buying one.
Inside is what you’d typically find in a blender. After
removing a well-made protective metal cover, I could see
the main space was taken up with a large brushed motor. It
directly powers a splined drive socket at the top of the mixer
via a square drive shaft at the end of the motor’s armature.
The splined drive socket is easily removable by loosening
a grub screw with an Allen wrench, if need be, and while
the splined and square drive parts are cast from relatively
heavy metal, the body of the drive socket is hard plastic.
This is actually by design; if something in the jug or bowl
fouls the blades and stalls the mixer, this plastic moulding will shear or crack, and the metal square-drive part of
it will just spin harmlessly inside the moulding to protect
the motor from stalling and potentially burning out motor
windings and electronics.
It is a relatively crude but very effective protection system. Replacement drive sockets are inexpensive and readily available. Another big plus for the repairability of this
device.
The mouldings and mounting for the motor and electronics are all super heavy-duty plastics, almost like Bakelite,
especially given what I usually see in most cheaper modern
appliances. This is definitely higher quality, and it is typical of the brand. The unit is certainly built to last, which
you’d hope for, given the relatively high purchase price.
The front panel controls – two toggle switches, a speed
control pot and the LED display – are all directly mounted
to a circuit on the inside front of the case. This PCB is populated with the usual mix of SMDs and discrete components, with heavy wiring to the motor and power switch
on the right rear side of the mixer.
It all looked pretty standard and what I would expect to
see in any reasonably advanced blender. However, I could
see nothing in or around the top of the unit that resembled
an NFC reader, so I assumed it was mounted on the main
circuit board instead.
This ‘initiator’ side of the NFC system should throw out
a magnetic field that would (hopefully) detect the passive
NFC chip embedded in the attachments and then allow the
mixer to be powered up, or not.
The thing is that I could see the NFC chips embedded
in the glass bowls on opposite sides, so why was this not
detecting attachments 90% of the time? As the attachments
have a spline-shaped base, they can sit at any angle in the
drive system, but no matter where they sat, the blender
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would not detect them most of the time. There seemed to
be no rhyme or reason.
So, to my mind, there was either a fault with our unit
or the NFC system is somewhat flawed. I reassembled the
blender, as there was really nothing I could do, except
feel a little better that I had at least tried to do something!
An unexpected solution
Next, I did what I always do and hit the web to see what
was going on. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it turns out that this
is a well-known problem with these blenders; a lot of people were moaning about it in online forums and videos.
Nice one, big-box store guy; we won’t be shopping with
you again!
As is typical with the information available, there is
a lot of it, and not much is helpful. Plenty of these slick
kitchen-type presenters were talking as if we were imbeciles and saying all we have to do is align the arrows on
the attachments, and it will work.
Oh really? They are either completely ignorant or wilfully obtuse, and the comments sections usually refer to
the former. While there are no instructions with the attachments, and the arrows are pretty hard to find unless you
are looking for them, this resolution didn’t seem to help
the majority of affected consumers.
The party line from the manufacturer themselves was
that a video would be ‘out soon’ to explain how to make
this more reliable. To date, nothing has been posted, so, as
is typical for a lot of technology, they leave it to end users
to resolve their issues and find a workaround.
As it turns out, there was only one video among hundreds where a home-chef type presenter found an almost
foolproof way of making it so the attachments were detected
and worked every time. She claimed she had just stumbled
across it after spending many hours trying to get her (much
more expensive model) mixer to work properly.
Her method was to screw the two halves of the attachment
together and line up the arrows. She would then place the
attachment on the blender, and typically, it would not be
detected. While it was in place, she cranked the glass part
about 30° more and magically, the blender would see it.
She could replicate this every single time, and of course,
the arrows on the case of the attachment no longer lined
up, but the appliance would detect it just fine.
This, of course, would make it impossible to undo again
due to being so tight. However, she then backed off the
bowl in-place, using the grip of the blender to help her.
She ensured she was still maintaining the seal – any contents would soon fall out if she undid it too far – and then
removed it and flipped it upside down before completing the unscrewing and removing the blades part of the
attachment.
Of course, the first thing I did was try that method with
ours, and it worked every time. The fact that the manufacturer hasn’t modified the attachments to show new arrow
positions, or at least put out a workaround video of their
own, is extremely disappointing. Sometimes, there is no
electronic fix, just a clever end-user who figures out how
to make it work.
The source of the interference
G. G., of Macleod, Vic thought he was solving one problem when he was actually creating a new one. He explains
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
how a software-defined radio (SDR) helped track down the
source of the problems...
I have a weather station to monitor the roof cavity temperature so I know when to turn on an extractor fan on a hot
day. I realise that it could be thermostatically controlled,
but I don’t want it running when we’re away.
The roof cavity sensor/sender seemed to be chewing
through batteries. Because of the nuisance value of getting into the ceiling, I decided to power it from a plugpack
plugged into a ceiling power point. That worked OK for a
few weeks, then the display stopped updating.
Then I started noticing that the remote controls for our
alarm system and garage doors had become less sensitive and
we had to be much closer to their receivers to get operation.
Next, a remotely-controlled ceiling fan refused to operate.
At about this time, I had brought home a system for repair
that included radio microphones and a mobile internet dongle. My wife was convinced it was causing the problems.
I replaced the batteries in the alarm remotes, which gave
a slight improvement. They had tuning capacitors, so I tried
tweaking them and got a bit more range, but barely enough.
Retraining and new batteries in the garage remotes seemed
to gain a little more range.
A web search told me that the alarm remotes were on
304MHz, so to check their outputs, I thought I’d install
an SDR that had been given to me years ago but that I had
never used. The software installation was tedious and even
required manual installation of the drivers, but it eventually sprang to life.
Stepping across that part of the spectrum, I couldn’t see
any response to my button presses. Testing with the radio
mic in the system in for repair confirmed that the SDR was
working correctly.
I then did a web search on the garage remotes. I found
a very useful site (www.remotepro.com.au) that gives all
manner of Australian wireless remotes and the programming of garage door openers, and even has full installation
details for many garage openers. That site told me that my
Merlin controllers were on 433.92MHz, so I tuned the SDR
to that frequency to check the garage remotes.
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 83
I found that there was already a very strong continuous
signal, 30dB greater than the local FM radio stations. Rough
direction finding with the whip antenna gave a null when
pointed toward the weather station sender. Powering down
the circuit going into the ceiling immediately stopped the
rogue signal, and all remotes started operating perfectly.
Reapplying the power even restored the temperature display, and on the SDR, I could now see a short update burst
coming from the sender about once per minute.
It seems that an occasional software glitch sent the
weather station into a continual transmission mode and,
as it was within a couple of meters of all the other devices’
receivers, it swamped their reception.
Likely previous similar glitches had flattened the batteries
before we’d noticed any effect, but my new power source
was able to keep the rogue transmission going. After the
reset, it has been performing normally for a few weeks; until
I get around to replacing it, I at least know how to restart it.
I later discovered that the alarm remotes also operate in
the 433MHz band.
A trio of antenna repairs
Around fifty years ago, I. G., of Banyo, Qld was a Radio
Trainee with the Department of Civil Aviation, field training
at his home station, the Gold Coast Airport (Coolangatta)...
I was lucky to have great mentors at the station, the supervisor and technician, who involved me in fault clearance
and regular maintenance. Still, one time I was left to my
own devices as they worked on a particularly troublesome
fault with the non-directional beacon (NDB).
The NDB was the most common and simplest navigation aid at the time. It is a low-frequency 200-400kHz AM
transmitter, transmitting a short two- or three-letter identifier in Morse code a couple of times per minute.
Before WW2, broadcast stations were used as navigation
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Silicon Chip
aids. With bearings from two stations, you could determine
your position on a map or track towards a known location.
That was not ideal as few broadcast stations transmitted
24 hours per day, and when broadcast networks became
the norm, you could not be dead sure which station you
were tuned to.
NDBs were a more reliable alternative. The lower frequency gave a better ground wave, with no chance of skip.
The Coolangatta beacon’s antenna was electrically short,
a single vertical wire supported by several horizontal wires
strung between two 22-metre tall towers. These horizontal
wires formed a capacitive top-load to increase the antenna
current and thus the antenna’s efficiency. The NDB transmitters were a pair of 100W vacuum tube units, providing
operational redundancy.
They were monitored by a receiver fed from a short whip
antenna inside the NDB hut. If any of the monitored parameters fell below the Low-Performance Level, the monitor
would change from the running transmitter to the standby.
Frequent intermittent faults were causing changeovers.
It was determined that the fault was causing a varying carrier level.
After a lot of investigation, the fault appeared to be in
the antenna itself. The DCA lines section was called in to
lower the antenna and investigate its condition. This was
reasonable because, being a coastal station, salt corrosion
was a likely culprit. However, the antenna checked out OK
and was hoisted back into position. The fault persisted.
During this process, the trainee (me) was superfluous
and left to his own devices. As I wandered about like a lost
soul, in one of my walks around the hut, I noticed that the
iron roof had a metal drainpipe down one corner that finished just above the ground and level with the ant cap on
the building foundation.
The drainpipe was not fully anchored and moved in the
breeze, bumping into the ant cap. I wedged it back with a
piece of timber and sought out the boss. We found that the
fault could be induced by pushing the drainpipe against
the ant cap. Grounding the roof and downpipe altered the
signal strength at the monitor receiver. Problem solved!
After completing my training, I was stationed at Charle
ville in southwest Queensland and became the acting
supervisor after a few years. This time, there was another
very intermittent fault with the Charleville NDB. It only
happened occasionally during wet weather. In this case,
the fault kept recurring for a long time with an unknown
cause; the short duration made it difficult to pin down.
When the beacon was eventually updated, the new installation required re-siting the transmitter in the “transmitter
hall” and the complete replacement of the antenna coaxial feeder (changed from 70W to 50W). When the old feeder
was removed, they discovered a female-to-female connector
under a little ‘sand dune’ in the building’s sub-floor cable
duct that dated from the previous NDB upgrade. Heaven
knows how long ago that was. It was not weatherproof
in any way and showed signs of distress. In the words of
Homer Simpson, “D’oh!”
The last item is also from Charleville. In the 1970s, before
the adoption of SSB high-frequency communications for
air/ground communications, comms were amplitude modulated. To cover all of the Flight Information Zone with
varying ionospheric conditions, three frequency ranges
were used near 3MHz, 6MHz and 8MHz.
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
The fault this time was interference on one of the 3MHz
channels. The interfering signal was the local radio station program (918kHz) mixed with the ident code from
the local NDB (267kHz). This was determined by sitting
down with a calculator and figuring out what combination
of harmonics of these two transmitters fell on the problem
receiver frequency.
The receiver antenna system was three half-wave dipoles
strung between two towers, with the lowest frequency at
the top and the highest at the bottom, to maintain the same
height relative to the wavelength. The feeders (shielded
twin) were laced to a vertical guide wire at the centres of
the dipoles.
Since the problem manifested itself only in the local
receiver, it was likely local. The immediate low-tech solution was to belt the receiver antenna feeders with a broom
handle, which alleviated the fault!
The fault was located in the supporting guide wire in
the receiving antenna system. Initially, the eyes used in the
mechanical structure of the supporting cables and other
fittings were provided with small plastic sleeves to stop
spurious rectifying joints from being formed by contact
between the dissimilar metals and/or their oxides, making
an unintended but efficient mixer.
The plastic sleeves were long gone in the western sun.
To clear the problem permanently, all these joints were
eventually bonded.
Fixing AC ripple in a dual-tracking power supply
T. I., of Penguin, Tas had a trusty old power supply until
it could no longer be trusted. Some gremlins were lurking
within that would need to be dealt with...
Following the completion of my electrical apprenticeship last century, I completed a course in Industrial Electronics, culminating in the construction of a Dual Tracking Power Supply kit, the details of which appeared as a
project in Electronics Australia in March 1982. The power
supply utilises LM317 and LM337 three-terminal regulators and provides ±1.5-22V DC at up to 2A.
It has been my main DC source for experimentation in
electronics over the years. “Tracking” refers to the magnitude of the negative rail voltage following the positive rail
across the entire voltage range. It does this by measuring
the positive regulator’s adjust/reference signal, inverting
it and feeding it to the negative regulator’s adjust terminal. There is also a fixed 5V reference supplied by a separate regulator.
The power supply has performed faultlessly over the
years – until recently.
Having built Nixie tube projects in the past, I am now
in the process of building a VFD (vacuum fluorescent display) clock with a 32,768Hz crystal timing reference. I
design, build and test the PCBs using the power supply
mentioned above.
I completed the crystal oscillator timing board and the
divide-by-32,768 circuit to provide the 1Hz count for the
clock timing. I connected my CRO lead to observe the
32,768Hz waveform, only to find significant noise on the
trace.
Although it was a definite sinusoidal waveform, I could
not achieve a clean single trace and initially thought that
the crystal was possibly being overdriven. However, after
spending some unnecessary time changing components
siliconchip.com.au
around the crystal, I just could not get a clean signal.
Instead of a clear trace, it appeared as a sinewave drawn
by a 10mm-thick noisy trace.
Somewhat frustrated and overdue for lunch, I switched
off the AC supply to the power supply with the CRO still
connected, and the signal instantly became a clean sinusoidal trace until the power supply’s onboard filter capacitors drained their charge away. That got me wondering
whether the unit I’d built all those years ago was in trouble.
I was able to prove things weren’t right by powering the
crystal oscillator with an alternative DC supply; it produced
a perfect trace on the CRO. I then put the CRO leads across
my power supply’s output and could see significant AC
ripple that obviously shouldn’t be there. My timing circuit
was being modulated with AC ripple from the DC supply.
I removed the four screws holding on the lid and slid the
cover off. I could see four tantalum capacitors and several
aluminium electrolytics. Given the age of the unit, I suspected that at least one was faulty.
Looking at the circuit, I could see a 1μF tantalum at the
input to each regulator, a 100μF electro across the output
of each regulator, and a 10μF tantalum across the voltage
adjustment potentiometer. I could also see some discolouration on one 120W resistor between the adjust and output
terminals of the positive regulator.
I clearly needed to remove the PCB and therefore took
heaps of photos and marked the wires before going any
further. I desoldered the main transformer AC connections
plus the wiring to both the regulators, which are mounted
on the side of the case for heatsinking. I then removed four
other connections to various switches and indicator LEDs.
I could then swing the PCB out far enough on the remaining wiring to enable component replacement. While the
board was out, I checked the integrity of all the onboard
diodes and any suspect dry joints. However, all was good
and certainly acceptable, given my inexperience at the
time I built it.
I replaced the four tantalum capacitors, the two 100μF
electros and the discoloured 120W resistor, then set about
restoring all wiring connections. After checking and
rechecking, I plugged the unit back in with the lid still
removed and with fingers crossed, switched it on. Great –
no smoke, so a good start.
A test of the voltages proved that the unit was functional
across the full range. Connecting the CRO leads showed a
perfect, ripple-free DC supply. However, I then noticed a red
LED fully illuminated. This was the dropout LED, which
should only be illuminated if a fault draws too much current
on the output so that the regulator drops out of regulation.
What was going on here? I had no load connected, and
the voltage tested perfectly across the entire range.
Spending too much time measuring voltages around the
components driving the LED, I finally realised that the sunshine coming through the window (yes, we do get sunshine
in Tassie’s winter occasionally) was shining through the
back of the LED, which was mounted on the front panel,
giving the impression that it was illuminated. Shading the
sunlight stopped the glow. No wonder the wrinkles on my
forehead keep multiplying!
With the lid back on, I connected the crystal oscillator
to the power supply and tested the signal with the CRO,
to see a perfectly clean trace. Hopefully the unit will serve
me for many more years to come.
SC
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 85
D-200 RADIO TRANSMITTER
/DVWPRQWK,JDYHVRPHEDFNJURXQGRQ6SXWQLN
WKHƬUVWDUWLƬFLDOVDWHOOLWH DQGH[SODLQHGKRZ,
UHFUHDWHGWKHUHOD\EDVHGq0DQLSXODWRUrWKDW
VZLWFKHGWKHWZRUDGLRWUDQVPLWWHUVRQDQGRƪDW
+]:HSLFNXSZKHUH,OHƱRƪP\QH[WMREZDV
WRUHYHUVHHQJLQHHUDQGEXLOGRQHRIWKHUDGLR
WUDQVPLWWHUVWKHQFUHDWHDVXLWDEOHSRZHUVXSSO\
A Vintage Radio Story, Part 2 By Dr Hugo Holden
T
he Manipulator is an oscillator
based on two sensitive relays.
It alternately switches off the output
valves in the two transmitters by disconnecting the screen grids, stopping
the transmitted carrier wave. Each
transmitter is on for ~0.2s at a time,
then silent for a similar period.
Having gotten my Manipulator
working like the original, mainly using
period-authentic parts, I turned to the
three-valve-based transmitters and the
chassis they were built into.
While I was not planning to go as far
as to produce a complete D-200 unit
with two transmitters and the Manipulator, I wanted to make a period-correct
recreation of one transmitter along
with the Manipulator that I could put
on display. I knew some parts would
not be identical to the originals, but I
was confident I could get very close.
Transmitter details
The two transmitters are based on
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Silicon Chip
small 2P19B pentode valves, which
are still readily available.
The data sheet extract shown in
Fig.10 includes the customary bottom view of the valve’s base. Another
2P19B data sheet shows screen and
suppressor grid connections reversed,
as if viewed from the top. Still, it is
easy to tell from the valve itself that
this data sheet is correct.
Before building the transmitters, I
made a test jig to verify that the 2P19Bs
I had bought (some shown in Photo 2)
were functioning normally.
They had been stored in corrugated
cardboard rolls with a thin paper wrapping, which is not ideal, resulting in
some corrosion on the tinned copper
leads. I had to clean that off, initially
by scraping and then smoothing the
lead with 1000-grit sandpaper, being
very careful not to bend the wires near
where they enter the glass envelope.
To determine their ‘normal
behaviour’, I tested over 30 valves,
Australia's electronics magazine
a fair statistical sample. Three were
defective: two had low gain, and the
other had let in air.
Fig.11 is the test jig circuit, while
the actual device is shown in Photo 1.
I took the sockets on the test jig that
receive the wires from the 2P91B valve
from some machined-pin IC sockets. I
tied grid 3 to +12V rather than ground
because it was tied to +10V in the Sputnik transmitter output stage.
I added a 1kW series resistor to
avoid an accidental short between the
grid pin and adjacent heater pin from
applying 12V to the heater. I used a
12V gel cell to power the filament
circuit and my dual 0-60V CPX-200D
bench power supply, connected in
series, for the 120V test voltage.
Sputnik-1 20.005MHz
transmitter design
The transmitter circuit is shown
in Fig.12. Valve V1 is deployed as a
crystal-controlled oscillator while V2
& V3 (all 2P91Bs) form the push-pull
power amplifier. The valves have a 1W
plate dissipation, so a pair running in
an output stage, sharing the load, will
have no difficulty delivering a 1W RF
output, provided there is adequate
drive voltage (close to 40V peak) at
the G1 grids.
The circuits for the 20.005MHz and
40.002MHz transmitters are practically identical, aside from the coil and
capacitor values. In the 40.002MHz
unit, the main change was that they
did not tap off the main tank circuit
for an impedance match with the
antenna, as they did for the 20MHz
unit. They used a capacitive divider
instead.
siliconchip.com.au
Photo 1: the test jig in action. The
anode wire comes out the top of the
valve envelope, hence the need for
the clip lead.
A detail not shown in the original
circuit diagram is that the L5 and L6
coils are built into a rectangular can.
Capacitor C28 is not visible in any historical photos, so it most likely was in
the same shield can. C29 is visible in
the photos, though (see Photo 3).
In Photo 4, the shield around the
glass-bodied crystal appears to project a little above the housing, but the
shield can for L5 and L6 does not look
that tall. I determined the transmitter
chassis’ dimensions by studying the
photos and scaling from the image
details and the limited geometry data
in the design document.
I determined that the housing
around the transmitter modules was
93mm wide, suggesting the chassis
was 90mm wide, 180mm long and
60mm deep.
It was OK that the crystal shield projected a little above the chassis height
in the original unit because this side
of the transmitter module faced the
Photo 2: some of the 30 2P19B valves
I bought, of which three had failed.
They had not been stored properly,
so I had to clean the corrosion off the
wire leads before testing them.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.10: a page from a data sheet for the 2P19B pentode showing its pinout and
critical parameters.
Fig.11: a simple test circuit for the 2P19B pentodes that allowed me to weed
out three faulty valves from the 30 I purchased. A test signal can be fed
in, and the amplified output signal examined with various external load
resistances.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 87
Fig.12: the Sputnik-1 20.005MHz transmitter circuit. The two transmitters were very similar but had
some slight differences besides the crystal frequency. Note that most versions of this circuit (including
one we published previously) contained errors; this one should be accurate.
interior of the D-200 housing, where
there was clearance.
The original document shows the
width of the main unit that carries
the two transmitter chassis as 132mm,
more than enough to accommodate
two 60mm-deep units with 12mm to
spare, so a mid-line panel and wiring
could run through the main body.
Lead dress for the 2P19Bs
Photo 5 shows how I insulated the
bare valve leads with PVC tubing,
although I later decided to use Teflon
sleeves instead.
Replicating the chassis
When it comes to making replicas
of a vintage electronic apparatus, the
most difficult part is the mechanical
engineering aspect of the project. If
not done well, the final result does
not represent how the unit actually
worked and looked.
It takes quite a while to examine the
historical photos and figure out where
the components were placed and the
original geometry of the internal and
external panel work. A good replica
also requires tracking down most of the
original parts; not just the valves but
also resistors and capacitors, because
they have a characteristic look, especially the Soviet chassis-mount and
RF feed-through capacitors.
Also, for RF apparatus operating
above 5-10MHz, physical layout and
shielding considerations become very
important. This includes the mounting clips that attach the 2P19B valves
to the module body. These serve as
partial shields and conduct some heat
away from the valves as well. Therefore, it is best to stick to the original
physical layout closely.
To make the transmitter module’s
metal chassis precisely the same as
the original would require the same
tooling. The metalwork had been riveted and soldered together in places.
Without the tooling, other methods
exist to create a nearly identical-
looking metal module of almost identical geometry.
I decided to make the metalwork
out of brass, which is easily soldered.
I used 3mm-thick plates to replicate
Common mode choke
with glued slug
C26
Capacitor missing from
schematic – C47, 1.2nF 250V
R10
C27
C29
C34
20.005MHz crystal in
glass envelope
Photo 3: a photo of the original transmitter with C27 and
C29 visible, but C28 is nowhere to be seen. It makes sense
that it was in the shielding can with L5 and L6 since it
connects to both.
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Silicon Chip
Photo 4: this photo of the 20.005MHz transmission unit
shows that the crystal shield was taller than the shield for
L5/L6/C28 and even projected outside the chassis slightly.
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Figs.13-20: these are the mechanical
drawings that I provided to the
machinist who made my reproduction
transmitter metalwork.
Fig.13
the top and bottom faces of the module, routed and engraved with a
groove to fit the side panels, made of
0.8mm-thick brass. The three internal
panels were also CNC machined. They
are all soldered together too.
This method avoided having to fold
any metal panels, which can distort
the material.
I prepared Figs.13-20 to help with
this task. Troy at Sunquest Industries
in Warana, Maroochydore (Qld) did
the CNC machining. The projections
on the sides of the plate are 1.5mm tall
and 5mm wide. The slots in the other
panels that they pass into are 1.5mm
wide and 6mm long. These are soldered together. I soldered them with
the aid of a gas stove and the result is
shown in Photo 6.
I finished the chassis with 1000-grit
sandpaper and spray painted it, using
temporary screws to prevent paint
from entering the threads and covering the Earth points.
Very few paints stick to polished
or shiny brass well. I have been
experimenting with paints for this
Photo 5: I added insulation tubing
to the pentode leads; initially, I used
PVC but changed to Teflon later.
Photo 6: having received the CNC-machined chassis pieces, I soldered them
together with a gas stove. The areas that were masked with screw heads are either
chassis grounding points or where I didn’t want paint to get into threaded holes.
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application for many years. One excellent product is the clear Dupli-Color
spray number DS-117. It helps not to
have any pigments or fillers, such as
aluminium powder. After coating the
brass with this clear coat, I waited
24 hours and applied silver DS-110
spray paint.
Once that had dried, I applied a
final clear coat. This makes for scratch-
resistant paint with a good finish and
maximum surface adhesion (similar
to automotive paint). You can see the
result in Photo 6.
December 2023 89
Fig.14
Other options that give superior
adhesion and scratch resistance are
powder coating or electroplating.
However, those would have meant
sending it away to a factory, which I
was reluctant to do.
Note that while I used Phillips-head
screws to keep the holes clear of paint,
the final transmitter has slot-head
screws to match the original.
Photos 7 & 8 show the completed
transmitter with the final 16:3 output coil.
Terminal strips
The original unit appeared to contain two side-by-side terminal strips
with five tags each, each mounted
with two screws & nuts and a thinner
underlying insulating plate. I decided
to make this myself as one 3mm-thick
black fibreglass plate with four mounting holes and a rear 1.6mm insulating
plate, as shown in Photo 9. It might
have been done that way originally.
I made a custom connector strip for
the unit’s rear wiring connections (also
shown in Photo 9). I used a six-row
strip rather than eight (as in the original) as the extras were not required,
and this way, it would be less crowded.
Oscillator & output tank coils
I searched for ceramic coil formers
for several weeks. I determined the
diameter of the original ceramic coils
and the approximate number of turns
from the photos in the design document. The formers have slots for the
winding wire. Most likely, the originals would have been a pre-made part
intended for amateur radio projects in
the USSR.
Generally, the wire used on these
sorts of formers is silver-plated copper.
I acquired the closest oscillator
coil form I could find from the UK.
It required a machined base, which
I made out of Bramite, to help match
the original appearance – see Photo 10.
I wound this coil using 0.9mm-
Fig.15
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diameter silver-plated copper wire. My
first attempt was a 12-turn coil with a
five-turn centre-tapped secondary. An
additional 10pF parallel capacitance
was required to bring it to the correct
frequency.
It is possible that the original trimmer capacitance had a higher centre
value than the one I selected. However, the photos of the original suggested a 13-turn coil, which would
have given the option of a six-turn or
four-turn CT secondary. Experiments
showed that a four-turn secondary
provided inadequate voltage to get
the output stage to full power, so six
turns were required.
40-42V peak was needed at each of
the two output valve grids to attain the
full power output of 1W.
The closest ceramic former I could
find for the output tank coil, which
closely matched the geometry of the
original coil, was from Surplus Sales
Nebraska. It was close to the right
diameter with the correct number of
grooves, so the turns/inch (or turns/
cm) was correct, but it was too long.
To solve this problem, I bought a
diamond cutting disc from eBay and
fitted it to my bench circular saw
and removed 7mm of ceramic material from each end (see Photo 11). I
machined the end mounting pieces
from Phenolic rod, similar to Tufnol,
and fitted threaded, machined brass
inserts into those for the retaining
screws.
Because Sputnik-1’s antennas were
bent dipoles straddling a 0.58m diameter ball, the antenna feed impedance
would have been higher than the 72W
typical of a straight dipole, possibly
as high as 150W. It would be possible
Fig.18
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Fig.16
Fig.17
to find the exact value by making a
mock-up from a metal sphere and some
antenna rods.
Also, the antenna rods were a little
shorter than ¼ of a wavelength each.
When this is the case, for the basic
dipole at least, the antenna behaves
as a resistor with a capacitor in series
and represents a reactive load where
the current leads the voltage. This may
have helped to tune out the inductive
reactance of the three-turn coupling
coil on the 20.005MHz unit.
From the original document images,
I saw that the output coil had close
to 15 turns. The centre tap supplying
130V to the coil being on the same
side as the end connections suggested
an even number of turns. I initially
wound an experimental 15:3 coil and
later moved to a 16:3 for the final output coil (Photo 12).
Fig.19
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December 2023 91
Fig.20
Fig.20: this is the last of the seven mechanical drawings for the chassis.
To conveniently measure the output
power into a 50W load, I made several coupling baluns that presented
the transmitter output with a range of
loads, with the results shown in Fig.21.
The transmitter was tolerant of load
resistances from 70W to around 240W,
delivering at least 1W into that range of
loads. Output power peaked at 1.32W
with a load close to 138.8W, with the
plate-to-plate load resistance for the
2P19B valve pair close to 4kW.
The applied load resistance affects
the exact tuning of the tank coil with
the butterfly capacitor. If the output
were peaked with a low-range load
resistance (around 70W), it would
tend to down-shift the graph of load
resistance versus power output. If the
tuning were peaked with a higher load
resistance (around 300W), it would
tend to up-shift the graph.
Presumably, the D-200 transmitter
modules were tuned for maximum
power output when connected to
the actual antennas in the Sputnik-1
spacecraft.
Also, at full power, the plate voltage of the 2P19b with the 138.8W
load fell lower than its screen voltage. The RMS voltage swing across
the 16:3 output coil primary is 72V,
while the peak voltage from plate to
plate, across the coil primary, is close
to 102V. Each plate sees half of this,
so the plate dips to around 79V (51V
below the 130V HT voltage), ie, 11V
below the 90V screen.
This is not a concern for most pentodes unless the plate voltage is much
lower than the screen voltage; then,
there can be excessive screen-grid
current. I measured the screen-grid
current under all output loading conditions, even when the plate voltage
dipped to 23V below the screen voltage
with the 312.5W load, and the screen
current altered very little. Also, the
output waveform remained normal.
With lower load resistances than
138.8W, the plate voltage swing is less.
With the 78.1W load, the plate voltage
dips only 35V below the 130V HT and
stays 5V above the screen voltage.
Replica air-variable capacitors
The transmitter contains two
air-variable capacitors. To help match
these as best possible, I machined a
matching-looking nut for a Johnson-
Viking butterfly capacitor (Photo 13)
and attached it to a white Bramite
plate, which resembles ceramic.
I also machined a shroud around the
original adjusting nut for the oscillator trimmer capacitor and painted that
black to resemble the original parts.
It was made from a vintage germanium transistor mounting clamp and
◀ Photos 7 & 8: the completed and
operational replica 20.005MHz
transmitter.
Photo 9 (above): this is the tag
strip I made (shown at the top). I
wasn’t sure if the original had two
parallel 5-terminal strips or a single
arrangement like this. Regardless, it
was easier to make it as a single unit.
I then made the connector strip with
six terminals (shown at the bottom)
rather than the eight of the original, as
only six were used.
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a machined brass insert – see Photos
14 & 15.
Replica common-mode choke
Photo 17 shows the relative heights
of the crystal socket and shield and the
common-mode choke in the replica.
Coils L5 & L6 were likely wound as
a common-mode choke on the one ferrite core; the photos show a single ferrite slug. I think they made this choke
tuneable to allow a small amount of
fine adjustment of the exact frequency
provided by the crystal.
The idea behind the choke was to
ensure the cathode (filament) of V1
(2P91B) had a very high impedance
with respect to ground so the oscillator could work correctly. In a typical Colpitts-style crystal oscillator
for medium wave frequencies up to
2MHz, the cathode (or filament, in
this case) choke is typically chosen
to be around 1mH, with an inductive
reactance at that frequency of about
12.5kW.
In the case of the 20MHz oscillator, a choke of 100μH or thereabouts
is satisfactory, giving about the same
reactance. One thing about making an
RFC (radio frequency choke) is that it
is vital to keep the self-capacitance
low. The self-capacitance is in parallel with capacitor C27 (20pF).
This means that the construction of the choke must either be a
single-
layer coil, or a wave-wound
Photo 10: I was lucky to find this coil
former in the UK as it’s very close to
the original. I just had to add the base.
Fig.21: the reproduction transmitter’s output power vs load resistance. It
peaks around 138.8W; we don’t know the exact impedance of Sputnik-1’s
antennas but expect they were in the 70-150W range.
low-capacitance coil, to keep the self-
capacitance below a few picofarads.
I could have used two 100µH axial
chokes, but that would not make for
a good-looking replica.
I therefore made a single-layer coil
Photo 12: after some experimentation,
this is the configuration I came up
with for the output coil. It’s a 16:3
coil, with a 3/4-inch diameter, 3in
length, 8 turns per inch using 1mm
diameter silver-plated wire.
(bifilar wound) with an inductance
of 85μH and a self-capacitance of
3pF, determined by a self-resonance
test – see Photo 16. I fitted C28 (a
Soviet-made 1200pF capacitor) inside
the can, as shown in Photo 16. This
arrangement is probably similar to the
original part.
The choke also provides some of the
DC resistance required in the heater
chain. Each valve has a 2.2V heater,
accounting for 6.6V in total, while the
battery supply is 7.5V. The DC resistance of each coil is 4W, and the filament current is close to 100mA.
The value of R2, a resistor in series
with the filament string, was not specified in the design document. The
total voltage drop due to the choke is
0.8V, which would make the value of
R2 close to 1W. However, it’s possible they ran the filament chain 15%
‘over voltage’ with fresh batteries. The
2P19B data sheet says the filament
should be in the range of 1.8-2.5V, so
that should be OK.
Replica crystal
Photo 11: this former was also almost
perfect, but I had to cut the ends off to
make it the right length, then machine
some end pieces.
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Photo 13: the shroud (made from the
transistor mounting clip) was painted
black & can be seen fitted in Photo 14.
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The crystal was an interesting challenge. The original crystal was in a
7-pin glass envelope, typical of many
of the late 1950s era. While these
December 2023 93
Photo 14 & 15: the shroud around the original adjusting nut for the oscillator
trimmer capacitor made from a vintage germanium transistor mounting clamp.
crystals are still sometimes available
from Ukraine, I could not find one at
20.005MHz. A typical 1MHz crystal is
shown in Photo 18.
To make a replica, I cut the top off
a 7-pin valve using a diamond file in
the lathe and made a 7-pin base for
it, initially only fitting three pins as a
trial. The closest crystal I could find
was 20.004864MHz.
After I cut the glass valve, I heated
the cut glass edge to red heat with a
blowtorch. This helps to ensure that
microscopic cracks in the cut edge
don’t start to spread through the glass
wall later. Also, to get the modern
smaller crystal to operate properly in
the circuit, I had to add 12pF of parallel capacitance. I hid that inside
the base of the replica crystal – see
Photo 19.
RF output connectors
The photo of the original unit shows
what appear to be two round RF connectors. To help replicate them, I used
F connectors.
When the module was finished, it
was time to combine it with the Manipulator. I had considered replicating the
entire D-200 housing that contained
the two transmitters and the Manipulator but decided against it. The main
reason is that it is impossible to inspect
one side when the transmitter module
is mounted inside the D-200 casing.
A better move would be to mount
the transmitter module on a rectangular plate, visible on both sides, along
with the Manipulator relays and the
timing capacitors. This way, all the
parts are readily seen.
The achieve this, I had a natural
anodised 3mm-thick aluminium plate
CNC machined and engraved, then
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Silicon Chip
Photo 16: the common-mode L5/L6
choke and their shield can. The photo
on the right is with the capacitor C28
added.
filled with black paint. This plate
mounts on top of an insulated base.
The transmitter is fixed on one side
of the engraved plate, and the plate
is fitted to a Phenolic baseboard – see
Photo 20.
You can see videos of the replica
operating, including reception on
a shortwave radio, at https://youtu.
be/9N26pkGGPew and https://youtu.
be/_rq2yrdeGK8
Transmission test
I also built a power supply for the
replica of the Sputnik-1 Manipulator
and its 20.005MHz radio transmitter
module.
In the absence of batteries, the standard method to power a valve radio
or amplifier in a home or laboratory
setting was from a line voltage power
supply. These were called “battery
eliminators”.
Sputnik-1’s silver-zinc batteries (not
available to the public at the time) were
specially manufactured for the task.
The high-tension battery was tapped at
+10V, +21V, +90V and +130V. The 10V
One does not simply transmit a 1W
carrier at 20.005MHz because it might
cause some interference. Instead, I fed
the transmitter output into a dummy
load to absorb the power but, by adding
some small whip antennas, the leakage was enough that I could receive
the signal on a shortwave radio in the
next room.
I assembled a 5:3 balun to attach
to the transmitter and used a 50W
dummy load to present the transmitter with the ideal 138.8W output load
(see Photo 21).
A battery eliminator
Photo 17: the heights of the
crystal socket in its shield and the
common-mode choke shield can.
47mm
39mm
9mm
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11mm
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Photo 18: an original
glass envelope
crystal (right) and
my reproduction
20.005MHz unit (left).
Replica crystal
◀
Photo 19: the replica
crystal and its matching
shield can.
Original format crystal
supply was used for the suppressor
grids in the two 2P19B output valves
in the transmitter, for which the current draw is negligible. The 21V tap
powered the Manipulator relays.
The Sputnik design document
referred to the common (negative)
connection of the B battery and 7.5V
filament battery as “-A”. I decided to
stick to that on the front panel labelling of this battery eliminator.
The version shown here is based on
four 15W MEAN WELL RS-15 switchmode power supplies.
These supplies are compact, their
outputs are isolated and they have
become quite inexpensive. They are
also overload protected and are available with an output voltage of 3.3V,
5V, 12V, 24V or 48V. These voltages
are adjustable to an extent using an
onboard potentiometer; a very helpful
feature. Since the output of each one
is isolated, they can perform the same
job as an adjustable battery.
The battery eliminator circuit is
shown in Fig.23.
A large range of output voltages can
be provided by selecting these supplies appropriately. The 12V unit has
a higher output current, so that is what
I used to power the valve filaments.
Three 48V units in series provide the
B+ voltages.
Since the +10V and +21V supplies
don’t need to deliver much current, I
used zener diodes with a 1.2kW 2W
current-limiting resistor to derive
them from the output of the first 48V
supply.
When the replica transmitter unit
was running with the Manipulator,
loading the supply, I adjusted the
90V and 130V levels to be exactly
correct at the supply’s output, aided
by some built-in series resistors. The
+7.5V, +10V and +21V supply outputs
required no adjustments.
The power supply module outputs
are floating (aside from 2nF of capacitance to the unit’s housing), which to
some extent makes them safer because
a one-handed contact to the +90V or
+130V rail won’t result in a significant
current through the body to ground.
It is still better to tie the outputs to
ground electrostatically so they don’t
float up to some unknown value. I did
that using a 100kW anti-float resistor.
That value limits the one-handed contact current from the +130V terminal to
around 1mA, which is reasonably safe.
I decided to use robust 5W-rated
zener diodes, which require a modest
current to get their terminal voltage to
the labelled value.
Photo 20: the completed, fully
functional replica. The Manipulator
and transmitter module can both be
examined in detail.
Photo 21 (upper left): this dummy
load plugs into the transmitter’s
output socket. A tiny amount
of the signal makes it to the
antennas and can
be picked up by a
nearby radio.
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95
Fig.22: the front panel drilling details and artwork for my battery eliminator.
There is a 0.24W loss in the 1.2kW
resistor and a 1.25W loss in the 18W 2W
resistor. 1.875W are lost in the 5W-rated
7.5V zener, dropping to 1.125W under
load. There is a combined loss of only
0.3W in the 10V & 11V zeners. This
makes the total zener regulator losses
in use close to a modest 3W.
The shunt zener method is highly
beneficial for another reason. The
switching supplies have significant
noise on their outputs, around 80mV
peak-to-peak on measurement. This
noise is sourced from a very low output
resistance. For example, adding 100µF
directly to the supply output terminals
does little to reduce this noise.
However, the series resistance and
the low dynamic resistance of a shunt
zener regulator create a voltage divider
that flattens most of the noise out, even
without significant filter capacitors
added, especially for the +7.5V, +10V
and +21V outputs.
The 90V and 130V output required
RC low-pass filters to get the switching ripple low and under 3mV peakto-peak. The finished unit is shown
in Photo 22.
Line power safety
I built the battery eliminator into a
very high-quality Takachi MS66-2123G extruded and cast aluminium
enclosure that I got by mail from Japan.
It has the internal chassis option and
the tilt feet option.
A switched and fused IEC connector
on the rear panel avoids a cord dangling from the instrument when not
in use – see Photo 22. It also means
running mains power to a front-panel
switch is unnecessary. The IEC connector contains a very short physical link between the live pin and the
fuse; the link is easily protected with
an added insulation sheet with slots
punched for three pins.
Fig.23: the circuit for my battery eliminator that powers the Manipulator and transmitter. It’s based on four MEAN
WELL mains to DC switch-mode power supplies plus some zener diodes, power resistors and capacitors to help filter
out the switch-mode noise.
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Photo 22: the ‘battery eliminator’ mains supply is built into a very nice instrument case. All the voltages needed to run
the Manipulator and transmitter are available at the front panel banana sockets. The IEC mains input socket, power
switch and fuse are all in an integrated unit on the rear panel.
Some constructors put silicone rubber over this metal link, but I don’t subscribe to that as it can fall off. Another
option is an insulating boot, but they
are somewhat bulky.
Two Earth wires attach to the Earth
pin of the IEC connector. One goes
directly to the metal housing with
a shakeproof internal star lug. The
other Earth wire connects to all the
Earths on the RS-15 switch-mode supply terminal strip, which are all also
grounded to the case by their mounting screws.
This double-Earthing makes the
Earth wiring a lower resistance with a
higher current carrying capability and
more electrically robust than the single wire connections comprising the
Active/Live and neutral wiring.
I soldered the wires to flat circular
lugs to suit the screws on the RS-15
units and applied heatshrink insulation. Putting stranded wire directly
under the screw connections is a bad
idea, as single strands can break.
I retained the plastic covers over the
RS-15 screw connections. This helps
prevent finger contact with the mains
terminals while probing inside the
powered unit.
The RS-15 supplies can be screwed
directly to the metal surface of the
internal chassis. However, I added an
insulating black FR4 fibreglass sheet in
the region of the connectors, as seen in
Photo 23. The bodies of the units are
still double-Earthed to the chassis by
their pairs of fixing screws and their
individual Earth wires.
The front panel dimensions and
panel artwork are shown in Fig.22. It
was made as a transparent Sticker by
Stickerman.
The holes for the 4mm banana plug
connectors (made by Hirschmann) are
not round but have flats to prevent
the connector from rotating when it is
tightened. So I had to drill the holes to
about 7mm, file the flats out to 7.4mm
and then finish the holes on the opposite axis with a round file to create the
shape. The 11 solder terminals are
single 3mm screw-mount Teflon insulated types. One is a solid 10mm tall
threaded hex Earth post for the 100kW
anti-float resistor.
A good aspect of the enclosure and
sub-chassis system by Takachi is that
you can assemble everything, including the sub-chassis, front and rear
panel assembly, before you drop them
SC
into the main housing.
Photo 23 (left): the four switch-mode power supplies just fit into the case with a small amount of space left for the
resistors, capacitors and zener diodes. The circuit is simple enough that a PCB is not required.
Photo 24 (right): the wiring on the underside of the baseplate (which is separate from Photo 23). Note the power zener
across the 7.5V supply of the baseplate, this was added to protect the tube filaments from accidents.
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December 2023 97
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.
Wireless power transfer demonstration
My circuit demonstrating how magnetic levitation works was published
in the Circuit Notebook section of the
November 2023 issue (“Magnetic levitation demonstration”; siliconchip.au/
Article/16024). This follow-up uses a
similar circuit to demonstrate wireless
power transfer.
I had an H-bridge IC left over from
the Magnetic Levitation project, so I
decided to drive an air-cored coil with
it. This time, I set the drive frequency
to approximately 200kHz. I am generating the required 200kHz signal using
a 4047 CMOS oscillator (IC1). The top
section of the circuit all mounts on a
57 × 52mm PCB (see photo).
The second smaller (21 × 21mm)
PCB has a 270μH RF choke on its
back that is tuned with a capacitor to
resonate at about 200kHz. The sinewave induced in the pickup coil is
rectified by a voltage doubler circuit
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Silicon Chip
using diodes D1 & D2. The resultant
DC voltage is applied to the white LED
connected in series with a 1.5kW current-limiting resistor.
The frequency of the 4047 drive
oscillator can then be adjusted using
trimpot VR1 for maximum choke resonance by placing the smaller ‘receiver’
PCB near the ‘transmission coil’ and
adjusting VR1 for maximum LED
brightness.
The circuit’s operation is shown
in two videos which you can view at
• siliconchip.au/link/abmr
• siliconchip.au/link/abms
You will see that the LED lights
at about 80mm from the coil and
increases in brightness until it reaches
the centre. Gerber files for the two
PCBs can be downloaded from:
siliconchip.com.au/Shop/6/308
Les Kerr,
Ashby, NSW ($100).
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Significant Spectral Sound MIDI Synthesiser software update
I have released updated firmware
for my Spectral Sound MIDI Synthesiser (June 2022; siliconchip.au/
Article/15338). It is now available
for download from the Silicon Chip
website at siliconchip.au/Shop/6/6490
(along with some release notes).
The most important update is for the
six dsPIC33EP512MC502 ‘Tone processor’ chips. Version 8 features significant noise reduction due to correcting
the mapping of MIDI note velocity to
tone amplitude. It also introduces an
option to model string sound more
naturally using non-integer-based harmonics, a novel algorithm and a carefully calculated lookup table.
The source code to Version 8 is
available and has been significantly
clarified and streamlined. To build a
HEX file from the source code, you’ll
need the MPLAB X Pro licence to get
the compiler optimisation required.
However, a precompiled HEX file is
also supplied.
The Windows app has also been
altered to use the additional in-
harmonic option; the new feature is
turned on in an app setting.
I have also produced a logical diagram of the Tone Processor, which was
missing from my original article and
could help to clarify how it works.
The new feature relating to ‘in-
harmonicity’ is a deep but interesting
subject. I spent a lot of time last year
improving the Windows app with Dan
Amos and adding some features that
could extract the timbre from samples
This diagram shows how the software
works in each of the six Tone
Processor chips in the Spectral Sound
MIDI Synthesiser.
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Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 99
of sound automatically (he kindly sampled all the notes on his real piano),
adding a lot of improvements since
the published version.
Since then, I’ve been focused on trying out this inharmonic idea.
For those interested in hearing what
the Spectral Sound Synth is now capable of, I created a Bach track purely
from its sounds (mixed in Audacity).
It was inspired by Carlos’ 1968 album
“Switched-On Bach” (a very early use
of synthesisers). You can listen to it at
https://youtu.be/qUR4B8xxSeU
I have also created a version of
Debussy’s Clair de Lune and posted
it at https://youtu.be/WcUckqA5x3k
The interesting thing about the
Clair de Lune track is that the sound
was automatically calculated by the
Windows app’s ‘Instrument Analyser’
feature from samples Dan Amos gave
me of his real upright piano. He very
kindly sampled every note at three
velocities, which the App analysed
into 264 separate samples and translated into a best approximation of the
sounds using additive synthesis.
I’ve been improving this analysis
recently in relation to the sound envelope. The next step is to try to improve
the timbre, which seems to be missing
some bottom end for some reason. I’ve
been using my ‘scope and spectrum
analyser software to study my output
compared to the original raw samples,
but it is time-consuming.
I had a few direct questions about
setting the module up, and although
they all seemed to be basic problems, it
made me better appreciate a new user’s
perspective. For example, if you don’t
have your keyboard set to transmit on
MIDI channel 1, you’ll get no sound
from the module because it initially
expects channel 1.
Also, when you first build the module, it doesn’t have any sound until
you connect it to a computer and send
a patch into the module. I’ve expanded
the Troubleshooting section in the
App’s help file to deal with these situations.
Although the module seems to work
well, my recent effort is trying to make
sure it’s as good as it can be. The Windows app automatically updates for
any users, but I appreciate that firmware chip upgrades are more difficult
(you need a PICkit and a programming adaptor). I’ve been making sure
that any Windows app update doesn’t
break the system for people with older
firmware.
Jeremy Leach,
Shrewsbury, UK. ($120)
Battery-powered timer
This small battery-operated timer
triggers a 3V relay after a set time
delay. It can either latch the relay
on or pulse it. I developed it to test
electronic gardening equipment.
The BASIC program that controls
it is pretty simple, which allowed me
to use the more limited MX150F128
chip left over from previous testing,
thus requiring some variation from
the latest BASIC coding versions.
The power restriction when using
two AAA cells was resolved by using
a 10 LED bargraph to show the set
time and reducing the PIC chip’s
clock speed to 20MHz from the usual
40MHz or 50MHz.
100
Silicon Chip
Different timing values and
latched/triggered operations are
set by the four-way DIP switches.
If the Latch switch is off, the relay
is pulsed for 200ms when the timer
expires; otherwise, it stays on until
the unit is switched off.
The 5/15/30 minute timer settings can be modified, if required,
by changing the values set by PIN(7),
PIN(9) and PIN(10) in the BASIC
program. If the 200ms trigger time
needs to be changed, that can be
done by increasing or decreasing
the PAUSE 200 under the StarStopTimer subroutine.
The battery life is around 7-8
Australia's electronics magazine
hours if used in latched mode or
25-36 hours if the relay is triggered
only.
The PCB gerbers and firmware can
be downloaded from our website at:
siliconchip.com.au/Shop/6/304
Gianni Pallotti,
North Rocks, NSW ($80).
siliconchip.com.au
ASK SILICON CHIP
Got a technical problem? Can’t understand a piece of jargon or some technical principle? Drop us a line
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Viewing circuits in PDF
spread across pages
I have been subscribing to SiliChip online for some time now
and eagerly await each issue, which
I download and view on my laptop
(usually saving it for beer o’clock on
Friday arvo as a personal treat!). But
one thing that always annoys me is
viewing the PDF schematics over several pages.
In the print edition, it is no problem
as it is usually on two facing pages. But
online, you need to constantly scroll
up and down between pages. That
makes it cumbersome to follow traces
from one page to another. I note that
these PDFs are text-based, not imagebased, ie, if I zoom in a lot, the fonts
and detail remain crisp.
I don’t know if this is possible, but
could you embed schematics as a
single-sheet PDF? I don’t know what
the limits are to PDF, but is it possible
to include a very small version of the
entire schematic at the end of an article so that a computer user can zoom
into it deeply?
Cheers and thanks again for the great
magazine. (K. W., Newport, Vic)
● The issue PDFs are intended to
be viewed in “two-up” mode, where
facing pages appear side-by-side. That
way, circuits that run across pages will
appear connected.
It helps if your screen is large
con
enough to show both pages, although
you can zoom in and scroll around
if necessary for smaller screens. You
can switch between single-page and
two-page views if screen real estate
is limited.
For the two-up mode to work correctly, you must tell the reader that
the first page is the cover. In Acrobat
Reader, that’s the “Show Cover Page
in Two Page View” option under View
→ Page Display (the recently updated
UI still has this option, but you have
to click the menu icon at upper left
before View). It usually remembers this
option between viewings, so you don’t
need to enable it every time.
By the way, when referring to the
PDFs as “text-based” rather than
“image-based”, we would say that
they comprise vector images rather
than raster images. Vector images scale
much better than raster images. The
photos in our PDFs are raster images,
but everything else (text, diagrams etc)
should be vectors.
Information needed on
electric motor
I have a two-speed electric motor
that I would like to use (GMF Cadet,
frame B56, type ESBD5C2/4-6S; see
photos below), but I can’t find any
information on how to change the
speed between the 1425 RPM and
930 RPM options that are indicated.
Would any readers have information
on this? Any information/wiring diagram that anyone may have would
be greatly appreciated. (B. P., Dundathu, Qld)
● We don’t have this information. If
any reader knows the answer, please
email us and we’ll pass the information on.
Commercial 3D
printing services
I read with interest the August 2023
issue of Silicon Chip on page 92 about
people who have made a case and buttons for their Advanced Test Tweezers
like the one I built (siliconchip.au/
Article/15910). I am retired and 75 and
do not want to purchase a 3D printer
at this stage.
Can you point me in the right direction to purchase a ready-made case
and buttons? Also, is there one to suit
the previous version of the Tweezers
(SC5934)? In both cases, any colour
or clear will do. (W. J., Trentham, NZ)
● Unless you know someone who
has a 3D printer, you would need to
use a 3D printing service. There are
many about. We have previously used
JLCPCB to 3D print parts; their online
store is at https://3d.jlcpcb.com/3dprinting-quote
Mainly, you just need to upload
the STL file(s) (that you can download from our website) and choose
The two-speed electric motor, type
ESBD5C2/4-6S that B. P. cannot find
any information on. If anyone has
information on this motor please
email it to silicon<at>siliconchip.com.au
and we’ll pass it along to him.
siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 101
the material and process. You’ll also
need to give them your address for
delivery and pay for the printing
and postage.
You could also go to a Jaycar maker
hub where they have 3D printers that
you can ‘rent’. Other Jaycar stores may
also have 3D printers running demonstration prints; it might be worth asking if they can do the printing for you.
Some libraries now offer access
to 3D printers, too. Of course, you
must bring the relevant files with
you (eg, on a USB flash drive) if you
go to a Jaycar store or a library to do
3D printing.
We are not aware of any 3D-printed
case designs for the earlier version, the
Improved SMD Test Tweezers from
April 2022.
How to drive relays
from a microcontroller
Reading the article on the Programmable Mains Timer With Remote
Switching in the November 2014
issue (siliconchip.au/Article/8063), I
noticed the circuit has relays driven
directly by pins on the microprocessor.
Is it possible to drive a larger relay via
a transistor arrangement like in other
projects? (R. M., Melville, WA)
● We got away with directly driving the relay coils in that case because
they are small reed relays that only
require a low coil current. A larger
relay can be driven if a transistor is
used to drive the relay coil instead
of the microcontroller output. The
micro output can then drive the transistor base via a resistor as per other
projects and with the reverse diode
across the coil.
The circuits below show different
ways to drive relay coils from a microcontroller digital output (DOUT). (A)
& (D) shows direct drive suitable for
small reed relays, while the others use
external transistors and larger diodes.
They should work with just about
any low-voltage DC coil relay if V+
matches the coil’s DC voltage rating.
Note how (A)-(C) use a high level from
DOUT to switch the relay on while (D)(F) use a low level.
Circuits (B) & (C) are preferred due
to the limitations stated in the note
within the circuit diagram.
It’s always a good idea to include
the diodes for long-term reliability.
Touchscreen Digital
Preamp volume control
It took me a while, but I finally finished building Phil Prosser’s Active
Monitor Speakers and Active Subwoofer (November 2022-February
2023; siliconchip.com.au/Series/390).
I am very pleased with them. It took
me a while to do all the woodwork and
metalwork for the subwoofer amplifier
chassis, but I learned a few new skills
along the way.
The Active Crossover and the multiple Hummingbird Amplifiers sound
excellent for the bookshelf speakers.
Note: for (D), (E) & (F), the V+ supply must
also be the microcontroller supply (eg, 5V).
Only (B) & (C) allow the relay coil voltages to
be significantly different from the micro’s. It’s
always a good idea to include the diodes for
long-term reliability.
102
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
They are crisp and clear, with excellent bass from the subwoofer as well.
It’s a fantastic project and I love the
sound. Well done.
I also decided to build the Touchscreen Digital Preamp (September & October 2021; siliconchip.au/
Series/370) but have struck a problem
that I have not been able to solve. I was
hoping for some clues/suggestions in
fault finding.
The touchscreen/remote and input
selection all work fine. The mute function works fine. The sound is clear
and clean, and everything seems to
work OK (including the tone controls),
except the volume control does not
work correctly.
The touchscreen can select a volume level from -99 through zero up to
99, but the sound levels are far higher
than they should be. The minimum
volume setting of -99 still provides
too high of a sound level. The sound
level is far too high for a higher-level
input device, such as a CD player (up
to 2V output), even with the volume
set to the lowest point of -99.
The volume control does adjust the
volume level; it is just over much too
small a range. From -99 to 0, the output level only changes from 0.19V
RMS to 1.2V RMS. That’s a range of
just 16dB. At a setting of 99, the output
is 3.95V RMS, an increase of another
10dB or so.
I started checking for obvious construction or component placement
errors as simple things like the wrong
resistor could explain higher than
designed gains/sound levels, but I
have not found one. I am puzzled about
what I have done wrong or missed in
my construction. Any suggestions,
please? (P. M., Loftus, NSW)
● There are limitations to the digital attenuators, but the Baxandall configuration used should give a wider
range of volume settings than that.
We recently designed a new project
(that will be published soon) using
the same basic volume control project
and measured a volume control range
of close to 64dB, more than twice what
you found.
We suspect the problem is that with
the earlier software, a setting of -99
maps to a potentiometer setting of
29/256, which is far from the lowest
volume setting possible. To fix this,
go into the settings and set the input
level to -29 or lower, which will bias
continued on page 104
siliconchip.com.au
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WARNING!
Silicon Chip magazine regularly describes projects which employ a mains power supply or produce high voltage. All such projects
should be considered dangerous or even lethal if not used safely. Readers are warned that high voltage wiring should be carried
out according to the instructions in the articles.
When working on these projects use extreme care to ensure that you do not accidentally come into contact with mains AC
voltages or high voltage DC. If you are not confident about working with projects employing mains voltages or other high voltages,
you are advised not to attempt work on them. Silicon Chip Publications Pty Ltd disclaims any liability for damages should anyone
be killed or injured while working on a project or circuit described in any issue of Silicon Chip magazine.
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siliconchip.com.au
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2023 103
I would like to get a complete kit
for the Lathe-E-Boy lathe controller,
as published in your January 2018
issue (siliconchip.au/Article/10933).
If that is not possible, then maybe
links to suppliers of kits for the Induction Motor Speed Controller (April &
May 2012, August 2013; siliconchip.
au/Series/25) and the Micromite Plus
Explore 100 (September & October
2016; siliconchip.au/Series/304).
I appreciate any help on the above.
(H. G., Bunbury, WA)
● There is no complete kit for the
Lathe-E-Boy as it is too specialised.
However, we have an almost complete kit for the Explore 100, just lacking the touchscreen (siliconchip.au/
Shop/20/3834). There were complete
kits for the Induction Motor Speed
Controller released by Jaycar and
Altronics, but that was over ten years
ago, and they have both since discontinued their kits.
The controller/IGBT IC used in the
IMSC has not been manufactured for
several years. We bought a small stock
that we sold through our website, and
at the time of writing, we only have
one left (siliconchip.au/Shop/7/2814).
The only other source we can find for
the controller/IGBT IC is AliExpress.
Their provenance is unknown, but
presumably they will work.
Therefore, except for the Explore
100 part of the design, you would
have to gather your own parts. Before
ordering the STGIPS30C60 IC from us
or anyone else, check that all the other
parts are still available. You would
need to get a copy of the IMSC parts
list, which is on page 72 of the May
2012 issue.
Advertising Index
2.5GHz Frequency
Counter troubleshooting
all the settings down. That should
also result in a wider volume control range.
If that isn’t enough, the maximum
gain can be changed by varying a couple of resistor values. The value of the
10kW resistors between pins 6 & 7 of
IC2b/IC4b will reduce the maximum
gain and probably also reduce the
minimum output. Increasing the values of the 2.2kW resistors connected
to diodes D1-D4 should also reduce
the maximum output level.
Parts for the Induction
Motor Speed Controller
Altronics.................................29-32
Dave Thompson........................ 103
DigiKey Electronics....................... 3
Emona Instruments...............9, IBC
Icom Australia............................... 6
Jaycar............................. IFC, 49-56
Keith Rippon Kit Assembly....... 103
Lazer Security........................... 103
I built your 2.5GHz 12-Digit Frequency Counter (December 2012 & January 2013; siliconchip.au/Series/21),
and it is partially working but not in
all modes. Frequency measurements
work and are accurate, but it seems to
lock up on the 100MHz or lower range
in Period mode. The display simply
doesn’t update.
The FREQ/PERIOD line toggles
LD Electronics........................... 103
Microchip Technology......... 7, OBC
Mouser Electronics....................... 4
PCBWay................................. 10, 11
PMD Way................................... 103
Rigol............................................... 9
SC GPS Analog Clock................. 23
Silicon Chip PDFs on USB......... 28
Silicon Chip Shop...................... 33
Silicon Chip Back Issues........... 41
The Loudspeaker Kit.com.......... 83
Wagner Electronics....................... 8
104
Silicon Chip
Errata and Sale Date for the Next Issue
LEDsales................................... 103
when the button is pressed. Both Green
LEDs light up properly in period mode,
and there is a 1MHz signal at TP2.
Could it be a PIC programming problem? (S. C., Revesby, NSW)
● If it displays the frequency, we
know the PIC is working; it’s very
unlikely the frequency mode would
work if it weren’t programmed correctly.
The FREQ/PERIOD signal from O4
(pin 12) of IC23 goes to three places:
pins 1 & 2 of IC12a, pin 13 of IC13d
and pins 12 & 13 of IC18d. Check that
there is continuity from pin 12 of
IC23 to all those other pins, and verify that they change levels correctly
when switching between frequency
and period modes.
If those seem correct, check that the
outputs of those gates are feeding to
the right places. That means checking
for continuity from pin 12 of IC12 to
pin 3 of that same IC, from pin 11 of
IC18 to pin 2 of IC11 and from pin 11
of IC13 to pin 10 of IC12.
Use the Fig.4 circuit diagram to follow the flow of all those control signals
to their ultimate destinations and verify that everything is connected correctly. You will likely find that one of
the signals does not flow through due
to either a bad solder joint, a pin of
an IC not being inserted properly in
the circuit or (less likely) a faulty or
incorrect IC. Fixing that should get the
period function working.
At the same time, it would be a good
idea to check that all components are
correct types in the right positions and
examine all the solder joints to ensure
they have been properly formed. The
fault can almost certainly be traced
back to those sorts of problems. SC
Breadboard PSU Display Adaptor, December 2022: there was an error in
the software (line 65 of main.c) that meant that the wrong analog channel
was read during calibration of the second current setpoint. That did not
affect regular operation but made calibration difficult. We have fixed this
and updated the software to V7; the correct HEX file for programming the
PIC16F18877 is now 0411222B.HEX.
30V 2A Bench Supply Mk2, September-October 2023: in Fig.6 on page 76
of the October 2023 issue, the ribbon cable should loop through the top of
the connector and terminate at the bottom, not the other way around, as
was shown in the diagram.
16-bit Precision 4-input ADC, November 2023: the name for the second
library on p48 under “Arduino software libraries” should be “Rob Tillaart”,
not “Rob Tillard” and the link should be https://github.com/RobTillaart/
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