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ISSN 1030-2662
11
November 1996 1
9 771030 266001
R
AUSTRALIA’S BEST AUTO TECH MAGAZINE
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If you’re looking for a magazine just filled with “how to” features,
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From the publishers of “SILICON CHIP”
Contents
Vol.9, No.11; November 1996
FEATURES
4 Striking A Blow Against Lightning
Lightning is by far the single biggest cause of power interruptions. Now
there’s new technology that can track lightning strikes with impressive accuracy, so its effects can be minimised – by Ross Tester
82 Adding An Extra Parallel Port To Your Computer
Add an extra parallel port to your PC and forget switching printer cables.
We show you how to upgrade the serial ports as well – by Greg Swain
BUILD AN 8-CHANNEL STEREO
MIXER – PAGE 20
PROJECTS TO BUILD
20 Build An 8-Channel Stereo Mixer; Pt.1
Easy-to-build unit has eight main inputs, LED bargraph level meters, effects
send and comprehensive headphone monitoring facilities – by John Clarke
30 Low-Cost Fluorescent Light Inverter
Low-current unit is suitable for solar power installations and can drive both
fluorescent and neon tubes – by Branco Justic
42 How To Repair Domestic Light Dimmers
Don’t toss that crook light dimmer. Repair it by fitting a more rugged Triac and
it should be fixed for good – by Leo Simpson
LOW-COST FLUORESCENT
LIGHT INVERTER – PAGE 30
59 Build A Multimedia Sound System; Pt.2
We describe two speaker systems designed specifically to go with the amplifier card described last month – by Rick Walters
66 600W DC-DC Converter For Car Hifi Systems; Pt.2
Second article has all the constructional details. Build it and fit high-power
amplifiers to your car – by John Clarke
SPECIAL COLUMNS
38 Serviceman’s Log
Of ships and shoes and sealing wax – by the TV Serviceman
HOW TO REPAIR DOMESTIC
LIGHT DIMMERS – PAGE 66
54 Radio Control
AM vs FM: the real facts in the argument – by Bob Young
88 Vintage Radio
A pair of Astor valve radios – by John Hill
DEPARTMENTS
2
16
18
53
79
Publisher’s Letter
Circuit Notebook
Bookshelf
Mailbag
Product Showcase
87
92
95
94
96
Order Form
Ask Silicon Chip
Market Centre
Notes & Errata
Advertising Index
ADDING AN EXTRA PARALLEL
PORT TO YOUR PC – PAGE 82
November 1996 1
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief
Leo Simpson, B.Bus., FAICD
Editor
Greg Swain, B.Sc.(Hons.)
Technical Staff
John Clarke, B.E.(Elec.)
Robert Flynn
Rick Walters
Reader Services
Ann Jenkinson
Advertising Manager
Christopher Wilson
Phone (02) 9979 5644
Mobile 0419 23 9375
Regular Contributors
Brendan Akhurst
Garry Cratt, VK2YBX
Julian Edgar, Dip.T.(Sec.), B.Ed
John Hill
Mike Sheriff, B.Sc, VK2YFK
Philip Watson, MIREE, VK2ZPW
Bob Young
SILICON CHIP is published 12 times
a year by Silicon Chip Publications
Pty Ltd. A.C.N. 003 205 490. All
material copyright ©. No part of
this publication may be reproduced
without the written consent of the
publisher.
Printing: Macquarie Print, Dubbo,
NSW.
Distribution: Network Distribution
Company.
Subscription rates: $54 per year
in Australia. For overseas rates, see
the subscription page in this issue.
Editorial & advertising offices:
Unit 34, 1-3 Jubilee Avenue, Warrie
wood, NSW 2102. Postal address:
PO Box 139, Collaroy Beach, NSW
2097. Phone (02) 9979 5644. Fax
(02) 9979 6503.
PUBLISHER'S LETTER
On the track of
lightning
Every year at about this time thunderstorms and lightning become an important
part of the weather. This applies no matter
where you live in Australia although in some
parts the storms are often a great deal more
severe. In the tropical north, thunderstorms
during the “Wet” are an almost daily occurrence while in the more temperate southern
regions, thunderstorms invariably sweep in
from a particular direction and can cause a great deal of damage.
Many people, those who would rather watch television than go outside to
see what the weather is like, are blissfully unaware of the forces unleashed
in a large thunderstorm. Others, much fewer in number, are greatly in awe
of the almost mind-numbing energy being released and the ways in which
it happens.
Think about it for a while. A big band of thunderstorm cells can originate
as far north as the Kimberleys and then will move southwest in a period of
24 hours or so. It will move into northern NSW, pass over Dubbo or thereabouts and continue on to lash Sydney or the Gosford region. A day or so
later, its remnants can be seen in the evening, far out in the Tasman, still
active with lightning, thunder and lots of rain.
To try and comprehend how much energy has been released during such
a period of thunderstorms is impossible. Not only may millions of tonnes
of rainfall have been dumped over several states with widespread flooding,
but fierce winds may have caused further damage, unroofing buildings and
downing trees. Lastly, there is perhaps the most fearsome aspect, the lightning. This may have run at several thousand strikes an hour over a front
which may be a hundred kilometres wide or more. The total energy release
may easily be equivalent to several 100 megaton bombs.
These thoughts have been triggered by our feature article this month on
the subject of tracking thunderstorms, beginning on page 4. Even while this
article was being written, we experienced several severe thunderstorms, a
timely reminder that summer is with us again.
So read the article and enjoy it. And next time a thunderstorm passes
over your area think of the forces involved. Think about protecting all your
electrical and electronic gear too - the only sure way to so is to disconnect it
while ever the storm is in progress. And if the time between lightning strike
and thunderclap is three seconds or less, the lightning is directly overhead!
Lastly, if a thunderstorm is in progress, stay off the telephone – the next
victim could be you!
Leo Simpson
ISSN 1030-2662
WARNING!
SILICON CHIP magazine regularly describes projects which employ a mains power supply or produce high voltage. All such projects should
be considered dangerous or even lethal if not used safely. Readers are warned that high voltage wiring should be carried out according to the
instructions in the articles. When working on these projects use extreme care to ensure that you do not accidentally come into contact with
mains AC voltages or high voltage DC. If you are not confident about working with projects employing mains voltages or other high voltages,
you are advised not to attempt work on them. Silicon Chip Publications Pty Ltd disclaims any liability for damages should anyone be killed
or injured while working on a project or circuit described in any issue of SILICON CHIP magazine. Devices or circuits described in SILICON
CHIP may be covered by patents. SILICON CHIP disclaims any liability for the infringement of such patents by the manufacturing or selling of
any such equipment. SILICON CHIP also disclaims any liability for projects which are used in such a way as to infringe relevant government
regulations and by-laws.
Advertisers are warned that they are responsible for the content of all advertisements and that they must conform to the Trade Practices Act
1974 or as subsequently amended and to any governmental regulations which are applicable.
2 Silicon Chip
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Macservice Pty Ltd
They say there are
two things that are
inevitable:
death and taxes.
We would add a third:
lightning!
We cannot control it,
we cannot even make use
of it. But we can be ready
for it and plan to at least
minimise the effects of its
incredibly destructive power.
By ROSS TESTER
LPATS:
Striking a Blow
Against Lightning
4 Silicon Chip
Lightning photo by MICHAEL BATH
C
ONSIDER THIS SCENARIO:
you are in charge of an electricity distribution network and the
weather forecast is not good. “Thunderstorms”, it says. Now thunder
is no great problem – ear muffs can
stop the noise. But it is the immense
power behind the thunder that has
you worried – lightning. You know
that lightning is by far the number
one cause of electricity supply failure.
The problem is that you don’t know
how bad the lightning will be. Or
where it will strike. Or when it will
strike. Do you put your maintenance
crews on standby – just in case? Or do
you cross your fingers and hope this
storm will miss your area altogether?
And then the lights go out...
Now consider this: same person,
same situation. But instead of casting
an anxious eye to the heavens, you
are looking instead at your computer
screen. What you see doesn’t look
good: stroke after stroke of lightning,
advancing at an alarming rate in your
direction. You get on the 2-way to the
maintenance crew chief: get the crew
ready to move as soon as you give the
all-clear. They’ll be needed at suchand-such grid coordinates because
that’s where the lightning will strike
in the next 15 minutes. Sure, the lights
still go out. But you smile as they come
on again after a minimal delay.
Move that same storm to a busy
airport. Everyone knows that planes
don’t land or take off during lightning.
Lightning damage, either by
direct hit or by a struck tree
bringing down lines is by far
the most significant cause of
power supply faults. Reducing
the costs associated with
lightning damage is therefore of
major importance to electricity
supply authorities. (Photo
courtesy Integral Energy).
But when does the air traffic
controller say “stop” and “go”?
When he can see the lightning?
It could be 50km away – more
than enough time to get many
flights in or away. What about
the all-clear?
Again, the controller looks at
his screen. He can see exactly
where the lightning is striking,
in real time. He can see when
the storm is going to hit, or
even if it is going to hit, and when it
has passed.
Another example: a bush fire
control centre. At least 30% of bush
fires are caused by lightning strikes.
If only you knew exactly where the
lightning was a problem, you could
have fire fighters there before the
small blaze became a conflagration.
The screen tells you exactly where
they have to go!
The same scenario could be repeat-
ed over and over across the country.
Sports arenas, building sites, mines,
oil rigs, the military, shows and
exhibitions, ports and so on – all
benefit from having accurate data
on the direction, speed, severity and
likely duration of storms containing
lightning.
Critical processes in industry, radio
& TV stations, hospitals and the like
could have their emergency generation
equipment up and running before
Somewhere under this
kaleidoscope lies the Sydney
metropolitan area being belted by
a violent storm during the night
of February 8, 1996. The LPATS
screen dramatically shows one
hour's worth of a storm front
crossing the Northern Suburbs.
Every dot is a lightning stroke:
the grey dots occurred in the last
10 minutes, ranging back to one
hour previously. The time graph
(bottom left) shows a massive
build in intensity as time passes.
This screen, which stretches from
roughly Palm Beach in the north to
Botany Bay in the south, could be
zoomed in much closer if required.
If you think the southern suburbs
were spared, the same LPATS file
some two hours earlier shows
another two massive storm fronts,
one passing between Sydney city
and Sutherland and the other
hitting the greater Wollongong area
with even greater fury!
November 1996 5
HYPERBOLAS
Fig 1: time-of-arrival lightning stroke positioning depends on gaining a very accurate time "fix" from three or more
special receivers, widely spaced. This gives a single, unambiguous position accurate to within a few hundred metres.
the storms hit: proactive instead of
reactive.
How it is done
Back in September 1991, SILICON
CHIP readers were told of an exciting new method of tracking thunderstorms by detecting the intense
electromagnetic (e-m) field generated when lightning occurs. Readers
would be aware of the static they hear
on ordinary AM radio receivers when
a thunderstorm is even some distance
away. That static is the direct result of
that e-m field and basically lightning
tracking systems are “listening” for
that “static”.
The e-m field is generated over
a very, very wide frequency range
– almost “from DC to daylight”, as
amateur operators put it. However,
by tailoring the frequency response
of the receiver, the system can be
made dramatically more sensitive to
lightning only.
In 1991, two methods were under
Fig 2: how lightning is located by time of arrival:
(a) The signal will be detected at each receiver at a different time
relative to the stroke, depending on the distance from the stroke.
(b) Time is measured at each site with a resolution of 100
nanoseconds (±50 nanoseconds).
(c) Each receiver has a 10MHz timebase which is typically
synchronised 20 times each second from the precise time
signals of the Global Positioning System satellites.
(d) A minimum of three receivers is required for a solution.
Achievable accuracy is 1 microsecond and within
200 metres, depending on the
distance from the lightning
stroke to the receivers.
6 Silicon Chip
investigation – direction finding and
time-of-arrival. As its name implies,
the direction finding method uses trad
itional radio direction finding methods
and is reasonably accurate if enough
data is available.
What has really captured the imagination, however, is the other method
reported at the time, although then in
its infancy (and not then available in
Australia).
Now things have changed:
time-of-arrival detection is not only
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November 1996 7
TRACKING A STORM WITH
It formed over the Channel Country in the
early evening. By 9.37 LPATS had record
ed 174 strokes in the past hour.
here but is proving its worth continuously. If you missed the earlier article,
a brief recap is in order.
Basically, a number of sensitive
radio receivers pick up the extremely
strong electromagnetic field generated
by the lightning discharge. The exact
time of arrival (to 100ns) is compared
to the extremely accurate time signals
from the Global Positioning Satellite
(GPS).
If two radio receivers separated
by some distance detect the emf of a
lightning strike at precisely the same
moment, it stands to reason that the
strike was somewhere along a straight
line between those two receivers – see
Fig.1. But if one receiver detects the
strike at a slightly different time than
the other, the differences between the
times can be used to work out two
hyperbolas about the receivers on
which the strike could have occurred.
These hyperbolas will intersect in two
places; one of these two places is the
location of the lightning strike.
Add a third receiver to the system
and by using the time differences
between each of the three pairs, three
hyperbolas can be drawn. However,
there will only be one point where all
three hyperbolas intersect: this is the
location of the lighting strike.
This point can be located with
quite impressive accuracy: within 200
metres of the actual strike location
within the baseband of the receivers,
and within 500 metres outside (and
8 Silicon Chip
Half an hour later further cells had
developed and more than 500 strokes had
been recorded in the past 50 minutes.
By midnight it had moved southeast but had
reduced in intensity – under 300 strokes in
the hour. Was it dying out?
remember, the actual location can
be thousands of kilometres from the
receivers).
The accuracy of the GPS “commercial” signal is only ±100 metres, so the
fix is very close indeed.
Fig.2 shows the system graphically. As we said, a minimum of three
receivers is necessary to calculate an
accurate position. Add a fourth and
subsequent receivers and the accuracy
can be further increased.
Under the acronym of LPATS, the
Lightning Positioning and Tracking
System is provided in Australia by
Kattron, a company based on the central coast of NSW. As an aside, whether
by luck (bad!) or design, Kattron’s head
office just happens to be located in one
of most active storm belts on the East
Coast. “It is incredible”, said Kattron’s
Ken Ticehurst, “to see the number of
storms which come through this area
and then affect Sydney.”
Ken is not just speaking from anecdotal evidence: Kattron now has five
years of historical data to demonstrate
the effectiveness of the LPATS method
of lightning tracking. Not only does the
data correlate perfectly with weather
bureau data, it actually surpasses it in
many respects.
In fact, the Bureau of Meteorology
has been using Kattron data since April
1992 for general forecasting as well
as upper air reports for commercial
aircraft flight paths.
LPATS operation
As mentioned, it takes three LPATS
receivers to obtain an accurate “fix”.
At present, there are six receivers
in place, ranging from Rockhampton
in central Queensland to East Sale in
Victoria. Other receivers are located
at Moree, Cobar, Coffs Harbour and
Power Network Faults
Faulty Type
Percentage
Lightning
58.98
Other Weather
6.49
Trees
2.12
Personnel Error
2.95
Equipment Failure
6.35
Other Misc. Causes
5.56
Unknown Causes
17.56
This table, from
the records of
Minnesota Power
in the USA,
clearly shows the
overwhelming
proportion of
problems to the
power network
caused by
lightning. LPATS
helps to minimise
the effects and the
costs.
LPATS
The night of September 24, 1992 was not one to be outdoors. A huge storm made its way from
southwest Queensland down through northern NSW, finally crossing the NSW central coast. These
Australia-wide "screen grabs" (which could in fact be much smaller areas) track its path in real
time by recording lightning strokes. The grey strokes are the most recent (previous 10 minutes)
ranging back to one hour before.
It was just fooling everyone. By 2am it was
recording a massive 2000 strokes per hour.
No one slept over half the state!
By 4am it was crossing the coast between
Newcastle & Sydney, still recording 1000+
strokes per hour. That's some storm . . .
As dawn broke it was moving out into the
Tasman and people over a 2000km path
were counting the cost.
Nowra. This gives more than enough
receivers to ensure the three-receiver
fix but also gives a very high level of
built-in redundancy.
As more and more users come on
line, so more receivers will be added
to the LPATS network. The receivers
themselves use a simple whip antenna to receive the lightning signal and
a helix antenna to receive the GPS
satellite timing signals.
The receivers monitor the 2-450kHz
radio band; ie, the spectrum below the
AM broadcast band. AM detection is
used.
When a lightning stroke is detected,
the receivers digitise 100 microseconds of the stroke information and
store it in memory. At the very first
peak of the received signal a very accurate time stamp is used to measure
rise time and to provide the essential
time-of-arrival reference, which is
derived from the Global Positioning
Satellite and accurate to 100 nanoseconds.
Embedded in the digitised information is the polarity (positive or negative) and the peak stroke current which
determines the size (and therefore the
damage capability) of the stroke.
This information is then sent to
a “Central Analyser” computer via
a modem and continuous data link.
Various algorithms are used to not only
reject false strokes but also determine
the exact location of the stroke.
The central computer also generates the lightning stroke data to be
both disseminated to system users
and also stored for later evaluation
and use.
With the location of the six LPATS
receivers, lighting can be detected
across a very wide area – virtually the
whole of Australia.
For Perth and Darwin, strokes with
an amplitude of 50kA and greater
can be detected. To demonstrate the
effectiveness of the system, LPATS
regularly records lightning strokes
in Japan, Indonesia and way out
into the Pacific Ocean. Indeed, New
Zealand can be more-than-adequately covered using the current setup,
though accuracy would be increased
with an LPATS receiver or two in the
Shaky Isles.
Distributing the information
It’s fine for Kattron to know about
lightning approaching but how do
customers find out about it?
Many larger organisations go “on
line” to Kattron’s Central Analyser
computer and obtain their lightning
If you believe, as do many people, that lightning strikes occur mostly at night, look again: these graphs from LPATS
data record the number of strikes per hour in central western NSW over each of three months: November, December
1995 and January 1996 (coincidentally, the peak lighting period in NSW). November had most strikes around
midday, December was all over the place while January peaked very much in the early evening, with very little at
other times.
November 1996 9
The one that got away . . . or that we got away from! Two much more recent screens (from September 19/20 last)
demonstrate the fickle nature of lightning. The first screen taken at 7.30pm on September 19, shows a truly massive
line of thunderstorms virtually unbroken from central Queensland to the Victoria/NSW border. More than 1400
strokes had been recorded in the previous hour. The second screen, showing the same storm at 6am next morning
and "zoomed in" on the central NSW coast, shows just a few isolated strokes in the Hunter Valley and the mountains
northwest of Sydney, with just 153 strokes recorded in the hour.
data in as much detail as they want
it, any time of the day or night. Organisations such as electricity supply
authorities and similar “must know”
bodies have become major customers.
The software enables customers to
utilise the data in a variety of ways to
suit their particular needs.
Most users are of course interested
in their local area(s) and this information is available constantly. Sometimes, however, the “broader picture”
is required and information is also
available over a larger area by zooming
out – even to the whole of Australia.
It’s fascinating watching the buildup of a storm near Indonesia and
eventually seeing the lightning strike
Sydney!
But Kattron has a much wider distribution (and lower cost) network
available to anyone who can receive a
television picture from any station in
the Seven network (including Prime
and other affiliates). If your local TV
7 affiliate station transmits Teletext, it
also transmits Datacast.
Like Teletext, Datacast is transmitted during the vertical blanking
interval (VBI) – the black lines you see
on a TV screen when the picture rolls.
Through the use of a suitable decoder, various LPATS data can be
displayed on any personal computer.
When this service commenced in
January 1993, it was a world first
for Australia – no other country had
10 Silicon Chip
lightning data available via Datacast.
The data is also available in report
form for such bodies as insurance companies and assessors. With the accuracy of the lightning data now beyond
question, Kattron has been called on
many times to verify (or alternatively
to dispute) insurance claims.
With bogus claims costing the industry many, many millions of dollars
a year, insurance companies are glad
to pay $150 for a report.
For example, take the claimant who
insisted his freezer was damaged by
lightning between a certain Friday
night and Sunday night when he was
away from home. He said that all the
frozen food was of course spoiled
and therefore the claim was quite
significant.
Unfortunately for the claimant, the
insurance company purchased a report
from Kattron which proved that there
was no strike within 50km of his house
that weekend, nor even a few days
either side.
Faced with the black and white data,
the claim was withdrawn.
Conversely, individuals having a
fight with their insurance companies
can also purchase a report to back their
claim. There have been many instances where claims have been accepted
with lightning data after they were
initially rejected.
But by far the biggest users of the
lightning data are power supply au-
thorities, telecommunication companies, oil companies and airports.
Figures produced for one of the
major power distributors showed savings of more than $50,000 per annum
in maintenance costs alone, simply
because the controllers knew exactly
where the trouble spots were.
Add to that the dramatically quicker
restoration of power from lightning
damage – and its almost incalculable
savings to the community – and it’s
not hard to see why authorities are so
enthusiastic about LPATS.
Power outages have become something of a political football of late.
Anything that helps get the power
back on sooner is sure to be a winner!
Contact:
Ken Ticehurst
Kattron
Phone/Fax (043) 89 2024
Footnote: Michael Bath, the photographer who
captured the lightning strike on page 4, is also
the editor of the severe weather newsletter
“Storm News”. For more information, contact
Michael on (02) 9625 9700 (ah) or visit his
web sites at:
http://www.geocitites.com/capecaneral/1801/
(lightning photos).
http:/atmos.es.mq.edu.au/AMOS/weather
watch/photos.htm (storm photos).
http:/www.ozemail.com.au/~jimmyd/news.htm
(storm news).
What do you
know about lightning?
Everyone has experienced static electricity, caused when
two insulated objects rub across each other. Lightning is
simply the most violent manifestation of a static electricity
charge which has become too high to be maintained.
The amount of static electricity generated between objects
depends on several factors, not the least of which are the
amount of movement creating friction and the insulation
between the objects.
In a storm cloud enormous amounts of unstable air are
constantly on the move. This movement picks up ice crystals
within the cloud, forcing them upwards until they are too
heavy and fall back down again. Back near the base of the
cloud the crystals may again be forced upwards, the cycle
repeating over and over.
This movement creates friction and hence static
charge. Eventually, the charge builds to such a high
level that the insulation of the air is insufficient to
prevent some electrons “jumping the gap” to a point
of a lower potential. That may be another point
on the same cloud or another cloud altogether
(cloud to cloud or C-C strokes). Or it can be
between a cloud and ground or earth (C-G
strokes). The latter is the type of major interest to humans,
as C-G strokes have the most potential – no pun intended
– to cause damage, injury and death.
In a C-G stroke, as the insulation begins to break down a
stepped leader begins to zig-zag from the cloud, ionising the
air in its way and thus creating a very low impedance path.
When the electron path is about 200 metres from the ground
it “searches” for a point or points which form the easiest path
to ground: a mountain, a tall building, an electricity tower, a
tree, a person standing on a golf course...
When a suitable point is found a massive return stroke
occurs from the ground up. The electrons blast towards the
cloud at half the speed of light. The circuit is completed
and the huge amount of energy stored in the cloud is then
virtually “short circuited” to ground, resulting in a rapid
and spectacular electron flow from cloud to ground – the
phenomenon we know as lightning. And all this in a few
millionths of a second!
The amount of energy involved boggles the imagination:
all lightning strokes have peak currents of thousands of
amperes while the very largest strokes can easily exceed a
quarter of a million amps! The potential difference between
the cloud and
ground can be
millions of volts.
The huge discharge
also results in a very
large electromagnetic field
being generated (which we
can hear as static on an
AM radio, even from a storm
hundreds of kilometres away).
Lightning may be either positively or negatively charged – or, more
accurately, the cloud which contains
the energy may be either positively or
negatively charged. In fact, in a large,
anvil-shaped thunderstorm cell, there will
be areas of positive charge and areas of negative charge (which is why C-C strokes occur).
Recorded lightning data suggests that both the
leading and trailing edges of the cloud are usually
positively charged, resulting in positive lightning strokes.
To some degree, these can be used to pinpoint the start
and finish of the storm cell. The centre of the storm cell is
more likely to result in negative strokes.
There is a difference between a lightning flash and lightning stroke. A flash will typically contain more than one
stroke – on average two to three, but up to 20. Each stroke
will normally last only 20-50µs and strokes will be about
20-50ms apart. The area covered by all the strokes can be
quite large: a 10km radius is not unknown.
Because we humans cannot differentiate such small periods (and also because of persistence of vision), we tend
to see this multiplicity of strokes as one flash, lasting up to
say half a second.
So where does the thunder come from?
As the air is ionised by the electrons (creating the flash
of light) it is violently heated to around thirty thousand
degrees. This massive influx of energy causes the air to
expand extremely rapidly, creating a shock wave which we
hear as thunder. The closer you are to the lightning stroke,
the shorter and sharper the shock wave.
If you are very close, all you will hear is one mighty “K-ER-A-C-K!” – and if you’re still alive afterwards, you might
think to yourself “goodness gracious me . . .”, or words to
SC
that effect!
November 1996 11
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
dicksmith.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
dicksmith.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
dicksmith.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
dicksmith.com.au
CIRCUIT NOTEBOOK
Interesting circuit ideas which we have checked but not built and tested. Contributions from
readers are welcome and will be paid for at standard rates.
Swimming pool
lap counter
While intended for the
backyard pool, this simple
lap counter could be used
anywhere some form of lap
or event counter is required.
In a swimming pool application, the unit is waterproofed and placed at either
end of the pool on the edge.
When a lap is completed,
the swimmer touch
es the
button to advance the display by 1. An effective 2km
distance in a 10m backyard
pool is achieved with a 2digit display.
The circuit is straightforward. The regulator provides a 5V rail for the ICs
while the two transistors
form a debounce circuit
for the “count” pushbutton
switch. IC1, IC3 and DISP1
make up the counter for the units
digit. IC1 is a decade counter with
BCD outputs, while IC3 is a BCD to
7- segment decoder/driver.
Similarly, IC2, IC4 and DISP2 count
and display the tens digit. The reset
button ensures the display resets to
“00”. If necessary, a hundreds counter
could be added, taking its input from
the tens counter (IC2).
The circuit can run from a 6-12V
battery supply; mains power is not an
option for safety reasons. As shown
above, it is powered from a 9V supply,
however a “216” type 9V battery will
have limited life. Two 6V lantern batteries connected in series to give 12V
are recommended due to their high
capacity (the regulator needs in excess
of 7V to function properly).
Care should be taken with waterproofing, especially the count and
reset switches. The count switch ideally could be some form of touch pad
almost immersed in the pool.
S. Isreb
Traralgon, Vic. ($40)
Obtaining balanced & isolated
9V supply rails
While there are a number of circuits to generate
a negative 9V rail from a positive supply, if you
want a pair of balanced 9V rails which are isolated
from the input DC rails, there is only one practical
approach; a transformer must be used.
This circuit employs a 555 timer operating at
25kHz to drive a transformer based on a small
ferrite toroid. The primary is wound with 15
turns while the secondary has 36 turns (18 turns
either side of the centre-tap). It should be capable
of delivering up to 20mA but the output is not
regulated.
The output voltage can be varied by varying the
mark space ratio of the driving waveform from IC1;
16 Silicon Chip
ie, by varying trimpot VR1 (10kΩ). Note: this circuit has
not been tested.
SILICON CHIP
Thermostatic fan
controller
This circuit is based on the Low
Fuel Indicator published in the March
1993 issue of SILICON CHIP. By fitting
a relay in place of the warning lamp
and connecting the sensor lead to an
existing temperature sender, the unit
was converted to operate a thermostatic fan. The relay is a PC type and was
mounted along with the other extra
9V nicad battery
saver/regulator
This circuit provides a 5V regulated
output from a 9V nicad battery supply
and switches off before the battery is
over-discharged, to avoid permanent
damage to the cells. Q1 is a 5V regulator while IC1 monitors the battery and
disconnects the regulator at a preset
input voltage.
In operation, IC1 functions as a
non-inverting Schmitt trigger, with
trimpot VR1 setting the trip voltage
parts on a small piece of Veroboard
which fitted into the moulded slots
of the existing case.
A hole was drilled through the main
circuit board and the outer case so
that a small screwdriver can access
trimpot VR1 for adjustment. The LED
isn’t really necessary but was fitted
for testing and was cheap enough to
leave in place.
The 10-second delay is adequate to
avoid “hunting” at switch on, but as
the unit was also hunting when near
switching off, a 4.7µF capacitor was
fitted across the relay coil to provide
a short time delay before switch off
(around 2 seconds).
Because the unit is in a plastic case,
it has to be mounted in the coolest
practicable position. Note: the controller will come on for a short time
when the engine is started.
Ed Fudala,
Forest Lake, Qld. ($30)
and VR2 setting the degree of hysteresis. In some applications, a fair amount
of hysteresis is needed to prevent the
Schmitt trigger tripping on and off due
to fluctuations in load current.
When the voltage at pin 3 is below
the reference voltage at pin 2, IC1’s output will be low and LED1 is illuminated, indicating that the battery voltage
is low and that the output is disabled.
Diode D1 will now be reverse-biased,
thereby preventing current flow to
the base of transistor Q1. This turns
Q1 off, thereby reducing the output
voltage to 0V.
When the output of IC1 is high, Q1
is turned on and then Q1, Z2 and D2
operate as a regulator, providing a
nominal output voltage of +5V. LED
2 lights to indicate that the battery is
OK and that the circuit is operating.
The optional input circuit incorporating Q2 is used to further conserve
battery power. It switches power to
the main circuit only while the button
(S1) is pressed.
S. Carroll,
Timmsvale, NSW. ($35)
November 1996 17
BOOKSHELF
EDN Designer’s Companion
EDN Designer’s Companion,
Hickman/Travis, published
August 1994 by Butterworth-Heinemann, Australia.
Hard covers, 250 x 195mm,
254 pages. ISBN 0 7506 1721 7,
Price $69.00.
Electronic Design News is a long
established US publication with a
worldwide readership and its technical articles, some written by the
staff and others submitted by a broad
spectrum of the electronics industry,
are usually of a very high standard.
Following on the success of the
authors’ previous work, Electron
ic
Circuits Systems & Standards released
in 1990, this new book contains a selection of articles published in EDN
since that time.
The book is divided into six major
headings: Digital Techniques; Analog
Technology; Analog/Digital Conversion; Oscillators, Generators & Clocks;
Power Sources & Motor Control; and
Test, Measurement & Standards.
The main topic in the first section
is a comprehensive discussion on data
compression, with particular emphasis on im
ages. When you calculate
the amount of storage necessary to
display images on the screen, you
quickly realise why so much effort is
being concentrated in this field. A full
colour VGA screen needs nearly 1Mb,
while an SVGA image needs 2.3Mb!
Once we get to moving images the data
rate as well as the volume becomes
significant.
The aim is to do as much compression as possible without losing
significant detail. The characteristics
of our vision allow some information
to be discarded. The eye is relatively insensitive to small changes in
intensity and even less sensitive to
colour detail.
18 Silicon Chip
Information on the JPEG (Joint Photographics Expert Group) compression
algorithm for stills, the MPEG (Moving
Pictures Expert Group) for moving
pictures and the P*64 standard for
video telephony are described and
compared. Other newer systems are
examined, including a two-chip set
which is capable of hardware compression of 2.5:1.
Compression algorithms
The next chapter deals with compression algorithms for black & white
images, such as technical drawings
or faxes. Some areas of rapid data
change can actually have a negative
compression; ie, the compressed code
is actually bigger than the original. To
overcome this problem, some schemes
use bytes of literal, unencoded pixels
amid the compressed code.
This chapter concludes with details
of the CCITT group 3 and group 4
image-data compression algorithms.
The final two chapters in the first
section describe cir
cuits using DSP
(Digital Signal Processing) chips to implement a random number generator
and a random noise generator.
The second section, Analog Technology, is the largest in the book and
covers the selection of single (5V) supply op amps, external compensation,
improving CMRR (Common Mode
Rejection Ratio), current feedback amplifiers, filters and phase compensa
tion for photodiodes.
With the proliferation of 5V and
3.3V microprocessors and integrated
circuits, the analog interfaces to these
products are becoming more critical.
Methods of obtaining stable Vcc/2
voltages are covered, along with low
dropout regulated supplies. Circuits
are shown for current loops, DACs and
tempera
ture sensors operating from
these low voltages.
Improving the CMRR of an instrumentation amplifier by using common
mode driven supplies is an interesting application note. By keeping the
supply voltage to the input amplifiers
at the common mode voltage ± a low
supply voltage (typically 5V), the
CMRR can be improved by 40dB. In
addition, by running the op amps
at lower than the usual ±15V, the
quiescent power dissipation and its
associated temperature rise is reduced
by at least 300%. This provides a
commensurate decrease in thermally
induced errors.
Doug Smith of Burr-Brown Corporation contributes the next article on
the use of current feedback amplifiers in high frequency filter design.
Until recently, the design of active
filters with cutoffs above 1MHz was
difficult because voltage feedback
amplifiers with sufficient gain-bandwidth products and short propagation
delays were too expensive. With the
availability of current feedback or
transimpedance amplifiers this situation has changed. Details of circuit
designs using the OPA063 in a fifth
order Cauer, a bandpass and a twin-T
filter are given.
Chapter 15 is titled Unusual Oscillators and Filters. It shows a method
of compensating for the rather large
capacitance of a ceramic filter to
obtain a more symmetrical response
and better out-of-band attenuation.
Another circuit shows a FET stabilising a 20MHz oscillator.
Also included are a 1MHz to 10MHz
Wien bridge oscillator and a continuously variable function generator
covering the range from 1Hz to 1MHz
for a 0-10V input.
The analog section finishes with
a discussion on phantom circuits,
whereby N pairs of wires can carry 2N
- 1 signals and an article on methods
of increasing the bandwidth of photo
diode amplifiers.
A/D conversion
The third section, covering analog
to digital conversion, begins with a
method for sampling a narrow percentage bandwidth signal, such as
an IF signal, at a sub-harmonic of
the IF. This is followed by a primer,
“sense and nonsense about sampled
systems”. The author points out that
while the Nyquist theorem promises
frequency recovery without aliasing,
it can produce peak amplitude errors
of 30% for an 11kHz sinewave sam
pled at 44kHz.
The next chapter is devoted to oversampling data converters. While these
are slower they offer greater resolution
(20-22 bits) and linearity. The newer
1-bit DACs are also covered. The
section concludes with a method of
using two 8-bit DACs to obtain 14-bit
resolution.
Chapter four covers oscillators
of various types. One interesting
circuit shows how to generate very
low frequency triangular waveforms
using two high frequency oscillators.
Another explains how to extend the
control range of a CMOS 4046 phase
locked loop from the usual 10:1 range
to 1000:1 by using a current sink.
An unusual application of SAW
filters as the reference in 140MHz and
higher VCOs (voltage controlled oscillators), plus a servo loop amplifier
to control the amplitude of a 10MHz
crystal oscillator, are among several
other circuits in this section.
Power Sources and Motor Control
are covered in chapter five. The topics covered here begin with inductor
selection in DC/DC converters and
continue with methods of using spe-
cial ICs to control DC motors without
using Hall sensors. By placing a linear regulator in the servo loop of a
switching regulator, the next article
describes how you get the precision of
a linear regulator with the efficiency
of a switcher.
A discrete low dropout (130mV)
linear regulator with 3V output from a
3.6V nicad using an LM358 and a FET
is a good example of battery regulator
design. The next item is a switching
regulator operating from 8-40V which,
by using two inductors, gives a dual
stabilised output.
The last reprint in this section
shows how to create a 1A diode with
a forward drop of only 0.04V using an
LM393 to control a FET.
The final section of this book consists of a collection of articles on testing, measuring and standards. Testing
covers high speed ADCs and high
speed digital circuits. Measurement of
fast transients by building your own
single shot recorder, techniques for
measuring the distortion of advanced
op-amps, measuring transient voltages
between separate ground points and
non-contact measurements are covered in the second group.
The implementation of an ISO
9000 quality management system by
the technical editor of EDN covers
the benefits and pitfalls involved in
seeking this qualification. There seems
to be little difference between the US
situation and that existing here.
Electromagnetic compatibility
The last article is an in-depth treatment of the current situation regarding
EMC (Electromagnetic Compatibility)
in the EEC. From January 1996 all
electronic equipment sold must conform with the relevant standards and
bear the “CE” mark of compliance.
To quote one authority “if an electron
flows in your product, the standards
are applicable to it”.
This means that any Australian
exporters of electronic goods to the
EEC will have to comply. The certification can be “in house” but for legal
protection it will probably be safer to
have the equipment approved by an
independent testing authority.
This is an interesting collection of
reprints from EDN, although it is unlikely that all items will be of interest
to every reader. It is an ideal reference
to browse through when you need
SC
inspiration. (R.J.W.)
Are you frustrated
using DOS or
non-compliant
Windows software?
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November 1996 19
Build an 8-cha
stereo mixer;
At last there’s a comprehensive mixer that’s easy to build.
This unit features eight main input channels, an auxiliary
input channel, LED bargraph level meters, effects send and
comprehensive headphone monitoring facilities.
20 Silicon Chip
annel
Pt.1
By JOHN CLARKE
W
HEN IT COMES to mixers, every-
one has their own ideas about
how the signal should be directed
from the input to the output. And of
course there are numerous options to
be decided on in the design process.
In this design, we have produced a
practical arrangement which should
be suitable for most mixer users.
There are of course the usual level
controls for each of the inputs, plus
separate output pots for the left and
right channels. Stereo effects are provided by separate Pan pots for each
input channel. These allow tailored
mixing into either the left or right
channel bus, or a mixture in both.
Each of the eight Main inputs
includes tone control facilities. The
monitor signal, however, is not affected by the tone controls and is a mono
output only. This output can be fed to
a foldback amplifier and speakers, so
that musicians can hear themselves
on the stage.
An Effects signal output is also
provided on each channel, immediately following the tone controls. It
is intended for use with reverberation or other effects boxes for added
sound en
hancement. The resulting
signal from the effects box can then
be applied to the Auxiliary input of
the mixer and subsequently level
controlled and panned to the left and
right outputs.
If effects are not required, the Effects
bus can be used as a second monitor
output. Note that both the Monitor
and Effects outputs for each channel
have individual level controls. These
are situated in two rows along the top
of the front panel.
All signal monitoring is provided
via a headphone output which is situated near the top righthand corner of
the front panel. An adjacent 12-way
switch allows any of the eight main
inputs to be monitored (after the tone
controls), or the Monitor Bus, Effects
Bus, Left Main Bus or Right Main Bus
can be monitored.
Two 10-step LED bargraph displays
are used to indicate the left and right
channel output levels. These cover
signal levels from -24dB to +3dB and
allow the operator to see what’s going
on at a glance.
Design considerations
With all those facilities, the new
8-Channel Mixer is quite large. It fits
into a 125mm deep metal case and
this carries a front panel that measures 485mm wide x 310mm high.
These dimen
sions comply with a
7-unit rack sizing, which means that
the unit can be mounted vertically in
a rack frame.
Alternatively, it can be used as a
“standalone” unit which sits either
horizontally or vertically. In addition,
at least one retailer has indicated that
they intend producing a complete kit
of parts for this design and that their
case will have a sloping front panel.
Despite the amount of circuitry
involved, the unit is easy to build
since virtually all the parts go on a
single large PC board. Even the input
and output plugs and sockets mount
on the PC board. This leaves only a
small amount of wiring to be run for
the power supply.
By contrast, many other mixer designs use a separate PC board for each
input channel plus several others for
the output controls. The amount of
wiring between these PC boards is
considerable.
Our new circuit is also much
simpler than previous designs with
similar facilities. This has been made
possible by using a special purpose
balanced input amplifier IC which
provides a low noise signal for the
following stages. Let’s now take a look
at how it all works.
Block diagram
Fig.1 shows the general signal path
arrangement of our new mixer. There
are eight Main inputs plus a single
Auxiliary input. Note, however, that
only one Main input channel (IC1-IC3)
is shown here in order to simplify the
diagram. The other seven input channels are identical.
Each main input can accept either
an XLR plug or a 6.35mm stereo
jack. For unbalanced inputs, you can
ground one of the input pins (2 or 3)
on the plug. This is standard practice
and is done to avoid hum pickup when
an unbalanced lead is connected to a
balanced input.
IC1 is the input amplifier and it can
be switched to provide either +30dB
or +10dB of gain. The +30dB setting
(LOW) is suitable for microphone
levels and provides the mixer with an
overall sensitivity of 4mV. The +10dB
(HIGH) setting is suitable for higher input levels, such as from electric guitars
and keyboards. In the latter mode, the
overall sensitivity is reduced to 40mV
November 1996 21
Fig.1: the general signal path arrangement of the new mixer. There are eight
Main inputs (although only one is shown here) plus a single Auxiliary input and
an Effects input. The outputs are metered using LED bargraph displays.
and clipping occurs at 9V RMS.
Note that the input does not provide
phantom power for electret microphones. If you want to use electrets,
they will either have to be battery-operated or powered from some other
source.
Following IC1, the signal is split
two ways and drives level control pots
VR1 (Main) and VR2 (Monitor). VR2 in
turn feeds op amp stage IC2 (+12dB)
which then drives the monitor bus via
a mixing resistor.
VR1, on the other hand, feeds IC2a
which also provides +12dB of gain.
Its output then drives a tone control
stage con
sisting of IC3 and potent
iometers VR3 (bass) and VR4 (treble).
22 Silicon Chip
The bass control provides a nominal
10dB boost or cut at 100Hz, while the
treble control gives a 12dB boost or
cut at 10kHz.
Note that the bass control is usually
only used to remove any “boominess”
from instruments, while the treble
control can help with sibilant (S)
sounds by curtailing high frequencies
in voice signals.
The output of the tone control stage
drives Effects level control VR5 and
Pan control VR6. It also provides the
Channel 1 headphone signal via an
isolating resistor.
The Effects control sets the signal
level to be applied to the Effects bus
(again via a mixing resistor), while
the Pan control sets the signal levels
fed to the left and right buses. If the
signal is intended for the right channel only, then the Pan pot is fully
rotated to shunt the left channel signal
to ground. Conversely, if the signal
if for the left channel only, the Pan
pot is fully rotated in the opposite
direction to shunt the right channel
signal to ground.
If the Pan pot is centred, then equal
amounts of signal are applied to both
the left and right buses.
By contrast with the Main channels,
the Auxiliary channel provides an
unbalanced input only. This input is
buffered by IC10a and this then drives
pan control pot VR11 via level control
VR10. The resulting left and right
channel signals are then mixed onto
the left and right main buses.
From there, the left bus signal is
fed to IC4a, while the right bus signal
goes to IC7a. For the left channel, IC4a
provides 11dB of gain and drives IC4b
via output level control VR7.
IC4b provides an extra 12dB of gain.
Its output directly drives pin 2 of an
XLR output socket and pin 3 of this
same socket via inverting amplifier
IC5a. As a result, two out-of-phase
signals appear on pins 2 and 3 to
provide the balanced output. Alternatively, an unbalanced output can
be obtained by connecting between
pin 2 and ground.
In addition, IC4b drives a 10-LED
bargraph display which indicates the
signal level in 3dB steps. This display
has a range from -24dB to +3dB.
IC7a, IC7b, IC5b and the LED bar
graph process the right channel bus
signals in exactly the same manner.
The Effects bus and Monitor bus
output stages employ iden
t ical
circuitry. For the Effects bus, IC9a
amplifies the mixed signal and drives
IC9b via level control VR9. IC9b then
drives the Effects Send socket to provide an unbalanced output signal.
IC11a, VR12 and IC11b do exactly
the same job for the mixed Monitor
bus signal.
Finally, the headphone amplifier is
connected as an inverting stage (mixing) so that it can monitor the selected
bus via switch S9. You can listen to all
the input channel signals and each of
the buses as shown. The amplifier is
mono only, which means that the left
and right bus signals are monitored
separately rather than in stereo.
Circuit details
Refer now to Fig.2 for the circuit
details. To simplify matters, this shows
only one of the eight input channels
(channel 1) and only one of the two
main output stages.
IC1 is an Analog Devices SSM2017
Self-Contained Audio Preamplifier.
This is a balanced input amplifier with
a typical common mode rejection of
74dB at a gain of 10. Its total harmonic
distortion and noise figures are also
very low.
IC1’s gain is determined by the resistance value between pins 1 and 8.
In this case, the gain can be switched
between +10dB and +30dB by S1
which selects either a 4.7kΩ resistor
or a 330Ω resistor respectively.
The 10kΩ resistors at the pin 2 and
pin 3 inputs of IC1 ensure that it oper-
Features
•
•
•
•
Eight Main inputs plus Auxiliary input.
•
•
•
Bass and treble controls on eight Main inputs.
•
•
•
Special purpose low noise input amplifier.
•
Headphone monitoring for eight Main channels, plus Monitor, Effects,
Right main and Left main buses.
•
Easy to build – single PC board construction eliminates all external wiring
except for power supply.
•
Case conforms to 7-unit rack sizing; suitable for vertical or horizontal use.
Stereo outputs.
Effects and monitor for all eight Main inputs.
Panning between left and right channels for all eight Main inputs and
Auxiliary.
High and low input signal selection for eight Main inputs.
Balanced inputs for eight Main channels using XLR sockets or 6.35mm
sockets.
Balanced left and right main XLR outputs.
Signal level metering for Left and Right output channels using dual LED
bargraphs.
Specifications
Signal-to-Noise Ratio at Left and Right Main outputs
80dB unweighted <at> 1V out and 100mV input (all channel inputs unloaded and set at maximum)
Bass and Treble controls
±10dB at 100Hz and ±12dB at 10kHz
Sensitivity for 1-8 Channel inputs
4mV RMS for 1V output on LOW setting
40mV RMS for 1V output on HIGH setting
Sensitivity for Monitor and Effects outputs
2mV RMS for 1V output on LOW setting; 20mV RMS for 1V output on
HIGH setting
Sensitivity for Auxiliary input
120mV RMS for 1V output
Maximum input levels before clipping
2.9V RMS on LOW setting; 9V RMS on HIGH setting
Frequency response
-3dB at 20Hz and 32kHz (Main, Monitor and Effects)
Total Harmonic Distortion
0.008% at 1kHz (100mV in and 1V out); 0.02% at 10kHz (100mV in
and 1V out)
ates within its correct common mode
range when no DC connection is made
to the input.
If a balanced microphone is connected, its low 600Ω impedance will
reduce the input load resistance, with
a subsequent reduction in noise. The
270pF capacitor shunts any high frequency signals to improve common
mode rejection at high frequencies and
reduces the possibility of RF pickup.
Note that the input to IC1 is not
AC-coupled via a capaci
tor. That’s
because microphone and guitar signals
November 1996 23
24 Silicon Chip
Fig.2 (left): this circuit diagram shows
only one of the eight Main input
channels and only one of the two
output stages. Note that all the Main
channels have balanced inputs and
feature tone control circuitry. The
headphone monitoring circuit uses
op amp IC12 to drive complementary
output pair Q1 & Q2.
are from a balanced or unbalanced
transformer or inductive pickup and
hence carry no DC voltage. What’s
more, any small DC offset from say a
line signal or keyboard will not cause
problems since the amplifier can
handle high DC offsets before any superimposed AC signal will be clipped.
The output from IC1 is AC-coupled to prevent any DC flow in the
following Main and Monitor pots
(VR1 & VR2). This is necessary since
any DC flow in these potentiometers
will cause noise in the signal as they
are adjusted.
The output from VR2 is AC-coupled
to the input of IC2b (pin 5) via a 2.2µF
non-polarised (bipolar) capacitor. A
22kΩ resistor to ground sets the input
bias, while the 10Ω resistor in series
with the input reduces RF pickup.
The gain is set to four by the 6.8kΩ
and 2.2kΩ feedback resistors, while a
270pF feedback capacitor rolls off the
high frequency response from about
87kHz to prevent high-frequency
instability.
The amplified output from IC2b
appears at pin 7 and is mixed onto
the Monitor bus via a 10kΩ resistor.
IC2a in the main signal path functions in exactly the same manner as
IC2b. Besides providing gain and a
high impedance load for level control
VR1, IC2a also acts as a low impedance
source for the following tone control
stage based on IC3. This stage has the
tone control pots (VR3 & VR4) connected in the negative feedback network.
When the bass and treble controls are
centred, the gain of the stage is unity,
up to at least 50kHz.
Winding the bass or treble controls
toward the input side of IC3 increases
the gain for frequencies above 2kHz
for the treble control and 300Hz for
the bass control. Conversely, when
the tone controls are rotated in the
opposite direction (to apply bass or
treble cut), the gain is reduced above
2kHz and below 300Hz. This is because the negative feedback has been
November 1996 25
AUDIO PRECISION SCFREQRE AMPL(dBr) vs FREQ(Hz)
15.000
23 SEP 96 10:10:41
10.000
5.0000
0.0
-5.000
This stage operates with a gain of 4.09
and has a 100Ω resistor in series with
its output to prevent instability when
driving capacitive loads.
Following IC4b, the signal is fed to
pin 2 of the XLR output socket via a
47µF capacitor. It also goes to pin 2
of inverting buffer stage IC5a, which
then drives pin 3 to provide the other
side of the balanced output signal. As
with IC4b, IC5a has a 100Ω resistor
in series with its output to prevent
instability.
Note that the outputs of IC4b and
IC5a are both AC-coupled to the output
XLR socket. This is to prevent any DC
in the output.
LED level indicator
-10.00
-15.00
20
100
1k
10k
20k
Fig.3: this graph shows the frequency response of the tone controls at their
maximum boost and cut settings and at the flat setting. Note that the amount
of boost and cut is set to ±12dB maximum in both instances.
increased, giving a reduction in gain
at these frequencies.
The maximum bass boost and cut
is limited to about ±12dB by the 22kΩ
resistors on either side of the bass pot,
VR3. Similarly, the amount of treble
boost and cut provided by VR4 is limited to ±12dB by the 4.7kΩ resistors on
either side of the treble pot, VR4. Fig.3
shows the action of the tone controls at
their maximum boost and cut settings
and also at the flat setting.
Note that OP27GP op amps have
been specified in the tone control
circuitry. The reason for this is that
the DC across VR3 must be as low as
possible to limit noise when adjusting the bass control. The input offset
voltage for the OP27 is typically just
30µV while the input offset current is
only 12nA and so the resulting DC in
VR3 will be negligible.
The output from IC3 appears at
pin 6 and drives Effects pot VR5, the
10kΩ headphone signal resistor and
the left and right channel Pan control
circuitry. As mentioned previously,
the Pan control operates by shunting
signal in the unwanted channel to
ground.
When the wiper of VR6 is towards
the left main bus side, the left channel
signal is shunted to ground. Similarly,
when the wiper of VR6 is towards the
right bus side, the right channel signal
26 Silicon Chip
is shunted. Finally, when the pot is
centred the left and right signals are
attenuated and so are equally mixed
into the left and right channels.
The seven other inputs are identical
to this first input circuit but with different IC and pot numbering.
Op amps IC10a and IC10b are used
to process the unbalanced auxiliary input signal. IC10a is wired as a
unity gain buffer stage, with its pin
3 (non-inverting) input biased to 0V
by a 22kΩ resistor. The output signal
appears on pin 1 and is AC-coupled
to the Auxiliary level control (VR10)
via a 2.2µF capacitor.
Following VR10, the signal is fed to
IC10b which operates with a gain of
4.09. IC10b in turn drives the Auxiliary pan control circuitry which mixes
the signal onto the left and right main
buses.
Output stages
The mixed left main bus signal is fed
to the pin 2 input of IC4a via a 2.2kΩ
resistor. This op amp (an LM833) is
wired as an inverting stage and amplifies the left bus signal by a factor
of 3.4. The 27pF capacitor across the
68kΩ resistor provides high frequency
rolloff above about 87kHz.
IC4a’s output at pin 1 feeds the Left
Main level control (VR7), after which
the signal is coupled to gain stage IC4b.
IC4b also drives the LED level indicator circuit. This circuit is based
on IC6 which is a logarithmic LED
display driver wired to operate in
bargraph mode. The signal from
IC4b is applied to pin 5 via a 100Ω
decoupling resistor.
Inside the IC, the negative-going
signal excursions are clamped via a
diode while positive signal excursions
are fed to comparator circuits which
then drive the individual LEDs. The
meter circuit responds instantaneously to the waveform and thus shows
the peak voltage of a sinewave. Note,
however, that the peak LED does not
light on very short transients and so
the meter can be considered to be an
averaging display.
The meter calibration is set by the
voltage on pins 6 & 7. This voltage is
determined by first applying the 1.2V
internal reference that appears between pins 6 & 8 to a 330Ω resistor. The
resulting 3.6mA current then flows to
ground via a 68Ω resistor, which thus
has 0.25V across it.
As a result, pins 6 & 7 of IC6 sit at
1.45V (1.2V + 0.25V). This means that
the LED bargraph reaches full-scale
(equivalent to +3B) when the applied
signal level reaches 1.45V, corresponding to a nominal 1V RMS sinewave.
The 0dB level (LED 9) occurs at 0.7V
RMS.
The 270Ω resistor in series with the
LED anodes limits the dissipation in
IC6, while the associated 100µF capacitor decouples the LED supply rails. A
10µF capacitor decouples the supply
rail to the IC.
The right channel output stage is
identical to the left channel circuitry.
In this case, the devices and their
Despite the amount of circuitry involved, the assembly is really very easy since
virtually all the parts are on this single large PC board. Note that this photo
shows an early prototype board.
corresponding pin numbers are indicated in brackets.
Monitor & effects stages
IC11a is the Monitor bus summing
amplifier and this stage operates with
a gain of about 5.7. Its output is fed to
level control VR12 and from there to
IC11b which provides a gain 2. IC11b’s
output is then fed via a 100Ω resistor
(for stability) and a 47µF capacitor to
the Monitor output socket.
The Effects summing and output
amplifier stages (IC9a and IC9b, respectively) operate in exactly the same
manner as the Monitor stages.
Headphone amplifier
The headphone amplifier is based
on op amp IC12 and this operates in
combination with transistors Q1 and
Q2 which form a fairly conventional
push-pull output stage.
The transistors are there to boost
the output current capability of the
TL071 op amp. Note that they are
slightly forward-biased (to minimise
cross
over distortion) by connecting
diodes D1 and D2 in series between
their bases. The distortion produced
by the output transistors is also minimised by incorporating them inside
the feedback loop of the op amp.
The 33Ω emitter resistors have been
included to maintain the bias stability.
Together with the 68Ω output series
resistor, they also provide short circuit
protection and protect the headphones
against damage in the unlikely event
of an amplifier failure.
Power supply
Power for the circuit is derived from
a toroidal transformer which delivers
a 30V centre-tapped AC output. The
primary of the transformer is fused for
safety, while a .001µF 2kV capacitor is
connected across the power switch to
minimise switch-off transients.
The secondary voltage is applied to
bridge rectifier D3-D6 and the resulting
DC rails filtered using two 1000µF
capacitors to obtain ±21VDC. These
rails are then fed to 3-terminal regu
lators REG1 and REG2 which provide
stable ±15V rails for the mixer circuit.
Note that the output of each regulator is decoupled with a 10µF capacitor
to maintain stability. In addition,
there are many other 10µF capacitors
scattered around the circuit which
decouple the supply rails to the ICs.
These are important to ensure stability
in the op amps.
Power indication is provided by
LED21 which is connected in series
with a 4.7kΩ resistor between ground
and the -15V rail.
By the way, the toroidal type has
been specified to mini
m ise hum
induction in the mixer circuit. Do
not use a standard E-core type since
the signal-to-noise ratio will suffer
greatly and hum will be heard in the
mixer output.
That’s all we have space for this
month. In Pt.2, we shall present the
parts list and give the full construction
SC
details.
November 1996 27
Silicon Chip
Back Issues
December 1990: The CD Green Pen Controversy; 100W DC-DC
Converter For Car Amplifiers; Wiper Pulser For Rear Windows;
4-Digit Combination Lock; 5W Power Amplifier For The 6-Metre
Amateur Transmitter; Index To Volume 3.
January 1991: Fast Charger For Nicad Batteries, Pt.1; Have Fun
With The Fruit Machine; Two-Tone Alarm Module; LCD Readout
For The Capacitance Meter; How Quartz Crystals Work; The
Dangers of Servicing Microwave Ovens.
September 1988: Hands-Free Speakerphone; Electronic Fish
Bite Detector; High Performance AC Millivoltmeter, Pt.2; Build
The Vader Voice.
Quality Audio Oscillator, Pt.2; The Incredible Hot Canaries;
Random Wire Antenna Tuner For 6 Metres; Phone Patch For
Radio Amateurs, Pt.2.
April 1989: Auxiliary Brake Light Flasher; What You Need to
Know About Capacitors; 32-Band Graphic Equaliser, Pt.2; The
Story Of Amtrak Passenger Services.
March 1990: Delay Unit For Automatic Antennas; Workout Timer
For Aerobics Classes; 16-Channel Mixing Desk, Pt.2; Using The
UC3906 SLA Battery Charger IC; The Australian VFT Project.
May 1989: Build A Synthesised Tom-Tom; Biofeedback
Monitor For Your PC; Simple Stub Filter For Suppressing TV
Interference; The Burlington Northern Railroad.
April 1990: Dual Tracking +/-50V Power Supply; Voice-Operated Switch (VOX) With Delayed Audio; 16-Channel Mixing
Desk, Pt.3; Active CW Filter; Servicing Your Microwave Oven.
July 1989: Exhaust Gas Monitor; Experimental Mains Hum Sniffers; Compact Ultrasonic Car Alarm; The NSW 86 Class Electrics.
June 1990: Multi-Sector Home Burglar Alarm; Low-Noise Universal Stereo Preamplifier; Load Protector For Power Supplies;
Speed Alarm For Your Car; Fitting A Fax Card To A Computer.
September 1989: 2-Chip Portable AM Stereo Radio (Uses
MC13024 and TX7376P) Pt.1; High Or Low Fluid Level Detector;
Studio Series 20-Band Stereo Equaliser, Pt.2.
October 1989: FM Radio Intercom For Motorbikes Pt.1; GaAsFet Preamplifier For Amateur TV; 2-Chip Portable AM Stereo
Radio, Pt.2; A Look At Australian Monorails.
November 1989: Radfax Decoder For Your PC (Displays Fax,
RTTY & Morse); FM Radio Intercom For Motorbikes, Pt.2;
2-Chip Portable AM Stereo Radio, Pt.3; Floppy Disc Drive
Formats & Options; The Pilbara Iron Ore Railways.
December 1989: Digital Voice Board; UHF Remote Switch;
Balanced Input & Output Stages; Operating an R/C transmitter;
Index to Volume 2.
January 1990: High Quality Sine/Square Oscillator; Service Tips
For Your VCR; Phone Patch For Radio Amateurs; Active Antenna
Kit; Designing UHF Transmitter Stages; A Look At Very Fast Trains.
February 1990: A 16-Channel Mixing Desk; Build A High
July 1990: Digital Sine/Square Generator, Pt.1 (Covers
0-500kHz); Burglar Alarm Keypad & Combination Lock; Simple
Electronic Die; Low-Cost Dual Power Supply; Inside A Coal
Burning Power Station.
February 1991: Synthesised Stereo AM Tuner, Pt.1; Three
Inverters For Fluorescent Lights; Low-Cost Sinewave Oscillator; Fast Charger For Nicad Batteries, Pt.2; How To Design
Amplifier Output Stages.
March 1991: Remote Controller For Garage Doors, Pt.1;
Transistor Beta Tester Mk.2; A Synthesised AM Stereo Tuner,
Pt.2; Multi-Purpose I/O Board For PC-Compatibles; Universal
Wideband RF Preamplifier For Amateur Radio & TV.
April 1991: Steam Sound Simulator For Model Railroads;
Remote Controller For Garage Doors, Pt.2; Simple 12/24V
Light Chaser; Synthesised AM Stereo Tuner, Pt.3; A Practical
Approach To Amplifier Design, Pt.2.
May 1991: 13.5V 25A Power Supply For Transceivers; Stereo
Audio Expander; Fluorescent Light Simulator For Model Railways; How To Install Multiple TV Outlets, Pt.1.
June 1991: A Corner Reflector Antenna For UHF TV; 4-Channel
Lighting Desk, Pt.1; 13.5V 25A Power Supply For Transceivers,
Pt.2; Active Filter For CW Reception; Tuning In To Satellite TV.
August 1990: High Stability UHF Remote Transmitter; Universal
Safety Timer For Mains Appliances (9 Minutes); Horace The
Electronic Cricket; Digital Sine/Square Generator, Pt.2.
July 1991: Loudspeaker Protector For Stereo Amplifiers; 4-Channel
Lighting Desk, Pt.2; How To Install Multiple TV Outlets, Pt.2; Tuning
In To Satellite TV, Pt.2; The Snowy Mountains Hydro Scheme.
September 1990: Low-Cost 3-Digit Counter Module; Simple
Shortwave Converter For The 2-Metre Band; the Bose Lifestyle
Music System.
August 1991: Build A Digital Tachometer; Masthead Amplifier
For TV & FM; PC Voice Recorder; Tuning In To Satellite TV,
Pt.3; Step-By-Step Vintage Radio Repairs.
October 1990: The Dangers of PCBs; Low-Cost Siren For Burglar Alarms; Dimming Controls For The Discolight; Surfsound
Simulator; DC Offset For DMMs; NE602 Converter Circuits.
September 1991: Digital Altimeter For Gliders & Ultralights;
Ultrasonic Switch For Mains Appliances; The Basics Of A/D
& D/A Conversion; Plotting The Course Of Thunderstorms.
November 1990: How To Connect Two TV Sets To One VCR;
Egg Timer; Low-Cost Model Train Controller; 1.5V To 9V DC
Converter; Introduction To Digital Electronics; Simple 6-Metre
Amateur Transmitter.
October 1991: Build A Talking Voltmeter For Your PC, Pt.1;
SteamSound Simulator Mk.II; Magnetic Field Strength Meter;
Digital Altimeter For Gliders, Pt.2; Military Applications Of
R/C Aircraft.
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April 1995
September 1995
February 1996
July 1996
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28 Silicon Chip
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Card No.
November 1991: Build A Colour TV Pattern Generator, Pt.1;
Junkbox 2-valve receiver; Flashing Alarm Light For Cars; Digital
Altimeter For Gliders, Pt.3; A Talking Voltmeter For Your PC, Pt.2.
December 1993: Remote Controller For Garage Doors; LED
Stroboscope; 25W Amplifier Module; 1-Chip Melody Generator;
Engine Management, Pt.3; Index To Volume 6.
December 1991: TV Transmitter For VCRs With UHF Modulators; Infrared Light Beam Relay; Colour TV Pattern Generator,
Pt.2; Index To Volume 4.
January 1994: 3A 40V Adjustable Power Supply; Switching
Regulator For Solar Panels; Printer Status Indicator; Mini
Drill Speed Controller; Stepper Motor Controller; Active Filter
Design; Engine Management, Pt.4.
January 1992: 4-Channel Guitar Mixer; Adjustable 0-45V 8A
Power Supply, Pt.1; Baby Room Monitor/FM Transmitter;
Experiments For Your Games Card.
March 1992: TV Transmitter For VHF VCRs; Thermostatic Switch
For Car Radiator Fans; Telephone Call Timer; Coping With Damaged Computer Directories; Valve Substitution In Vintage Radios.
April 1992: IR Remote Control For Model Railroads; Differential
Input Buffer For CROs; Understanding Computer Memory;
Aligning Vintage Radio Receivers, Pt.1.
May 1992: Build A Telephone Intercom; Electronic Doorbell; Battery Eliminator For Personal Players; Infrared Remote Control For
Model Railroads, Pt.2; Aligning Vintage Radio Receivers, Pt.2.
June 1992: Multi-Station Headset Intercom, Pt.1; Video
Switcher For Camcorders & VCRs; IR Remote Control For
Model Railroads, Pt.3; 15-Watt 12-240V Inverter; A Look At
Hard Disc Drives.
July 1992: Build A Nicad Battery Discharger; 8-Station Automatic Sprinkler Timer; Portable 12V SLA Battery Charger;
Multi-Station Headset Intercom, Pt.2.
August 1995: Fuel Injector Monitor For Cars; Gain Controlled
Microphone Preamp; Audio Lab PC Controlled Test Instrument,
Pt.1; Mighty-Mite Powered Loudspeaker; How To Identify IDE
Hard Disc Drive Parameters.
March 1994: Intelligent IR Remote Controller; 50W (LM3876)
Audio Amplifier Module; Level Crossing Detector For Model
Railways; Voice Activated Switch For FM Microphones; Simple
LED Chaser; Engine Management, Pt.6.
September 1995: Keypad Combination Lock; The Incredible
Vader Voice; Railpower Mk.2 Walkaround Throttle For Model
Railways, Pt.1; Jacob’s Ladder Display; The Audio Lab PC
Controlled Test Instrument, Pt.2.
April 1994: Sound & Lights For Model Railway Level Crossings;
Discrete Dual Supply Voltage Regulator; Universal Stereo Preamplifier; Digital Water Tank Gauge; Engine Management, Pt.7.
October 1995: Geiger Counter; 3-Way Bass Reflex Loudspeaker System; Railpower Mk.2 Walkaround Throttle For
Model Railways, Pt.2; Fast Charger For Nicad Batteries; Digital
Speedometer & Fuel Gauge For Cars, Pt.1.
May 1994: Fast Charger For Nicad Batteries; Induction Balance Metal Locator; Multi-Channel Infrared Remote Control;
Dual Electronic Dice; Simple Servo Driver Circuits; Engine
Management, Pt.8; Passive Rebroadcasting For TV Signals.
June 1994: 200W/350W Mosfet Amplifier Module; A Coolant
Level Alarm For Your Car; 80-Metre AM/CW Transmitter For
Amateurs; Converting Phono Inputs To Line Inputs; PC-Based
Nicad Battery Monitor; Engine Management, Pt.9.
July 1994: Build A 4-Bay Bow-Tie UHF Antenna; PreChamp
2-Transistor Preamplifier; Steam Train Whistle & Diesel Horn
Simulator; Portable 6V SLA Battery Charger; Electronic Engine
Management, Pt.10.
September 1992: Multi-Sector Home Burglar Alarm;
Heavy-Duty 5A Drill speed Controller (see errata Nov. 1992);
General-Purpose 3-1/2-Digit LCD Panel Meter; Track Tester
For Model Railroads; Build A Relative Field Strength Meter.
August 1994: High-Power Dimmer For Incandescent Lights;
Microprocessor-Controlled Morse Keyer; Dual Diversity Tuner
For FM Microphones, Pt.1; Build a Nicad Zapper; Engine
Management, Pt.11.
October 1992: 2kW 24VDC - 240VAC Sinewave Inverter;
Multi-Sector Home Burglar Alarm, Pt.2; Mini Amplifier For
Personal Stereos; A Regulated Lead-Acid Battery Charger.
September 1994: Automatic Discharger For Nicad Battery
Packs; MiniVox Voice Operated Relay; Image Intensified
Night Viewer; AM Radio For Weather Beacons; Dual Diversity
Tuner For FM Microphones, Pt.2; Engine Management, Pt.12.
February 1993: Three Projects For Model Railroads; Low Fuel
Indicator For Cars; Audio Level/VU Meter (LED Readout); An Electronic Cockroach; 2kW 24VDC To 240VAC Sinewave Inverter, Pt.5.
March 1993: Solar Charger For 12V Batteries; Alarm-Triggered
Security Camera; Reaction Trainer; Audio Mixer for Camcorders; A 24-Hour Sidereal Clock For Astronomers.
April 1993: Solar-Powered Electric Fence; Audio Power Meter;
Three-Function Home Weather Station; 12VDC To 70VDC
Converter; Digital Clock With Battery Back-Up.
May 1993: Nicad Cell Discharger; Build The Woofer Stopper;
Alphanumeric LCD Demonstration Board; The Microsoft
Windows Sound System; The Story of Aluminium.
June 1993: AM Radio Trainer, Pt.1; Remote Control For The
Woofer Stopper; Digital Voltmeter For Cars; Windows-based
Logic Analyser.
July 1993: Single Chip Message Recorder; Light Beam Relay
Extender; AM Radio Trainer, Pt.2; Quiz Game Adjudicator;
Windows-based Logic Analyser, Pt.2; Antenna Tuners – Why
They Are Useful.
August 1993: Low-Cost Colour Video Fader; 60-LED Brake
Light Array; Microprocessor-Based Sidereal Clock; Southern
Cross Z80-Based Computer; A Look At Satellites & Their Orbits.
September 1993: Automatic Nicad Battery Charger/Discharger;
Stereo Preamplifier With IR Remote Control, Pt.1; In-Circuit
Transistor Tester; A +5V to ±15V DC Converter; Remote-Controlled Cockroach.
October 1993: Courtesy Light Switch-Off Timer For Cars;
Wireless Microphone For Musicians; Stereo Preamplifier With
IR Remote Control, Pt.2; Electronic Engine Management, Pt.1.
November 1993: Jumbo Digital Clock; High Efficiency Inverter
For Fluorescent Tubes; Stereo Preamplifier With IR Remote
Control, Pt.3; Siren Sound Generator; Engine Management,
Pt.2; Experiments For Games Cards.
July 1995: Electric Fence Controller; How To Run Two Trains On
A Single Track (Plus Level Crossing Lights & Sound Effects);
Setting Up A Satellite TV Ground Station; Door Minder; Adding
RAM To A Computer.
February 1994: 90-Second Message Recorder; 12-240VAC
200W Inverter; 0.5W Audio Amplifier; 3A 40V Adjustable Power
Supply; Engine Management, Pt.5; Airbags - How They Work.
August 1992: An Automatic SLA Battery Charger; Miniature 1.5V
To 9V DC Converter; 1kW Dummy Load Box For Audio Amplifiers;
Troubleshooting Vintage Radio Receivers; MIDI Explained.
January 1993: Flea-Power AM Radio Transmitter; High Intensity LED Flasher For Bicycles; 2kW 24VDC To 240VAC Sinewave
Inverter, Pt.4; Speed Controller For Electric Models, Pt.3.
Security System; Multi-Channel Radio Control Transmitter For
Models, Pt.1; Build A $30 Digital Multimeter.
October 1994: Dolby Surround Sound - How It Works; Dual
Rail Variable Power Supply; Talking Headlight Reminder; Electronic Ballast For Fluorescent Lights; Temperature Controlled
Soldering Station; Engine Management, Pt.13.
November 1994: Dry Cell Battery Rejuvenator; Novel Alphanumeric Clock; 80-Metre DSB Amateur Transmitter; Twin-Cell
Nicad Discharger (See May 1993); Anti-Lock Braking Systems;
How To Plot Patterns Direct To PC Boards.
December 1994: Dolby Pro-Logic Surround Sound Decoder,
Pt.1; Easy-To-Build Car Burglar Alarm; Three-Spot Low Distortion Sinewave Oscillator; Clifford - A Pesky Electronic Cricket;
Cruise Control - How It Works; Remote Control System for
Models, Pt.1; Index to Vol.7.
January 1995: Sun Tracker For Solar Panels; Battery Saver
For Torches; Dolby Pro-Logic Surround Sound Decoder,
Pt.2; Dual Channel UHF Remote Control; Stereo Microphone
Preamplifier;The Latest Trends In Car Sound; Pt.1.
February 1995: 50-Watt/Channel Stereo Amplifier Module;
Digital Effects Unit For Musicians; 6-Channel Thermometer
With LCD Readout; Wide Range Electrostatic Loudspeakers,
Pt.1; Oil Change Timer For Cars; The Latest Trends In Car
Sound; Pt.2; Remote Control System For Models, Pt.2.
March 1995: 50W/Channel Stereo Amplifier, Pt.1; Subcarrier
Decoder For FM Receivers; Wide Range Electrostatic Loudspeakers, Pt.2; IR Illuminator For CCD Cameras; Remote
Control System For Models, Pt.3; Simple CW Filter.
April 1995: Build An FM Radio Trainer, Pt.1; A Photographic
Timer For Darkrooms; Balanced Microphone Preamplifier &
Line Filter; 50-Watt Per Channel Stereo Amplifier, Pt.2; Wide
Range Electrostatic Loudspeakers, Pt.3; 8-Channel Decoder
For Radio Remote Control.
May 1995: What To Do When the Battery On Your PC’s Mother
board Goes Flat; Build A Guitar Headphone Amplifier; FM Radio
Trainer, Pt.2; Transistor/Mosfet Tester For DMMs; 16-Channel
Decoder For Radio Remote Control; Introduction to Satellite TV.
June 1995: Build A Satellite TV Receiver; Train Detector For
Model Railways; 1W Audio Amplifier Trainer; Low-Cost Video
November 1995: Mixture Display For Fuel Injected Cars; CB
Transverter For The 80M Amateur Band, Pt.1; PIR Movement
Detector; Dolby Pro Logic Surround Sound Decoder Mk.2, Pt.1;
Digital Speedometer & Fuel Gauge For Cars, Pt.2.
December 1995: Engine Immobiliser; 5-Band Equaliser; CB Transverter For The 80M Amateur Band, Pt.2; Subwoofer Controller;
Dolby Pro Logic Surround Sound Decoder Mk.2, Pt.2; Knock
Sensing In Cars; RAM Doubler Reviewed; Index To Volume 8.
January 1996: Surround Sound Mixer & Decoder, Pt.1; Magnetic Card Reader; Build An Automatic Sprinkler Controller;
IR Remote Control For The Railpower Mk.2; Recharging Nicad
Batteries For Long Life.
February 1996: Three Remote Controls To Build; Woofer
Stopper Mk.2; 10-Minute Kill Switch For Smoke Detectors;
Basic Logic Trainer; Surround Sound Mixer & Decoder, Pt.2;
Use your PC as a Reaction Timer.
March 1996: Programmable Electronic Ignition System For Cars;
Zener Tester For DMMs; Automatic Level Control For PA Systems;
20ms Delay For Surround Sound Decoders; Multi-Channel Radio
Control Transmitter; Pt.2; Cathode Ray Oscilloscopes, Pt.1.
April 1996: Cheap Battery Refills For Mobile Telephones;
125W Power Amplifier Module; Knock Indicator For Leaded
Petrol Engines; Multi-Channel Radio Control Transmitter; Pt.3;
Cathode Ray Oscilloscopes, Pt.2.
May 1996: Upgrading The CPU In Your PC; High Voltage Insulation Tester; Knightrider Bi-Directional LED Chaser; Duplex Intercom Using Fibre Optic Cable; Cathode Ray Oscilloscopes, Pt.3.
June 1996: BassBox CAD Loudspeaker Software Reviewed;
Stereo Simulator (uses delay chip); Rope Light Chaser; Low
Ohms Tester For Your DMM; Automatic 10A Battery Charger.
July 1996: Installing a Dual Boot Windows System On Your
PC; Build A VGA Digital Oscilloscope, Pt.1; Remote Control
Extender For VCRs; 2A SLA Battery Charger; 3-Band Parametric
Equaliser; Single Channel 8-bit Data Logger.
August 1996: Electronics on the Internet; Customising the
Windows Desktop; Introduction to IGBTs; Electronic Starter For
Fluorescent Lamps; VGA Oscilloscope, Pt.2; 350W Amplifier
Module; Masthead Amplifier For TV & FM;
September 1996: Making Prototypes By Laser; VGA Oscilloscope, Pt.3; Infrared Stereo Headphone Link, Pt.1; High Quality
PA Loudspeaker; 3-Band HF Amateur Radio Receiver; Feedback
On Programmable Ignition (see March 1996).
October 1996: Send Video Signals Over Twisted Pair Cable;
Power Control With A Light Dimmer; 600W DC-DC Converter
For Car Hifi Systems, Pt.1; Infrared Stereo Headphone Link,
Pt.2; Build A Multi-Media Sound System, Pt.1; Multi-Channel
Radio Control Transmitter, Pt.8.
PLEASE NOTE: November 1987 to August 1988, October 1988
to March 1989, June 1989, August 1989, May 1990, February
1992, November 1992 and December 1992 are now sold out. All
other issues are presently in stock. For readers wanting articles
from sold-out issues, we can supply photostat copies (or tear
sheets) at $7.00 per article (includes p&p). When supplying
photostat articles or back copies, we automatically supply any
relevant notes & errata at no extra charge. A complete index
to all articles published to date is available on floppy disc at
$10 including packing & postage.
November 1996 29
This photo shows two versions of the PC module,
one with filament over-windings fitted to the
transformer. The module can drive virtually any
gas-filled discharge tube.
A low-cost f luorescent
light inverter
This low cost DC-AC converter will drive just
about any fluorescent tube and also neon tubes
up to about 1.5m long. It is suitable for solar
power installations and has low current drain.
It is easy to build and comes with a prewound
transformer.
Design by BRANCO JUSTIC
This project is a bit of a novelty
since it will drive just about any type
of gas-filled tube, whether fluorescent
or not. It has a high output voltage to
fire these tubes but a relatively high
output impedance as well, so it cannot
deliver a lot of current.
Because it can’t deliver a lot of
current, it is inherently self-protecting and is quite economical to run.
The downside is that it will not drive
typical fluorescent tubes to their full
brilliance – their output will be no30 Silicon Chip
ticeably reduced compared to normal
operation from the 240VAC 50Hz
supply. However, there are plenty of
applications where this type of operation is all that is required.
A prime example of this is for
emergency lighting. Most commercial, office and industrial buildings
have emergency light
ing based on
modified fluorescent light fittings.
A typical fitting contains a standard
240VAC ballast and starter for 50Hz
mains operation but also contains
a battery pack, DC-AC inverter and
charger. If there is a blackout, such
fittings will normally operate for
several hours under battery power
but their light output is considerably
less than normal.
The above remarks concerning
reduced output apply mainly to 18W
and 36W fluoro tubes. Smaller tubes
can deliver almost their full output,
depending on how the circuit is set
up.
Just to increase the novelty, the
circuit can be made to provide continuous light from the tube or flashed
operation.
PC module
The PC module itself is quite compact, measuring 85 x 40mm. It has
a fairly substantial high frequency
inverter transformer mounted on
it, along with one CMOS 4093 hex
Schmitt trigger IC, one Mosfet and
a handful of other bits. The circuit
Fig.1: the circuit is based on a 4093 Schmitt trigger IC. IC1b is the main oscillator and runs at over 50kHz.
diagram is shown in Fig.1.
IC1b is the heart of the circuit. It is
connected as a free-running oscillator
with a frequency of about 50kHz, as set
by the 330pF capacitor and resistors
R2 & R3. The actual frequency will
depend on the hysteresis of the particular 4093 IC used.
The output pulse waveform has its
duty cycle determined by the ratio
of resistors R2 and R3. These two resistors vary the charge and discharge
times of the 330pF capacitor. When
the capacitor is charging up, it is fed
by D2 and R3 and when it is being
discharged, the current path is via D1
and R2. If R2 & R3 have the same value,
the output at pin 3 will be a square
wave; ie, the duty cycle will be 50%.
We’ll discuss the need for varying the
duty cycle a little later on.
The pulse waveform at pin 3 is
buffered by IC1c and IC1d which are
connected in parallel. These square
up the waveform and then drive the
gate of Q1, a P222 Mosfet. It drives
the step-up transformer T1. This has 9
turns on the primary and 800 turns on
the secondary. The pulsed DC applied
by Q1 to the primary is about 19V
peak-to-peak and this is stepped up in
the transformer secondary to deliver
a high frequency AC waveform of a
thousand volts or more, depending
on the loading.
When a fluorescent tube fires (which
can require a peak voltage of 800V
or more), the output voltage is then
loaded down to the tube maintaining
voltage, typically 120V peak.
The output from the transformer is
AC coupled via two 22pF 3kV ceramic
capacitors. Such small capacitors are
adequate to feed the current to the
tube because of the relatively high
operating frequency of around 50kHz.
The scope waveforms of Fig.2 show
the pulse waveform at pin 3 of IC1b
(Channel 1 signal) and switching
waveform at the drain of Q1 (Channel
2 signal). Note that while the pulse
waveform from pin 3 of IC1b is quite
clean and has a long positive duty
cycle of about 86%, the corresponding waveform at the drain of Q1 has
been “dirtied up” by the transformer
loading and also is rounded off to a
degree by the 0.12µF capacitor, C6,
connected across the transformer
primary.
PARTS LIST
1 PC board, 85 x 40mm
1 prewound transformer (T1)
1 4093 hex Schmitt trigger (IC1)
1 P222 Mosfet (Q1)
2 1N4148 diodes (D1, D2)
Capacitors
1 100µF 16VW electrolytic
1 10µF 16VW electrolytic
1 0.12µF metallised polyester
(greencap)
1 330pF ceramic
2 22pF 3kV ceramic
Resistors (0.25W, 1% or 5%)
1 220kΩ 1 15kΩ (R2 - see text)
1 100kΩ 1 22Ω
Varying the duty cycle
Depending on the size of tube driven
by this circuit, the light output may be
increased by varying the duty cycle of
the oscillator, IC1b. This is done by
selecting the value of R2 and this can
be varied between 15kΩ and 100kΩ.
With R3 at 15kΩ the current drain
will be minimum and any increase in
value will result in increased current
drain as well as more light output
from the tube.
Adding filament windings
So far we have described just the
basic inverter and this will drive virtually any gas-filled tube, as mentioned
above. However, if fluorescent tubes
are started without having their filaments heated, the tube ends will tend
to blacken in a short time. This does
not reduce the tube’s light output to
any extent but it is unsightly.
The degree of blackening depends
on the tube current. The blackening
is minimal when the tubes are used
at low currents (with R2 = 15kΩ). In
this case, useful light output can be
obtained from 36W tubes with approximately 1.2W input (100mA drawn
from a 12V battery).
However, if the light output is increased by selecting a higher value of
R2, the tube ends will quickly blacken.
This blackening is cathode material
that has been splattered off the filaments. Ultimately, this damage will
mean that all the emissive material
from the filaments will have been
re-deposited inside the tube ends.
When this happens, no more electrons
can be emitted from the filaments and
the tube will be impossible to start.
The way around this problem is
November 1996 31
Fig.2: scope
waveforms for the
circuit, taken at
pin 3 of IC1b (top)
and the drain of Q1
(bottom).
to provide a small voltage to both
filaments.
This is done by adding two filament
windings to the transformer. These are
shown dotted on the circuit diagram
of Fig.1. Adding the filament windings
does increase the current but also improves the life of the tube.
Flashing operation
Finally, we need to talk about the
option of flashing. Schmitt trigger
IC1a is connected as a low frequency
square wave oscillator operating at
about 0.5Hz. Its output at pin 11 is
connected via a link between points
C and A, to gate oscillator IC1b on and
off for flashed operation. This is not
really an option for use with fluorescent tubes but could be an interesting
addition if the circuit was used for
driving neon tubes, as in under-car
installations.
Assembly
The good news about this project
is that you don’t have to wind and
assemble the transformer. This is just
as well because it would be a tricky
little beast. Not only does it have a
lot of turns on the secondary but it
has insulation between each winding
layer, to cope with the high voltage
operation.
So all you need to do is to assemble
all the active and passive components
on the board and solder the transformer into place. Make sure that the IC
and the Mosfet are correctly oriented
and the same comment applies to the
electrolytic capacitors. Note that the
0.12µF capacitor is wired onto the
underside of the PC board, as shown
in Fig.3.
Also shown in Fig.3 are the linking
options. Connect link A-B for normal
operation, or a piece of hookup wire
between points A & C for flashing
operation. One of these links must be
installed.
If you wish to add the filament
windings, they can be wound with
light duty hookup wire. Do not attempt to disassemble the transformer
to do this job – just wind them on over
the existing windings. Five turns are
required for each winding and they
are terminated to four pads on the
PC board.
Note that for some smaller tubes, if
the filaments can be seen to be glowing
orange, then the filament turns should
be reduced.
When you have finished assembling the PC board, check your work
carefully against the diagram of Fig.3.
Then connect a fluorescent tube and
apply 12V from a power supply or
battery. The tube should start immediately. Note that you can vary the
brilliance by varying the value for R2
but for 18W and 36W tubes, the light
output will be less than normal, as
SC
noted above.
Kit Availability
Fig.3: the component overlays for the two versions of the
PC board. The version at top with filament windings on the
transformer is recommended for driving fluorescent tubes.
32 Silicon Chip
This project was designed by
Oatley Electronics who own the
copyright. They can supply the
complete kit, including the pre
wound transformer and a small
fluorescent tube, for $18 plus $4
for postage and packing. Their address is PO Box 89, Oatley NSW
2223. Phone (02) 9579 4985; fax
(02) 9570 7910.
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Rod Irving Electronics Pty Ltd
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
Rod Irving Electronics Pty Ltd
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Rod Irving Electronics Pty Ltd
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
Rod Irving Electronics Pty Ltd
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Rod Irving Electronics Pty Ltd
SERVICEMAN'S LOG
Of ships & shoes & sealing wax
Of ships & shoes & ..? Well, something like that.
More exactly, this months column is a collection
of items which have accumulated over the past
few months, typically letters from readers.
Unfortunately, good intentions
don’t always work out in practice. For
one reason or another, there always
seems to be a space problem and so,
finally, they simply had to be dealt
with in one hit. So here goes – and
my apologies to all those concerned
for the inevitable delays.
My first item is from one of my
regular contributors of the past, J. L.
of Tasmania. We haven’t heard much
from J. L. in recent months and I had
gained the impression that he has
scaled his activities down somewhat.
38 Silicon Chip
Anyway, here is his latest story.
I had a job last week that was totally
wasted on an old bloke like me.
The manager of the local gymnasium had asked me to have a look at
their cassette deck, the one used by the
aerobics instructors to play the music
for their students to puff by.
I was told that the deck would only
play half a tape and would then slow
to a stop, just when the exercises
were getting up to full speed! What I
wasn’t told was that I would have to
do the job on the job, during a class,
because their spare deck was not up
to continuous use either! They had to
swap from one machine to the other
to get through a session.
I don’t know if you have ever
tried to work in a room
with 50 young women, each scantily
clad in lycra tights
and bouncing about
all over the place to
the thumping beat of
loud rock. As I said
at the top, the job
was totally wasted
on me.
The deck turned
out to be a Tascam Ministudio, a
4-track 4-channel
recorder designed
primarily as a semipro deck for rock
bands and the like.
It is quite a rugged
unit, which was
why it had been
chosen for play-only use in the gymnasium. Unfortunate
ly, it had “play-onlyed” just a little
too often and was now due for some
serious maintenance.
Flying blind
There was no way I could do a
proper test of the deck in situ. It was
accessible enough, on top of a small
wooden cabinet, but there just wasn’t
enough space around it for tools and
test gear. Quite obviously I was going
to have to fly blind with this one.
Fortunately, I have had quite a lot
of experience with audio tape decks,
going back to long before VCRs became
common. I also have a useful collection of specialised tools, including a
torque meter which proved to be the
saviour in the present job.
First up, I loaded a 1kHz test tape
into the machine and set it playing.
With a pair of headphones plugged
into the unit’s “phones” socket, I was
just able to hear the test tone and con
firm that it was running at about the
correct speed.
As I stood watching the frenetic
activity all around me, I became aware
that the tape was definitely slowing.
This was after only about five minutes,
so I could just picture all the exercising
slowly grinding to a stop.
My next move was to replace the
test tape with the torque meter. A tape
deck in good condition should give a
take-up torque reading of around 4050 gram/centimetres. This one was
hard pressed to reach 5g/cm, which
explained why the tape was so loosely
spooled in the cassette that I could see
daylight through the layers.
I can’t remember when I first learned
the usual cause of this problem, so I
can’t tell our younger readers just how
I first found it. I do know that I have
since found hundreds of stretched
or hardened main drive belts in both
audio and video cassette decks. And
so it was in this case.
I opened the machine and exposed
the bottom of the mechanism. I used
a finger to rotate the main flywheel,
Well, that’s J. L.’s story and it is
good to hear from him again. But I
can’t help wondering whether he is
perhaps coming on a little too strong in
his protestions – that he is promising
to not enjoy himself just a little too
emphatically!
The Marantz VCR
which should have caused the motor
pulley to spin. It didn’t move! When I
powered the mechanism, the wedging
action of the motor pulley managed to
drive the belt but the flywheel barely
moved.
That was enough – I removed the old
belt which had become quite hard and
highly polished. I selected a replacement belt about 1cm shorter than the
original and fitted it into place.
When the machine was reassembled, the torque figure had gone up to
55g/cm – a whisker high but one that
will provide a margin for the future.
By this time the noise and activity
around me were beginning to wear
me down. So rather than hang around
to test the deck, I set it running and
made my departure. When I checked
next day, I was told that it was working
perfectly, so my diagnosis must have
been correct. I promised to go back
later to complete the cleanup and
general maintenance of the unit but
only if they could assure me an hour
free from the distractions of young
women and loud rock!
When I related this story to one of
my younger colleagues he couldn’t
believe that I was more interested in
repairing a tape deck than in watching
the girls do their aerobics exercises.
Apparently, at his gymnasium, they
have segregated classes and he would
have given his left leg to get into the
girls’ class. He tried to convince me
that he was only interested in “...all
that stretchy Lycra” but somehow I
don’t believe him!
Next up, is a letter from A. M. of
North Turramurra, NSW, concerning a
problem with a Marantz 740A VCR. It
is similar to the situation described in
the Serviceman’s Notes for December
1995. Anyway, here’s his story.
Like many readers of SILICON CHIP,
I usually read your column first when
the magazine arrives. The December
issue was, however, a double treat
because it contained the solution to
a problem that has consumed many
hours of head scratching and frustra
tion. I refer to the power supply fault
in the Marantz 740A.
The problem first showed itself as a
curious sort of “rotating echo” effect
in the sound. After some fiddling, I
found that if the Audio Play switch
which had been set on Mix was set to
Hi-Fi or Linear, the effect disappeared.
As a result, I dismissed the episode as
an intended gimmick.
Some months later, I noticed that the
picture was somewhat degraded when
the machine was first switched on but
that this cleared after a few minutes.
This slowly became worse, until it
took about 15 minutes for the picture
to clear. At this time, I also found that
with the Audio Play switch in the HiFi position there was an intolerable
frame buzz, while the picture was
degraded.
The fault was obviously heat affected and the service manual showed that
the Video Head Amp PWB-Y was the
only common signal path for hifi audio
and video. I heated and froze every
component on the board but without
any result.
Incidently, the circuit diagram for
PWB-Y and others have been helpfully
(?) marked to show the signal paths on
playback and record. I assume this was
originally in colour but the manuals as
supplied are black and white copies,
so that all the path markings succeed
in doing is to obliterate the details of
the circuit!
On the grounds that most faults are
mechanical but without any clear idea
as to where the thermal effect would
arise, I carefully cleaned the heads,
November 1996 39
Serviceman’s Log – continued
aligned the tape path, and replaced
the pinch roller – all of which effected a slight improvement but did not
correct the real fault. It was clear that
there was no problem with the record
function but, when we could no longer
stand the playback delay, we bought a
Sanyo VHR-310. It was a nice luxury to
have two recorders, even if one could
record only.
You can no doubt imagine my joy on
reading your December 1995 column
and I wasted little time in diving into
the monster again. Your comments
about access are spot on but I’ve delved
into this device so many times that the
operation didn’t take long.
I was glad of your encouraging
comments about bending the support
bracket out of the way. This is something I would normally be reluctant
to do but which almost cannot be
avoided in this design. Of course I
was rewarded with immediate and
40 Silicon Chip
complete success.
It is not at all obvious why the fault
manifests itself in this way, or why
the ±9V regulator is designed in a
way which is bound to make it more
fault prone.
Thank you once again for the
solution to a most obscure problem
and for an always entertaining and
informative column.
And thank you, A. M. for your interesting report of this exercise. I have no
doubt someone else will benefit from
your time and effort.
The GC181 colour TV set
My next letter comes from N. B. of
Epping, NSW and concerns a story in
the Serviceman’s Notes for January
1989. The set on the Serviceman’s
bench was a GC181 colour TV set and
it had suffered an imploded picture
tube and sundry other damage but
without any clear reason for the fail-
ure. So here is N. B.’s story about his
GC181 TV set.
The set was bought in 1977, together
with a small trolley that held it about
half a metre off the floor. Around five
years later, my wife and I were snoozing on a Sunday morning to the usual
restful background of our three sons
squabbling over which cartoon show
they would watch.
Suddenly there was a thump, fol
lowed by absolute silence. After
some minutes, our eldest son put his
head around the bedroom door and
announced that the TV set was dead.
Feeling that it would do them no harm
to miss the cartoons, I told him to
switch it off at the mains outlet.
When I later went to investigate, I
found that the set had been pushed
backwards off the trolley and was lying
backwards at about 45 degrees. The
middle of its base was against the back
edge of the trolley and the extension
of the back cover was resting against
the wall. The soft old plaster of the
Glebe terrace house had been dented
by the case but had not come away
from the wall.
Now, I know almost nothing about
how TV sets work but I had been
building audio gear since about 1960.
I figured that the damage was probably
physical and that I might be able to
repair it.
Taking the back off, I found that the
neck board had broken in half. I had on
hand some single-strand copper bell
wire, so I carefully cleaned the tracks
each side of the break and soldered a
short length of bell wire across each
broken track. The neck board is so
small and light that the soldered joint
provided enough mechanical strength.
However, this did not fix the set.
On investigating further, I found that
(as in the set you described) the main
board was cracked from front to back
about 50mm from its lefthand side. I
carefully removed the various plugs
and boards from the main board, noting where each went, and considered
the problem.
Obviously, wire links would not
provide enough mechanical strength
for this board, so I used Araldite first
to repair the break. When this had set,
I soldered bell wire links across each
of the broken cracks and then reassembled the set. Much to my surprise, it
worked perfectly.
The point is that a fairly minor fall
backwards snapped both the neck
and main board. If the set had fallen
all the way to the ground, it is quite
possible that it would have suffered
the same damage as your customer’s
set. I wonder how much difference
there is between an impact that snaps
a neck board and one that breaks the
neck off the tube.
Incidentally, about five years ago the
set again fell off the trolley. That time
it fell forwards and landed flat on its
screen. There was no damage. It still
works, although now as a second set.
Its only problem is that it really needs
new volume and colour pots – the
sliders have to be wedged in place with
bits of cardboard so that the contacts
bear on a relatively unworn area of
the track. Not bad for a TV set that is
almost 20 years old!
Servicing at sea
Finally, there is a most unusual
story from A. D. of Whangarei, New
Zealand. And this is another of those
letters which has languished too long
in the “too hard” file, while trying to
fit everything in. Here is his story.
Intermittent faults are the most
annoying things, especially when it’s
your own equipment and is currently
in use.
To set the scene of this story I
should explain that I live on a yacht
and I picked up a TV set while
cruising in Australia. It is a 12.5cm
Trakka 15 colour set made by Philips
(KA212).
I have another TV set, a 25cm model,
so the 12.5cm model was stored in a
box and didn’t get much use over the
winter after I bought it. It was a very
wet winter and very damp on the boat.
When the set was eventually pressed
into service so that I could watch TV in
bed, it wasn’t long before it developed
a couple of faults.
When first turned on, a hissing
sound could be heard from the EHT
supply but this usually stopped after
about five minutes, so I wasn’t too concerned about it. The more serious fault
would cut out the picture and sound
completely. The channel selector indicators would remain lit, but I couldn’t
change channels. Then the picture and
sound would return but the set would
always revert to channel 1.
I thought a few hours in the sun
might dry the set out, as my suspicions
were that the EHT system was being
loaded and that this set might have an
overload trip that was resetting itself.
But after sunning the set the fault
became more frequent and annoying.
And it always seemed to fail right
on the punch line of the show I was
watching.
I found that I could sometimes get
the picture back by rocking the monitor/TV switch on the back of the set
and, since I had stowed the set resting
on its back, I suspected that I had
damaged the switch.
So, finally, the cover came off. This
set has two large circuit boards with
quite a few discrete components, plus
a sub-board with the monitor/TV
switch on it. The switch was going to
be impossible to remove so I simply
linked the respective switch points,
as the set was never going to be used
as a monitor anyway.
I thought that would be it and sat
back to watch Fawlty Towers but, five
minutes later, it was in fault status
again – just as Basil was annoying
some German diners.
I removed the cover again and this
time did some probing with a meter.
The sub-board has a number of cables
to it: video/audio, in/out and power.
I did consider trying to remove the
whole sub-board but settled for leaving
the meter connected to the 9V supply
rail and waited.
It read 8.92V when the set was
normal but dropped to 4.2V when the
fault occurred. And so the tracking
down began. I had to find the start of
the 9V stabilised rail, which involved
checking other supply rails carrying
higher voltages. I finally came to a TO220 package with 12V on one pin and
around 9V on the other two.
So out came the magnifying glass
and, sure enough, I discovered a dry
joint. I can only assume that flicking
the switch may have applied extra
load to the circuit and temporarily
remade the contact. I cleaned the EHT
connections, applied silicone grease to
the EHT cap and put the cover back
on for the final time.
I am not a TV technician but an
experienced general technician.
Well, that’s A. D.’s story of his life
on the ocean wave. And I don’t know
about not being a TV technician, A.
D. I reckon you’ll make a pretty good
substitute in the meantime.
And that’s the roundup for this
month. Which isn’t a bad effort considering that we have been from Tasmania
to New Zealand and points in between,
and covered everything from aerobics
SC
to marine electronics.
November 1996 41
Got a dud dimmer? The
fault is bound to be a
blown Triac. Fix it for
good with a higher-rated
Triac.
How to repair
light dimmers
Do you have light dimmers in your home?
Has one or more of them failed? Are you
cheesed off with the thought of buying
another one? Well, don’t. Repair it with a
more rugged Triac and it should be fixed
for good.
By LEO SIMPSON
Light dimmers are a great accessory
in lounge and dining rooms, to subdue
the lights and set the mood. The same
comment goes for lights in bedrooms.
They are handy too when there are
young children in the household. You
can set the dimmer low to check on
them without disturbing their sleep
and they can also help a child go to
sleep if he or she becomes anxious in
the dark.
But while they have their good
points, dimmers can fail. Usually they
42 Silicon Chip
fail when the lamp filament blows and
this is particularly the case if the lamp
fitting has the bulb upright. What often
happens is that when the filament
blows, a loose section of it flails around
and makes contact with one of the
filament supports. The resulting arc
blows the Triac and from then on all
you have is a light switch – it’s either
on or off.
In our article entitled “Power Control With A Light Dimmer” in last
month’s issue, we mentioned that
it was generally possible to repair a
failed light dimmer by replacing the
Triac with an SC141D. That is true
but for long term reliability it is better
to take the approach outlined in this
article.
This whole subject was brought
into focus once again when one of
the SILICON CHIP staff recently had a
dimmer blow in his home. We decided
to bite the bullet and see how difficult
it was to repair.
Removing the dimmer
The first step is to have the dimmer
removed and temporari
ly replaced
with a standard light switch on the
same size switch plate. Don’t even
think about working on the dimmer
while it is still connected.
Having had the dimmer removed,
you can inspect the small rectangular
module itself. This will have an end
panel which is generally secured with
integral clips and plastic tape. Peel off
the tape and then pop out the end panel by carefully pushing on the integral
clips – it is more difficult to describe
than actually do it.
Now remove the knob – it just pulls
off. Make a drawing of how the two
wires from the dimmer module connect to the switch. Disconnect the two
wires and then it is simply a matter of
pushing on the knob shaft to remove
the small PC board assembly from the
plastic housing.
The Triac is mounted at one end
of the board and usually has a small
aluminium heatsink.
On some dimmers this heatsink is
pop-riveted to the metal tab on the
Triac but on the one shown in the
photos in this article it was merely
placed in contact with the Triac tab
by the pressure from the end plate of
the plastic module. This is hardly an
effective method but it does make it
easy to replace the Triac.
Now why did the Triac fail? We have
already described the mechanism of
failure but since it is such a common
hazard you wonder why the dimmer
manufacturers don’t simply use more
rugged Triacs.
In the dimmer shown in the photos,
the original Triac fitted was a Philips
BT137 series. This is rated at 8A which
ostensibly is more than adequate considering that the dimmer was rated for
a maximum load of only 300 watts.
The problem is that the BT137 series
Table 1: Triac Ratings
Type
BT137/500
BT138/500
BT139/500
SC141D
SC146D
SC151D
MAC320A8FP
BTA10-600B
BTB16-400B
Current Rating
8A
12A
16A
6A
10A
15A
20A
10A
16A
Triacs have a non-repetitive peak surge
current (ITSM) rating of only 55A. This
is insufficient to cope with the arc
currents mentioned above.
The obvious solution is to replace
the Triac with a higher-rated unit and
there are quite a few to choose from, all
costing $6 or less. Table 1 shows a list
of Triacs which are widely available
from electronic parts retailers.
Looking at Table 1, you will see that
there are several devices with at least
double the surge current ratings of the
BT137. All have similar packages and
the same pinouts so they are drop-in
replacements for the BT137. However,
it is good practice to go for one with
the same or a higher voltage rating
as well. Therefore, if you can get the
alternatives, you can reject the 400V
SC146D, SC151D and the BTB16-400B
Voltage Rating
500V
500V
500V
400V
400V
400V
600V
600V
400V
Surge Rating
55A <at> 50Hz
90A <at> 50Hz
140A <at> 50Hz
74A <at> 50Hz
110A <at> 50Hz
110A <at> 50Hz
150A <at> 50Hz
100A <at> 50Hz
170A <at> 50Hz
although the last-named device does
have a massive surge rating of 170A.
Because we had them on hand, we
plunked for the Motorola MAC320
A8FP, a 20A device with a surge rating
of 150A (at 60Hz) and an insulated
tab. While the insulated tab is a good
feature in some equipment it is of no
advantage in domestic dimmers and
there is a slight drawback in that the
insulated tab is a little taller than the
metal tab on TO-220 packages.
The next step is to use your soldering iron to remove the failed Triac
from the PC board. Take care not to
overheat the copper tracks otherwise
there is a risk that they may lift off the
board substrate.
If the heatsink has been pop-riveted
on, you will need to drill out the rivet.
Clean off any burrs or metal swarf
Popping out the
end panel on the
dimmer module
reveals the PC board
assembly and the
Triac’s aluminium
heatsink. Before the
PC assembly can be
removed, you must
remove the knob
from the front panel.
November 1996 43
Replacing the Triac is merely a matter of
unsoldering the dud one and soldering in the
new. The heatsink should be attached to the
Triac’s tab using a screw, lockwasher and nut.
Make sure that the finished PC assembly will
still slide easily into its plastic case.
around the hole when you have finished drilling.
Next, solder in the new Triac,
making sure that you don’t have any
solder bridges between the Triac pads.
The Triac must be oriented the same
way as the original device, so that the
heat
sink can be refitted. Don’t use
a pop rivet though; use a machine
screw, lockwasher and nut. It’s also
a good idea to smear a little heatsink
compound on the Triac mounting tab
before fitting the heatsink. Note that
the heatsink will be live and there is no
need for such niceties as mica washers.
Before you reassemble the PC board
assembly into the dimmer module,
use your multimeter to check that the
Triac is open circuit. If you switch your
multimeter to the highest resistance
range you will find that the resistance
across the two dimmer module wires
should be above 30MΩ.
Do the same resistance check across
the Diac. This is a small glass package
with one lead connecting to the gate of
the Triac. The Diac should also appear
to be open circuit.
Now reassemble the dimmer module. You can either have it reinstalled
or you can use it as a soldering iron
temperature controller, as outlined in
last month’s issue of SILICON CHIP. SC
20 Electronic Projects For Cars
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44 Silicon Chip
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SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.jaycar.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
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more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.jaycar.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.jaycar.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.jaycar.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.jaycar.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
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more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
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SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
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which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
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MAILBAG
Flashing lights
foil hunting cats
In your response to a letter from K.F.,
of Albion Park Rail, on page 93 of your
August 1996 edition, headed “Cat Deter
rent Not Humane”, you invite comment.
It was an interesting and perceptive
observation that you made in reply to
the reader’s suggestion that emitted
sonics would not deter birds in preference to bells attached to cats’ collars.
We are given to believe by the avian
experts that sonics do not indeed have
any deterrent effect on birds.
Your thoughts that cats should not
be let out at night are not without pre
cedent. In Victoria, there is a curfew
placed on them in cities and shires that
have elected to enforce what is now state
law, and the bird and reptile population
is now on the increase in those areas.
Because cats hunt, by preference during the hours of sunset to sunrise, so we
have researched and developed a tiny
battery driven unit which emits a high
intensity flashing light from a position
behind the cat’s neck. It can then electively be used by responsible cat owners
as a “Skare” for birds and other creatures.
The cat is unaware of this and the
“Skare” acts as a far more effective
deterrent than tinkling bells but has
added safety benefits for the cat in
that it is illuminated if crossing roads
in unlit areas.
This device will shortly be marketed through our existing “K-9 Collar”
outlets whose primary purpose is the
humane and safe containment of dogs,
by proven methods using sonics and
avoidance therapy.
John Foley,
Canine Invisible Enclosures,
Tugun, Qld.
Internet can be cheap
I would like to comment on the Publisher’s Letter in October 1996 issue:
“Getting Onto the Internet Can Cost Big
Money”. Whilst it is true that the WWW
is mostly “voyeuristic” at present with
few tangible benefits, the cost does not
really have to be excessive. Granted,
some companies spend many tens or
even hundreds of thousands of dollars
running their web sites. However, this
does not have to be the case.
For example, I have assisted a local
(non-technical) company to set up with
a local Internet service provider (ISP)
with email and a simple web page, for
about $50 a month. The email account
was the driving need in this case; the
web page was an added bonus. I suggest
to you that email today is much like the
fax machine of 5-10 years ago, an expensive novelty then but essential now.
With regard to the cost/benefits of
properly setting up a WWW site, I agree
that not every organisation can justify
such an investment. Commercially
speaking, the WWW is just another
adver
tising medium, alongside print,
television and radio. Of course, any
media person will tell you that “advertising pays”; the question is which sort
of advertising is best for a particular
company. Given that $50 buys 92 words
or two column centimetres each month
in the SILICON CHIP Market Centre, or
5Mb of storage with an ISP, I’d suggest
that both are economical methods of
advertising, especially for technically-oriented organisations.
B. Low,
Gwynneville, NSW.
Underestimating
the Internet
I was rather stunned by your editorial
in the October 1996 issue regarding the
Internet. While your comments regarding copyright are quite correct, I think
you are underestimating the benefits
of the Internet.
Do you realise that all the major
electronics manufacturers have their
full technical data library on line? This
is the best thing that has happened in
electronics for years. You can down
load the full data sheets on just about
anything. While I am sure the electronics companies are quite helpful when
SILICON CHIP magazine wants some
data, I can assure you this is not the case
for the hobbyist or small manufacturer.
I cannot comprehend how you can
say it costs a lot of money to get a
company on the Internet. Do you realise that with an Ozemail membership
you get 5Mb of space for your home
page. Because HTML is basically text
and providing you don’t have stacks of
graphics, you can have a stack of stuff
in 5Mb of text. Email is great – I regularly correspond with companies and
individuals all over the world.
A SILICON CHIP Web site could have
your Bookshop and back issues listings,
kit listings, subscription rates, etc –
all stuff that would not detract from
magazine sales at all and it would be
available to the world 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
I recently heard about an article on
port I/O in Windows 3.1 in the American magazine “Windows Developers
Journal”. It was some time ago and my
friend had lost the issue. I did a search
on the Internet and found their Web
site, scanned the article listing for old
issues, found the article and ordered
the back issue. How the hell would I
have done that without the Internet?
It cost me about half an hour Internet
time which is (on Microplex) $2.00 +
25 cents call. You state that “most of
the information on it is pretty trivial”.
I gather you don’t include the complete
National Semiconductor Data library! I
am amazed at your attitude.
M. Boxsell,
Kellyville, NSW.
Comment: we published an article
entitled “Electronics On The Internet”
in the August 1996 issue. The cost of
having a presence on the Internet is
minimal. The cost of a large, well-supported web site can be very high.
Phototimer has
wrong bridge rectifier
I refer to the article “A Photographic
Timer For Darkrooms” published in
the April 1995 issue of SILICON CHIP.
There is an unfortunate error on the
PC board or in the specification for the
bridge rectifier. On page 27, that portion
of the PC board in which the rectifier is
to be installed shows that the two AC
connections are both at one end of the
rectangular BR1.
The parts list on page 29 and the
circuit diagram on page 26 specify
the rectifier as a type WO4. This has a
circular encapsulation with diagonal
AC connections. In order to obtain the
12V from the rectifier, two of the legs
had to be sleeved with spaghetti and
crossed before installation.
D. Paule,
Glenhuntly, Vic.
Comment: the bridge rectifier we used,
shown in the photos, comes in a 4-pin
DIP package. It is stamped DI104 and is
available from Altronics in Perth. Their
catalog number is Z-0070.
November 1996 53
RADIO CONTROL
BY BOB YOUNG
AM versus FM: the real facts
in the argument
This month, we will take a look at some of
the myths surrounding FM transmitters and
receivers and see just how well they stack up
against the old AM system. Some people really
believe that AM is obsolete and will go so far as
to claim that AM sets should be banned from
flying. They are dead wrong.
The Mk.22 series of articles brought
forth a host of letters and telephone
conversations, almost all of which
were very positive. It certainly stirred
up some interest around the country.
Yes, we do get the odd stinker but
many are simple letters asking why
29MHz AM for the Mk.22, when all
other manufacturers are producing
36MHz FM?
However, the saddest letters are
letter even indicated that flight training would cease unless he stopped
using “inferior” AM sets and changed
to FM. Very often the theme is that
beginners keep crashing models; they
are using AM sets, therefore the fault
lies with AM.
Well, I can state that there are plenty
of reasons why models crash and the
method of modulation is the last item
that need be considered. This column
What’s all the fuss about FM and AM? How
did all of this start in the first place and why?
We flew safely and successfully for 30 years
on AM, so what has changed?
those in which there is a genuine
plea for help, usually from beginners
who are under intense pressure from
some club members to sell their “inferior” AM system and buy the latest
FM-type transmitters, complete with
LCD, bells, whistles and buzzers. They
usually have a simple plea. “Should
we sell and why? Your help please.”
These letters often point to ridicule
or lectures on why AM is dead. One
54 Silicon Chip
is dedicated to those people who are
under pressure from “experts” who
should know better.
What’s all the fuss about FM and
AM? How did all of this start in the
first place and why? We flew safely
and successfully for 30 years on AM,
so what has changed?
Before we start I should point out
that we are dealing with an extremely complex subject and it is easy to
become entangled in a circular argument in which the main points keep
getting lost.
There are three branches in this discussion. The first concerns the relative
merits of AM over FM under normal
operating conditions. The second is
the effect of interference on both systems and finally, there is the level of
technology applied to each system by
the manufacturers.
The question of operating at 29MHz
instead of 36MHz is a separate issue
and we will deal with that another
time.
Cheap AM sets
Let’s talk about the level of technology in both systems. As AM is much
cheaper to produce than FM, it is the
preferred system of modulation for
those manufacturers going after the
price conscious market. These manufacturers sometimes use dubious
techniques to further reduce costs and
the result is a system that provides
minimal performance and reliability.
This has more to do with the design
and manufacturing approach than the
method of modulation.
To complicate matters there are also
AM systems produced for model car
operation, using short antennas. These
were never intended by the manufacturers for aircraft use but were sold by
the model trade as general purpose sets
and thus found their way into model
aircraft. These sets have played a large
part in giving AM an undeserved poor
reputation.
Now “everybody” knows that FM
is better than AM and, of course, so
it is. But this applies to the FM used
for radio and TV sound broadcasting.
Fig.1: spectrum analysis of a 4-channel AM R/C transmitter. This shows the occupied bandwidth as ±12kHz
at -60dB.
FM stereo radio is far superior to
steam- age AM radio, and so it should
be, with its frequency deviation of
±75kHz. That amounts to a channel
bandwidth of 150kHz! That is true
FM. By contrast, AM radio has a bandwidth of a mere ±9kHz; no wonder it
is inferior.
FM is not FM
What “everybody” does not know
is that model R/C equipment does
not use true FM! To use the term FM
to describe the method of modulation
in an R/C transmitter is quite wrong.
The system of modulation used in
FM R/C sets is actually NBFSK. This
stands for Narrow Band Frequency
Shift Keying. This system is a form of
direct frequency shift keying and is
not to be confused with AFSK (audio
frequency shift keying). This form of
modulation uses narrow-band carrier
deviation to transmit the data and let
me tell you the emphasis is on NARROW! Typical frequency shifts are
around ±1.5kHz to ±2.5kHz for a max
imum channel bandwidth of 5kHz.
That’s in theory. In practice, the
deviation is more usual
ly -400Hz
and +2.5kHz for a system bandwidth
of about 3kHz. In other words, the
36MHz carrier is shifted back and forth
by a mere 3kHz. That is a world away
from the 150kHz deviation applied in
FM radio.
Nor can anything better be expected
with NBFSK. How are we ever going
to get down to the coveted 10kHz
channel spacing if we occupy more
bandwidth?
So why isn’t the correct term of
Fig.2: spectrum analysis of a 5-channel FM R/C transmitter. This shows the occupied bandwidth as ±8kHz at
-60dB (narrower than the AM transmitter shown in Fig.1).
NBFSK used instead of FM? It really is
misrepresentation. It never began as a
deliberate policy but merely came into
being as a matter of convenience to
distinguish frequency-shift sets from
AM sets. After all NBFSK is a form of
FM and FM rolls off the tongue much
more nicely than NBFSK, doesn’t it?
The problem is, in the minds of many
people, FM has come to mean something quite distinct from NBFSK.
The term FM conjures up visions of
wideband high fidelity stereo sound
transmission systems, completely
free of noise and interference. This
is the underlying theme in the AM
versus FM argument; AM is “inferior”
because FM is so much better.
But the argument is spurious and the
question should be, “Is NBFSK better
than AM?” or possibly, “Is NBFSK as
good as AM?” Do you think I am being
deliberately controversial here? Well,
stick with me because you might be
surprised.
AM is really not AM
Not only is FM not FM but just to
confound the argument, there is one
other thing that “everybody” does
not know. The system of modulation
commonly referred to as “AM” in the
model trade bears no more relationship to AM radio than model “FM”
bears to broadcast FM!
Model AM is not AM! It is really a
gated carrier system and many of the
objections that apply to AM broad
casting just simply do not apply to
this system. It is a very robust system
of modulation.
Add to this receivers designed
specifically for noise elimination
and pulse shaping, with ceramic IF
filters, audio slicers, audio filtering
and decoding enable. What broadcast
AM receiver is designed along these
lines? The modern AM R/C receiver
might look simple but it has had a long
history of development and it works
very well.
Comparison tests
With all of the above in mind
we embarked on a series of tests to
demonstrate FM and AM performance.
We used a Silvertone Mk.22 receiver
which is ideal for comparative testing
as we could plug in the AM or FM
modules ahead of the audio slicer. We
used a loose form of antenna coupling
to the signal generator which gave a
practical dynamic range of 80dB.
Both receiver modules were identical in sensitivity. The AM receiver
circuit is that published earlier in
SILICON CHIP and the FM receiver uses
one of the Motorola receiver chips.
The signal generator was set at 100%
modulation for the AM testing while
the FM modulation was set at -400Hz
and +2.5kHz, mimicking a popular
Japanese “FM” R/C transmitter. The
external modulation was supplied
from a Silvertone Mk.14 7-channel
encoder.
Measured under these conditions
the signal-to-noise ratio of the AM
receiver at the detector was -14dB at
-70dB signal input, the point at which
the audio slicer was about to shut off
the pulse train to the decoder. The FM
receiver measured -12.5dB (also at the
detector), a figure 1.5dB worse than the
November 1996 55
AM Receiver
Fig.3: recovered modulation from the detector of an AM
receiver, taken at a transmitter relative signal level of
-60dB. Note that the waveform is clean and virtually
noise free.
AM Receiver
Fig.4: same waveform as Fig.3 but with a transmitter
relative signal level of -80dB.
AM Receiver
Fig.5: this shows the recovered data after the slicer, for a
transmitter relative signal level of -60dB.
AM receiver. Again the 70dB point is
significant as it is the point at which
the squelch is about to shut down the
audio output of the receiver.
Some idea of the relative signal-to
noise-ratios of the two receiver modules may be gained by referring to the
accompanying oscilloscope waveforms in Fig.4 & Fig.8. These were
taken at a carrier level of -80dB, the
lowest point at which a readable signal
is present in both detectors.
We took the above figures at these
points because they are of interest
when flying through weak signal areas. It is here that things will go pearshaped very quickly indeed if noise
or interference are present.
As you can see, these figures are
completely at odds with the theoretical
noise figures so widely available in text
56 Silicon Chip
AM Receiver
Fig.6: same signal conditions as for Fig.5 but with
interference from the commutator of an electric motor.
books and which form the basis of the
“FM” versus “AM” argument. To my
mind, the anomaly arises from the fact
that the “FM” system uses such small
deviations with simple receivers and
the “AM” system uses a gated carrier
with unusual receivers.
They also take no account of the
ambient noise levels in various receiver designs. In this case the FM
receiver had a much higher ambient
noise level than the AM receiver and
it shows quite clearly in the scope
waveforms. This point is important
in the “level of technology” discussed
previously.
So here we are well into the story
and so far the AM system is ahead by
a nose. It appears that we must dig
deeper to find out why “everybody”
believes that “FM is better than AM”.
Never in its long history was AM
ever considered perfect. The main
weaknesses with the AM system from
an R/C point of view are the AGC system and occupied bandwidth.
The wider bandwidth of the AM
transmitter is a result of the edge
conditioning (ie, pulse shaping) of
the carrier blocks which contain many
harmonics. This is a most difficult factor in AM transmitter design. Blow the
edge conditioning and you can end up
with a spectrum a mile wide.
If the time constants are not correct
on the AGC rail, fast models can ex
perience momentary glitches as the
signal strength gyrates wildly on close
passes to the transmitter. Here is a
problem not experienced by communications receivers.
The move to NBFSK, which began
FM Receiver
Fig.7: this waveform shows the recovered modulation
from the detector of an FM receiver (before the squelch
stage), taken at a transmitter relative signal level of
-60dB.
FM Receiver
Fig.8: same condition as for Fig.7 but with a transmitter
relative signal level of -80dB. Note that noise is intruding
seriously onto the signal and is much worse than the
equivalent AM receiver condition shown in Fig.4.
FM Receiver
Fig.9: this shows the recovered data after the slicer of an
FM receiver, for a signal level of -60dB. Note that this
waveform is virtually identical to the AM slicer signal
shown in Fig.5.
largely in the very busy clubs in Europe I am told, was largely driven by
the above two points plus the problem
of electric motor noise. Electric flight
is very big in Europe. They needed the
narrowest channel spacing possible
and stories circulated for years about
10kHz operation in Europe.
Yet I was at the MAAA committee
meeting last year that examined all of
the latest sets, including the best from
Europe and America, and that committee ruled that 10kHz operation was
not safe with the current generation of
NBFSK radios.
So what are they doing in Europe?
It is difficult to get a true story on how
they are managing the frequencies in
Europe but it appears that they allow
FM Receiver
Fig.10: same signal as for Fig.9 but with interference from
the commutator an electric motor. Note that the data has
been seriously disrupted, with an extra pulse appearing
the fourth data block.
the use of 10kHz spacing but only
allow every second channel to fly
simultaneously. Er, isn’t that 20kHz?
Just recently, the MAAA has adopted
a similar spacing for Australia.
We were getting better results with
AM sets in 1969 when I began testing
systems for narrow band spacing. We
actually flew Silvertone Mk.7 receivers on 5kHz and 10kHz spacing but
we deemed this unsafe and settled
on 15kHz as the closest safe spacing.
We flew this spacing for many years
without incident in several Sydney
clubs. This is still true today as proved
by the MAAA meeting in Melbourne
last year.
Yet there is a mystery here as a quick
glance at Fig.1 and Fig.2 will confirm.
The NBFSK transmitter has a slightly
lower bandwidth and the receiver is
more developed with very narrow
filters, so how is it that the more simple AM system delivers comparable
results from a band spacing point of
view?
Ironically, the big difference between the AM and NBFSK receivers
in regard to band spacing is that the
AM receiver has AGC (automatic gain
control). This drastically reduces the
signal levels arriving at the IF filters
and thereby reduces the stress on
these filters.
In contrast, the NBFSK receiver
with no AGC always runs at full sensitivity and the filters are subject at
all times to heavy noise, carrier and
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IF frequencies.
Fig.8 shows the recovered data
from the detector of a typical NBFSK
receiver operating at a very low signal level (-80dB). Note the extremely
high level of white noise. With the
carrier off, this noise is very high.
NBFSK receivers need to resort to
trickery in order to get rid of this
noise because if the transmitter is
turned off or moved out of range and
that noise got through the decoder,
the servo gears would be reduced to
pulp within 30 seconds.
The trickery consists of adding a
squelch circuit which detects the loss
of carrier and shuts down the audio
preamp, thereby removing the noise to
the decoder. All of this costs money of
course and it all adds to the expense
of an NBFSK receiver.
AM virtually noise free
Fig.4 shows the detector of a Mk.22
AM receiver at the -80dB point and
therefore running at maximum sensitivity. Here we are at the very edge
of the range and yet note the almost
complete absence of noise. This drops
to a straight line once the carrier noise
is removed.
There is no need for squelch for
there is not sufficient noise to get past
the audio slicer in the decoder. The
decoder shift register is fitted with a
pulse omission detector to catch whatever stray spikes slip past the slicer.
Servo gears are safe here.
The reasons for this vast difference
in two receivers of my own design is
primarily the fact that I have no control
over the choice of design and transistors in the FM receiver chip, whereas
I had total control over the AM design
and components. The transistors in the
AM receiver were the best I could find.
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58 Silicon Chip
At this point it is probably opportune to raise the issue of limiters.
One of the major advantages of the
broadcast FM system over broadcast
AM is the fact that the FM system
makes use of very effective limiters
which remove much of the unwanted
amplitude modulation and noise from
the system. The Mk.22 AM receiver
is fitted with an audio slicer which
also removes much of the noise from
the system. This does essentially the
same job as the limiter in an FM radio
receiver.
So here we are well into the story,
having dealt with the two major complaints against the AM system. And
what have we found?
Technically, the balance is about
equal with shortcomings in both
systems, but the AM system is much
cheaper to purchase and maintain. For
those with more money than sense, I
suppose this is not sufficient reason to
give the AM system the good housekeeping stamp of approval. Therefore,
let us dig a little more deeply.
Here we move on to point two. A
serious problem is that interference
to the AM system tends to reduce the
depth of modulation; if the interference is strong enough the modulation
depth can be reduced to zero and all
control lost. The equivalent effect in
NBFSK sets is the capture effect. If the
interfering signal is stronger than the
carrier, then the receiver can lock on to
the interfering transmitter, completely
blocking out the wanted carrier. Again,
all control is lost.
The big difference is that the AM
system is gradual whereas the FM
system is abrupt. Capture is a strong
point for FM radio broadcasts but a
real drawback in NBFSK sets.
When two signals are comparable
in amplitude, the moment one signal
becomes even a trifle stronger the response changes and the stronger signal
assumes control.
A similar effect occurs at low signal levels (almost out of range). The
AM system will work right down to
very low signal levels. Control deteriorates gradually at the lower levels,
thus giving some warning that things
are beginning to go pear-shaped. By
contrast, the NBFSK system will often
switch off abruptly with no warning
when the squelch cuts in or capture
takes over.
These points are terribly important
for it was demonstrated by Phil Kraft
back in the very early days of proportional system development (1960s)
that a system that shuts down abruptly
was not as good as one that allowed the
pilot to battle his way through noise
and interference.
There is a great deal more to this
discussion but it all tends to reinforce
my argument that FM is greatly oversold against AM. When you look at the
true nature of each of the modulation
systems, gated carrier (AM) versus
NBFSK (FM), what the argument really boils down to is “weak FM versus
SC
super AM.”
Get big sound from your
computer with this . . .
Multimedia
Sound System
Last month, we introduced this high
performance Multimedia Sound System and
gave circuit and constructional details of the
sound card which fits into a slot in your PC.
This month, we complete the story with the
constructional details of the speaker boxes.
Design by RICK WALTERS
Not only does this system deliver
much higher sound quality than the
vast majority of Multimedia speakers
with their tinny little drivers but the
all-up cost is quite a bargain. In fact,
this month we present the details of
not one but two different versions of
the speaker boxes. Both employ fully
magnetically shielded drivers and
both have been designed with the help
of BassBox CAD software.
The first system to be featured uses
magnetically shielded drivers from
Jaycar and has a speaker box with
external dimensions of 224mm high,
160mm wide and 212mm deep. A
perspective diagram of the enclosure
is shown in Fig.2. It is made of 12mm
thick MDF (medium density fibreboard).
Two of these boxes can be cut from
one sheet of 12mm MDF, measuring
1200 x 450mm. Fig.1 shows a proposed
cutting plan which provides all sides
of both enclosures, with a little offcut
left over. If you are cutting this with
a circular saw, don’t just mark up the
sheet and slice away otherwise you
will end up with wrong-sized sheets.
You must allow for the kerf (width of
the saw cut) otherwise you will end
up with unusable pieces.
Better still, if you are not an expert
November 1996 59
Fig.1: two boxes to house the Jaycar drivers
can be cut from one sheet of 12mm MDF,
measuring 1200 x 450mm. This diagram shows
a proposed cutting plan which provides all
sides of both enclosures, with a little offcut left
over.
PARTS LIST
2 5-inch magnetically shielded woofers, Jaycar
CW-2102
2 magnetically shielded dome tweeters, Jaycar
CT-2006
2 35mm speaker ports, Jaycar CX-2678 or equivalent
2 9-pin “D” plugs
2 9-pin “D” backshells
1 short cable with 3.5mm miniature stereo plugs
1 1200 x 450 x 12mm sheet of MDF
2 pieces of Innerbond, 220mm x 160mm
14 3mm x 20mm screws
4m heavy duty figure-8 cable (woofers)
4m light duty figure-8 cable (tweeters)
8 12mm square self adhesive feet
grille cloth
PVA wood glue
speaker sealant (mastic)
carpenter, take your sheet of MDF to your local cabinet
maker and ask him to cut it for you. Mine only charged
me $5, which seemed a very reasonable price to get all
the panels square and the exact size. Actually, while
you are there, you might ask the cabinetmaker if he will
make the boxes up for you, together with the holes cut
in the front baffle. You will save quite a bit of work.
The two front panels (one for each box) each measure
160 x 224mm. When you are marking the positions of
the tweeter, port and woofer holes, mark one for a left
channel speaker and one for a right channel speaker.
Fig.2 shows the hole positions for the right channel
speaker and these should be flipped over for the left
channel speaker, to keep the tweeter at the outside edge
of the enclosure.
Cut the large holes with a jigsaw and sand the edges
with a medium grade of emery paper. Temporarily sit
the speakers and the plastic port in their respective
holes and mark the mounting screw positions. Then
drill each hole with a 3mm drill.
Once this is done the box can be assembled. You
may or may not decide to assemble the box with timber
cleats but either way, the back panel fits between the
sides; it should hold the box square as you assemble
it. We suggest that you place the back panel on a flat
surface and then “wrap the two sides and top and
bottom panel around the rear panel. Use plenty of glue
and panel pins to hold the panels while the glue dries.
Ideally, you should use clamps to hold the panels together while they are assembled as this makes it easier
to hold everything square.
Make sure that the all edges of the side panels are
flush with each other at the front, so that they make a
good join with the front panel when it is attached. It
is the last panel to be screwed into place.
When all the glue joints are dry, drill a 6mm hole
for the speaker leads in the rear panel of both boxes.
The next stage it to finish the boxes either by painting, veneering or possibly even by covering them with
60 Silicon Chip
Fig.2: this perspective diagram
shows how the enclosure for the
Jaycar drivers goes together.
224
wall paper. If you paint, you will first
need to fill any holes and any surface
imperfections with a product like
Spak-Filla and then sand smooth. We
suggest a satin or low gloss paint for
a washable finish. Gloss paints show
every surface imperfection while flat
finishes tend to show dirt.
We painted ours with a water based
driftwood colour which matches the
computer reasonably well.
You may wish to leave the speakers
exposed as they look quite impressive
but they are then prone to damage.
Many commercial units use aluminium mesh for protection but this is not
ideal for the best sound.
We bent and soldered lengths of
November 1996 61
The drivers can be left exposed but since they are going to be used on your
desktop we suggest that they be covered with a grille cloth frame (as shown at
left) to avoid accidental damage. This grilled cloth frame can be bent up from
coat hanger wire and then covered with a light material.
coat hanger wire to make a speaker
cloth frame the size of the front of the
box and supported it at the top on
two flathead nails 10mm in from each
edge. Two round head nails were used
on each side to locate the frame, so it
would not move sideways.
A piece of suitably coloured light
material was made into a miniature
pillow case and slid over the wire
frame. The open end was tucked under
the front edge of the box and held with
a couple of staples. Then the rubber
feet were stuck on.
Final assembly
Once the box is finished to your
satisfaction you can begin the final
assembly. The tweeter can be mounted
directly on the front panel; its large
flange gives a good seal. The same
applies to the woofer flange. However,
before both woofer and tweeter are
mounted you will need to connect
their respective wires.
Use thin figure-8 flex with a stripe
to connect to the tweeter, wiring the
62 Silicon Chip
stripe to the negative lug. The woofer
has two pairs of connections; connect
the negative terminals together and the
positive terminals together and then
wire the paired terminals with thick
figure-8 striped wire; the stripe goes
to the paired negative terminals. Feed
both woofer and tweeter leads through
the hole you previously drilled in the
rear panel. Apply a large dob of mastic around the hole, both inside and
out, pushing it in as far as you can, to
prevent air leaks.
Remove and discard the outer
sleeve from the plastic port. Cut the
remaining port to a length of 20mm,
measured from the face, and mount it
on the front panel using mastic seal
around it.
Fig.3: the pinouts
for a DB9 plug.
Wire the speaker
leads to it as
described in the
text.
Place one piece of Innerbond, measuring 220 x 160mm, loosely in each
enclosure. This is used to help damp
any internal reflections.
Cut the speaker leads to a suitable
length for your computer setup and
then solder them to the DB9 plug. Fig.3
shows the pinouts on the plug. Solder
the woofer positive leads to pins 1 &
6 and the negative leads to pins 3 & 8.
This leaves plenty of room to solder
the two thin figure-8 leads; positive to
pin 4 and negative to pin 5.
You can now test the speakers by
using a multimeter switched to the x1
Ohms range. A click should be heard
from each speaker as the prods are
applied to the appropriate plug pins.
Equalisation resistors
Before you install the amplifier card,
you will need to install the equalisation resistors R1-R8. As it happens, the
values are the same for both versions
of the speaker box presented in this
article. R1 & R3 are 1.5kΩ, R2 & R4
are 10kΩ, R5 & R7 are links, and R6 &
R8 are omitted.
To install the amplifier, first remove
the mains lead from your computer,
open the cover and remove the blanking
Fig.4: this is the cutting plan
for the enclosure to house
the alternative Altronics
drivers.
This version of the Multimedia Speakers is taller but not
as deep as the other version and does not use a port tube.
The hole in the baffle is sufficient to tune it.
Version 2: The
Altronics Alternative
This second version of the speakers uses magnetically shielded drivers supplied by Altronics in Perth.
These speakers are a little larger than the other version
presented in this issue so the speaker box has different
dimensions and its volume is six litres (versus five litre
for the other version).
It is taller but not as deep. Fig.5 shows the perspective
view. The arrangement of the front panel is different from
the first version and the front panel is now glued in place,
while the back panel is screwed. It was made this way
to enable all panels to be cut easily from the same 1200
x 450mm sheet of MDF – see Fig.4.
No plastic port is required for this second design. The
box is tuned to the correct frequency with just the front
panel hole and does not need any additional porting.
Both speakers have spade terminals and if you don’t wish
to solder the wires to these you could fit spade lugs to
the ends of the wires. The woofer only has one 8Ω voice
coil and you will not have to parallel the voice coils as
detailed in the text.
PARTS LIST (Ver. 2)
2 5-inch magnetically shielded 8Ω woofers,
Altronics C-3085
2 magnetically shielded 8Ω dome tweeters,
Altronics C-3005
2 9-pin “D” plugs
2 9-pin “D” backshells
1 short cable with 3.5mm miniature stereo plugs
1 1200 x 450 x 12mm sheet of MDF
2 pieces of Innerbond, 270mm x 190mm
20 3mm x 20mm screws
4m heavy duty figure-8 cable (woofers)
4m light duty figure-8 cable (tweeters)
8 12mm square self-adhesive feet
grille cloth
PVA wood glue
speaker sealant (mastic)
November 1996 63
Fig.5: this perspective diagram
shows the enclosure for the
Altronics drivers.
64 Silicon Chip
Fig.6: this printout shows the
BassBox parameters for the
Jaycar version of the MultiMedia Speakers.
Fig.7: the BassBox parameters
for the Altronics version of
the Multi-Media Speakers.
The two versions sound very
similar to each other.
plate from an empty slot, preferably one
closest to the power supply connectors
on the main board. Plug the amplifier
card into the slot and secure it in
place with the retaining screw. Insert
the speaker plugs in the sockets and
tighten the retaining screws. The left
speaker is fed from the top connector.
Close the computer and reconnect the
mains lead.
You will have to make, or buy, a
connecting cable to link your sound
card to the amplifier card. The 3.5mm
stereo socket we used on the PC card
seems to be becoming the new standard so you will need a cable with a
stereo 3.5mm socket at each end.
The presets on the amplifier card
should be adjusted to give a suitable
level when your sound card volume
control is at its normal setting.
Finally, please note that the 22kΩ
bass boost resistors on pins 2 & 6 of
IC1a & IC1b on the amplifier card
should be changed to 10kΩ, while
the associated 150kΩ resistors on
pins 3 & 5 should be changed to 68kΩ.
Also, note that the 0.1µF monolithic
capacitors specified in the parts list
are used as supply bypasses. Their
positions can be clearly seen as small
blue capacitors on the colour photo on
SC
page 67 of last month’s issue.
November 1996 65
600W DC-DC converter
for car hifi systems
Despite its heavy-duty circuitry, the 600W
DC-DC Converter is easy to build. Provided
you correctly follow the step-by-step details
for winding the transformer, it should work
first time.
PART 2: By JOHN CLARKE
V
IRTUALLY ALL the parts for
the 600W DC-DC Converter are
mounted on a PC board coded
05308961 (310 x 214mm) and this
is installed in a 2-unit rack case. A
small label affixes to the front panel
to provide the legends for the LED
indicators.
Begin the construction by assembling the case. This done, insert the PC
board so that its front edge sits against
the front panel. Position the board so
that there will be a 16mm gap between
the edge of the heatsink (when this is
mounted in position) and the lefthand
side of the case.
Now mark out and drill 3mm holes
66 Silicon Chip
in the base of the case for the seven PC board mounting pillars. One
mounting hole is located adjacent to
each corner of the board, one is in the
centre of toroid inductor L1, another
is located between the two bus bars
towards the rear, and one is adjacent
to transformer T1.
The next step is to check the various
hole sizes on the PC board. Note that
2mm holes are required at all locations where 1.78mm wire is inserted.
These include the source connections
of Mosfets Q3-Q5 and Q8-Q10, the
interconnections to diodes D3-D6,
the connections from the 6 x 10µF
capacitor bank to the bus bars, and
the link from T1 to the centre of the
2200µF capacitors.
The 2200µF capacitor lead holes
need to be 3.5mm diameter, while the
mounting holes for the bus bar securing screws need to be 4mm diameter.
In addition, 4mm holes are required
for the output supply rails (-V, 0V &
+V) adjacent to the 2200µF capacitors.
The mounting holes for fuse F1 should
be 8mm diameter.
Next, check that all the Mosfet and
diode screw mounting holes are 3mm
and that the four holes used to secure
L1 to the PC board are large enough to
accept the cable ties. The holes for the
L1a and L1b leads and for the transformer pins need to be at least 1.5mm
in diameter. Fuse F2 requires a 2mm
hole, while the holes for the Mosfet
leads should be about 1.5mm.
The large heatsink specified is a
fan-type with fins run
ning down
either side of a central flat area. For
this project, one set of fins is removed
using a hacksaw, so that the heatsink
measures 69mm wide. If necessary,
the length should be trimmed so that
Fig.7: install the parts on the PC board as shown here, taking care to ensure that all polarised parts are correctly oriented.
November 1996 67
TABLE 2: CAPACITOR CODES
❏
❏
❏
❏
❏
Value
IEC Code EIA Code
0.47µF 470n 474
0.1µF 100n 104
.0056µF 5n6 562
.001µF 1n0 102
The Mosfet mounting holes should be
drilled to 3.5mm, so that they accept
insulating bushes (see Fig.8).
You also need to drill mounting
holes for the thermal cutout switch
(TH1). This mounts on one of the fins,
as shown in Fig.7. Deburr all holes
using an oversize drill and check that
the heatsink mounting holes for the
Mosfets and power diodes are smooth
and free of any metal swarf.
PC board assembly
Begin construction of the PC board
by installing the resistors, diodes (except for D3-D6) and ICs, plus trimpot
VR1 – see Fig.7. Table 1 shows the
resistor colour codes but it is also a
good idea to check the values using
a digital multimeter before installing
them. The wire links associated with
the low-current circuitry (bottom of
Fig.7) can also be inserted at this stage.
Take care with the orientation of the
diodes and ICs.
The next step is to install six PC
stakes to accept the external low-current wiring connections. Two of these
stakes are installed at the TH1 wiring
points (7 & 8); two at the fan wiring
points (9 & 10); one to accept the +12V
ignition lead; and one at the ground
point (11).
The fuseholder clips for F2 (1A) can
Fig.8: this diagram shows the mounting details for the power
diodes (top) and the BUK436 Mosfets (bottom). Note that the
metal tabs of these devices must be electrically isolated from the
heatsink using insulating washers and bushes.
the heatsink is exactly 214mm long.
File all edges to a smooth finish after
cutting.
The heatsink can now be positioned
on the PC board and the various hole
positions marked. Drill 3mm holes
at the two mounting pillar locations
and for the diode mounting screws.
TABLE 1: RESISTOR COLOUR CODES
❏
No.
❏ 2
❏ 1
❏ 2
❏ 1
❏ 6
❏ 4
❏ 3
❏ 1
❏ 7
❏ 2
❏ 6
68 Silicon Chip
Value
1MΩ
470kΩ
47kΩ
27kΩ
10kΩ
6.8kΩ
4.7kΩ
2.2kΩ
10Ω
4.7Ω
1Ω
4-Band Code (1%)
brown black green brown
yellow violet yellow brown
yellow violet orange brown
red violet orange brown
brown black orange brown
blue grey red brown
yellow violet red brown
red red red brown
brown black black brown
yellow violet gold brown
brown black gold gold
5-Band Code (1%)
brown black black yellow brown
yellow violet black orange brown
yellow violet black red brown
red violet black red brown
brown black black red brown
blue grey black brown brown
yellow violet black brown brown
red red black brown brown
brown black black gold brown
yellow violet black silver brown
brown black black silver brown
Fig.9: this diagram shows the step-by-step winding details for transformer T1. Note that the
primary is wound using copper sheet and this must be cut to the shape shown – see text.
November 1996 69
This is the completed prototype, ready for installation in the boot of a car. Note
that holes must be drilled in the front and rear panels in line with the heatsink,
so that the fan can do its job.
now be installed. Note that each clip
has a small lug at one end to hold the
fuse in place, so be sure to install them
the correct way around.
LEDs 1-3 and the four small-signal
transistors (Q1, Q2, Q6 & Q7) go in
next. Note that LEDs 1-3 are mounted
at full lead length so that they can
later be bent over and pushed through
the front panel. Take care to ensure
that they are oriented correctly – the
anode lead is the longer of the two.
LED 1 is the red LED, while LEDs 2 &
3 are green.
Be sure to mount the correct transistor type at each location. Q1 & Q6 and
NPN types while Q2 & Q7 are PNPs,
so don’t get them mixed up.
At this stage, the capacitors can all
be installed on the PC board. Install
the small MKT capacitors first (see
Table 2 for the codes), then move on
to the larger values. The 10µF 100VW
capacitors between the bus bars are bipolar types and can be mounted either
way around. However, the two 10µF
16VW capacitors must be mount
ed
with the correct polarity, as must the
four 2200µF 100VW units.
Note that the latter have terminal
70 Silicon Chip
numbers on their bases. Pin 1 is the
positive terminal, while pin 5 is the
negative terminal. Their bodies also
have unusual arrow markings down
the negative side.
Brass link bars
To cater for the heavy currents involved in the output stage, the circuit
board carries two brass link bars and
these are mounted using 3mm screws
into tapped holes from the underside
of the PC board. Once these bars are
in place, run the connections to the
adjacent capacitor bank and to the
sources of the Mosfets using 1.78mm
diameter solid core wire.
This same wire should also be used
for the interconnections between D3D6 and for the connections between
these diodes and transformer T1. In
addition, a link using this wire is run
from the transformer to the centre of
the 2200µF capacitors.
Once this wiring has been completed, solder three 4mm nuts to the
underside of the PC board at the (+),
0V and (-) output terminal positions
near the 2200µF capacitors. This is
best done with the nuts attached to
their 4mm screws, so that they line up
with the board holes correctly.
Transformer winding
Transformer T1 is wound using copper sheet for the primary and enamelled copper wire for the secondary.
Fig.9 shows the details.
First, use a pair of tinsnips to cut
the copper sheet to size, as shown
in step 1 of Fig.9. This done, solder
suitable lengths of 3.3mm2 insulated
copper wire to the tags as shown in
step 2. When doing this, flatten the
stripped wire strands with a pair of
pliers, so that they sit right down on
the tags.
Note that where two connections are
shown to a tag, it’s best to use a single
length of wire bent in half. Remove the
insulation from the centre point and
bend the wire into a sharp U-shape, so
that the leads emerge at right angles
from the copper strip.
Once all the connections have been
made, cover the top of the copper sheet
with a layer of insulating tape. Be sure
to also cover the soldered tags. This
done, label the relevant leads with
the numbers 1-6, as indicated on the
diagram. You can do this by attaching
a small piece of masking tape to each
lead and writing on this.
Make sure that you don’t get the
leads mixed up, otherwise the connections to the drains of the Mosfets will
be wrong. The red leads do not need
labelling since they are all connected
to the positive link bar.
The copper strip can now be wound
onto the former as shown in step 3 of
Fig.9. Start from the top of the former
and slide the solder tags into the slotted plastic flanges (you will need to
make these slightly wider using a file
or a pair of sidecutters). This done,
wind on two turns and check that the
solder tags with the red wires now
slot into the flanges on the top of the
transformer, along with the solder tags
at the start end.
Finally, complete the primary by
winding on the next two turns, finishing again at the top of the former.
Secure the winding with a layer of
insulating tape, taking care to ensure
that the solder tags are not shorting to
each other.
The secondary is wound directly
over the primary winding. First,
check Table 3 for the number of turns
required to obtain the desired output
voltage from the converter. This done,
cut four 1.5-metre lengths of 1.25mm
diameter enamelled copper wire and
terminate one end of each onto pins
4, 5, 6 & 7, respectively (the wire ends
are easily stripped by using a soldering
iron to melt the enamel).
Now wind on all four wires simultaneously in the direction shown,
with each wire sitting directly alongside the others (ie, not jumbled up).
Insulate each layer with a layer of
electrical tape and continue until the
requisite number of turns has been
wound on.
Terminate the ends onto pins 17,
16, 15 & 14 respectively. This done,
use a multimeter to check that pin 4
connects to pin 17, pin 5 to pin 16, pin
6 to pin 15 and pin 7 to pin 14.
The transformer is now assembled
by sliding the cores into the former
from each end and fitting the metal
clips. Once the transformer has been
completed, strip the ends of the primary leads and crimp eyelet lugs to
the black leads only.
Inductor L1a, L1b
Fig.8 shows the winding details for
L1a and L1b. These are wound on a
common Neosid 17-745-22 ring core
using 1.5mm diameter enamelled
copper wire.
The fan is mounted on the rear panel, in-line with the heatsink, using 9mm
tapped brass spacers. Orient the fan as shown here, so that it blows the air out
through the holes drilled in the rear panel.
sure to wind the coils in the directions
shown in Fig.8.
Copper strap
Fig.10: inductors L1a and L1b are
wound on a common toroid former,
as shown here.
Table 3: Transformer Wiring
Required Output
Turns On Secondary
±65-70V
±60-65V
±55-60V
±50-55V
±40-50V
±40-45V
±35-40V
±30-35V
±20-30V
12
11
11
10
9
8
7
7
6
You will need about 600mm of wire
for each coil on this ring core. Wind
on the 14 turns for inductor L1a first,
then wind on the turns for L1b. Be
The copper strap connecting the
link bar to fuse F1 is made from
0.6mm thick copper sheet. Begin by
cutting a 75 x 18mm piece, then drill
a 12mm hole in one end and an 8mm
hole in the other. This done, bolt the
end with the 12mm hole to the link
bar, as shown on Fig.7. The copper
strap is then bent down so that its
8mm hole lines up with the adjacent
fuse mounting hole.
Fuse F1 can now be mounted in
place on the copper strap and secured
using an 8mm bolt, nut and washer.
An 8mm bolt, nut and washer should
also be used to temporarily secure the
other end of the fuse.
Heatsink mounting
The next step in the assembly is to
fit the heatsink to the PC board. This
is secured at the two main mounting
points using 15mm tapped standoffs
on the PC board side and 3mm screws
from the heatsink side.
Next, bend the leads of the Mosfets
(Q3-Q5 & Q8-Q10) at right angles so
that they go through the PC board holes
(check also that their metal tabs line
up with the heatsink mounting holes).
This done, mount each Mosfet on the
heatsink using an insulating washer,
bush, spring washer, eyelet lug and
nut as shown in Fig.8.
The eyelet lugs used are the ones
that were previously crimped to the
November 1996 71
& 8 (near F2) at the far end of the PC
board.
The wiring from T1 can now be
completed by connecting its red
wires to the link bar as shown. The
toroid inductor (L1a & L1b) can also
be mounted at this stage. It is held in
place using two small cable ties which
pass through holes in the PC board.
Current sensing resistor (Rsc)
The Rsc lead is made using a 55mm
length of 3.5mm2 wire. Each end is
terminated by connecting it to a large
eyelet using generous amounts of solder. The lead is then insulated using
heatshrink tubing. For the time being,
attach one end only to the link bar as
shown in Fig.7.
This close-up view shows the mounting details for the power diodes, Mosfets
and the thermal cutout (TH1). The toroid inductor (L1a & L1b) is secured to the
board using a pair of cable ties.
black leads from transformer T1. These
leads were all numbered, from 1-6. Be
sure to connect the correct lead to the
metal tab (drain) of each Mosfet – see
Fig.7.
Note that the type of insulating bush
supplied may have a flange attached
– if so, this should be cut off using
a sharp knife. Note also that if mica
washers are used, it will be necessary
to smear heatsink compound on both
sides. If silicone washers are supplied
instead, then you do not need heatsink
compound.
When all the Mosfets are in place,
use a multimeter to confirm that their
metal tabs are correctly isolated from
72 Silicon Chip
the heatsink. If you do find a short,
remove the device and correct the
problem before proceeding further.
The power diodes (D3-D6) are
mounted next. These are installed in
a similar manner to the Mosfets, again
using an insulating washer and a bush
(with a flange) – see Fig.8. As before,
use your multimeter to confirm that
the device tabs are correctly isolated
from the heatsink.
When everything is correct, solder
all the Mosfet and diode leads to the
PC board. This done, bolt the thermal
cutout (TH1) to the heatsink as shown
in Fig.11 and use light-duty hookup
wire to connect its leads to points 7
Final assembly
Begin the final assembly by attaching the PC board to the case baseplate
using 15mm standoffs and screws.
This done, position the fan so that its
blades line up with the heatsink fins
and mark out suitable mounting hole
positions on the rear panel. Drill these
holes to accept 3mm machine screws.
Next, mark out the positions for the
Rsc wire connection to the rear panel,
the adjacent ground wire connection
and the two cable gland holes. These
holes can now be drilled or punched,
as appropriate. A large hole must also
Below: we dressed up the large hole
cut for the fan in the rear panel by
adding some aluminium trim but this
can be considered optional. Make
sure all cables are firmly secured.
Fig.11: the output cables and the positive battery cable are
secured to the rear panel using cable glands. Be sure to use
heavy-duty cable where indicated.
November 1996 73
Fig.12: this PC etching pattern is shown 71% of actual size. It can easily be reproduced full-size using a photostat
machine set to a standard enlargement of 1.41.
be cut in the rear panel in line with
the fan blades, to allow the air to escape. If necessary, the larger holes can
be made by drilling a series of small
holes around the inside diameter or
74 Silicon Chip
the marked area, then knocking out
the centre piece and filing to a smooth
finish.
The fan can now be mounted on the
rear panel using 9mm tapped brass
spacers and machine screws. Be sure
to orient the fan so that it blows the
air out of the case. This done, attach
the rear panel to the case and bolt the
free end of Rsc to the case, along with
the negative battery lead. The cable
glands can now be fitted, along with
the ground eyelet.
The ground eyelet connects to point
11 on the PC board. This connection
can be run using medium-duty hook
up wire.
Moving now to the front panel, you
will need to drill a series of airflow
holes in line with the heatsink (see
photo) plus three holes for the indicator LEDs. The latter are best drilled after first attaching the front panel label
and this should be carefully positioned
to ensure that it lines up with the onboard LEDs. Make the LED indicator
holes just large enough to accept the
plastic bezels. Once these have been
fitted, attach the front panel and push
the LEDs into place.
All that remains now is to complete
the wiring as shown in Fig.11. First,
connect the fan to points 9 & 10 on the
PC board. To do this, you will need to
extend the existing fan leads, taking
care to ensure that the joins are well
insulated with heatshrink tubing.
Next, attach the output leads to the
screw terminals using crimp eyelets
and 4mm screws, star washers and
nuts. The star washers bite into the
copper on the PC board, thereby ensuring good contacts. The +12V ignition
lead should also be connected at this
stage – use red medium-duty hookup
wire for easy identification.
The ignition lead and the three
output leads pass through one of the
cable glands on the rear panel. Tighten this gland firmly to prevent cable
movement.
Finally, the battery cables can be installed. These are run using heavy-duty
4GA cables (red for positive, black for
negative) which terminate into large
eyelets. You will need a heavy-duty
soldering iron to solder these, if they
haven’t already been connected. The
positive lead passes through the second cable gland and is bolted to one
end of fuse F1, while the negative lead
is bolted to the rear panel.
Testing
If you have a power supply capable
of delivering 12V at 1A or more, it
can be used to test the inverter. Alternatively, you can use a car battery
with F1 initially replaced by a 10A
automotive fuse. This can be wired in
using hookup wire around the 8mm
bolts and by using large clips for the
battery connection.
First, connect the positive and negative leads to the supply terminals,
then connect the ignition lead to the
positive terminal. The power supply
will be loaded down for a few seconds
if a low current supply is used as the
output capacitors charge.
Once the capacitors are charged,
the standby current should be around
300mA due to the fan. Check that the
power LED and (+) and (-) supply LEDs
all light, then adjust VR1 to obtain the
correct positive and negative output
voltages.
Next, check that the converter
switches off when the input voltage
is reduced to less that 10V. Of course,
this is only really practical if you are
testing the converter using a variable
supply. If you are using a battery,
test that the unit switches off when
pin 2 of IC1 is pulled to ground (you
can do this using a test lead but be
careful not to short any of the adjacent IC pins).
If the 10A fuse blows when a battery
is used, the problem probably lies in
the transformer wiring. Alternatively,
the Mosfets or diodes may be shorted
to the heatsink. Recheck all wiring and
component placement if you strike
problems.
Assuming everything works correctly, reconnect the 63A fuse for F1. The
unit can now be installed in a vehicle
but be sure to follow these guidelines:
(1). The heavy duty supply wiring
to the converter must connect directly to the battery terminals. You can
purchase battery terminals that will
allow the converter connection plus
the normal automotive battery wiring.
(2). The wires should be run through
the engine bay firewall via grommets
and pass under the vehicle carpet or
mats. Entry to the boot should be via
grommets as well.
(3). The ignition connection should
be made at the fusebox so that the
converter will be powered whenever
the ignition is on. Alternatively, a
dashboard switch can be installed so
that it is turned on separately.
(4). Make sure that the polarity is
correct when connecting the output
supply rails to the amplifier.
(5). Run the loudspeaker connections using twin cable. Don’t use the
vehicle chassis as a return connection
for the loudspeaker since heavy circulating currents can occur within the
ground wiring and this could lead to
SC
noise problems.
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regular customer newsletters
BEWARE OF IMITATORS
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November 1996 75
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.altronics.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.altronics.com.au
SILICON
CHIP
If you are seeing a blank page here, it is
more than likely that it contained advertising
which is now out of date and the advertiser
has requested that the page be removed to
prevent misunderstandings.
Please feel free to visit the advertiser’s website:
www.altronics.com.au
PRODUCT SHOWCASE
Hung Chang 20MHz
dual trace oscilloscope
trols are three pushbutton switches to
select Channel 1, Channel 2 or both
channels added together (ADD). By
pushing the INVERT button for channel 2, the ADD button will provide a
display which represents the difference between the two channel inputs.
This is not quite the same as having a
scope with differential inputs but it’s
a handy facility.
Above these controls and to the right
of the screen are the Power switch,
Intensity, Focus and Scale Illumination (for the screen graticule) controls.
Also in this section of the panel is a
screwdriver preset for trace rotation.
This can be used to ensure that the
traces are exactly parallel to the horizontal lines on the screen graticule.
As well, there is a Calibration terminal
providing a 0.5V peak-peak square
wave reference signal. This is used
for setting the compensation of the
scope probes (ie, for optimum square
wave display).
Timebase & triggering
This attractive oscilloscope has a 20MHz
bandwidth, dual trace operation and a
maximum vertical input sensitivity of 1mV/
div. Its timebase extends up to 0.1µs/div.
While many electronic hobbyists
might yearn for a 200MHz digital
storage oscilloscope with screen save
to disc capabili
ties, a great deal of
measurement work can be done with
a much lower priced instrument such
as this Model 6502 from Hung Chang
in Korea. It is quite compact, with
dimensions of 140mm high, 335mm
wide and 420mm deep.
The front panel manages to feature
all the usual controls while appearing to be very clean and uncluttered.
Even so, there are no less then 11
knob controls, 11 pushbuttons and
four 3-position toggle switches. The
active screen area is 10cm x 8cm and
the screen phosphor is blue.
To the right of the screen are the
vertical attenuators. These have nine
settings ranging from 5mV/cm to 5V/
cm in a 1:2:5 sequence. By pushing
the x5 MAG switch, the sensitivity can
be increased to a maximum of 1mV/
cm while knobs concentric with the
attenuator switches give continuous
variation of sensitivity.
To the right of each attenuator is a
3-position toggle switch allowing AC
or DC coupling and Gnd while above
each attenuator is the trace position
control for the respective channel. The
vertical input BNC sockets are beneath
the input attenuators with an earth
terminal between them.
Between the vertical position con-
At the far right of the panel is the
Time/Division switch giving 20 sweep
from 0.1µs/cm to 0.2s/cm in the usual
1:2:5 steps. Below this and to the left
are two 4-position toggle switches.
The first is for Trigger Mode allowing
selection of Auto, Norm, TV/V and
TV/H triggering, while the second
switch is trigger Source.
The positions provided here are
Internal, Ch2, Line and External. Note
that if the oscilloscope is being used in
the single channel mode, either Ch1 or
Ch2, then sync is provided by selecting
the Int source. To the right of these
switches is the Trigger Level control.
Above and to the right of the time
base switch is a timebase Variable
control and two pushbutton switches
for trigger slope (either + or -) and XY
mode. When pushed in this causes the
Ch1 and Ch2 inputs to be displayed as
an XY Lissajous plot.
Trace magnification
Two more pushbutton switches
provide timebase magnification (MAG
x5) and ALT-MAG.
November 1996 79
The first is self explanatory while
the second is not. When pushed it
displays an additional trace with
the timebase being five times normal
speed. If the scope is already in Dual
mode and ALT-MAG is depressed, then
four traces will be shown. This is quite
an unusual feature and can be handy
in a number of situations.
One control missing is that for selecting Alternate or Chopped mode
for dual trace operation. Instead, these
functions are selected automatically as
the Timebase speed is altered.
Trigger sensitivity for the Model
6502 on internal sync is quoted as
three divisions for DC to 20MHz bandwidth. Our sample easily exceeded
this spec. Reliable sync was obtained
up to 2MHz with a displayed signal of
less than one division and at 20MHz
with a two division signal. This is
good.
Another interesting point about
this scope is its very high maximum
sensitivity of 1mV/cm although this is
not useable in some situations where
the vertical input amplifiers become
unstable and oscillate. This is mentioned in the instruction manual and
can be cured by good grounding of the
KITS-R-US
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3 stage XTAL locked 100MHz
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design uses hybrid.
SG1 Kit $399
Broadcast quality FM stereo
coder. Uses op amps with selectable pre-emphasis.
Other linear amps and kits available for broadcasters.
80 Silicon Chip
signal source as well as placing a 220Ω
resistor in series with the scope probe.
Sweep linearity of the instrument
was good and the trace sweep times
within specification of ±3%. The displayed trace was very fine, with even
focus across the full screen area.
In short, the Hung Chang model
6502 oscilloscope is a good performer,
especially at its low price. Recommended retail price is $799 including
sales tax. Dual sensitivity 80MHz
probes are available for $39.95 each,
tax paid.
Our review instrument came from
Altronics, 174 Roe Street, Perth 6000.
Phone 1 800 999 007.
Price reduction on
Fluke graphical DMM
Fluke’s 860 series Graphical Multi
Meters have proved very popular
since their release in 1995. Combining
advanced multimeter capabilities with
waveform display, in-circuit component testing, trend plotting and logic
activity detection in one easy to use
handheld instrument, they represent
good value.
The Fluke 865, the mid-spec model
PO Box 314 Blackwood SA 5051
Ph 0414 323099 Fax 088 270 3175
AWA FM721 FM-TX board $19
Modify them as a 1 watt op
Narrowcast Tx. Lots of good RF
bits on PCB.
AWA FM721 FM-RX board $10
The complementary receiver
for the above Tx. Full circuits
provided for RX or TX. Xtals have
been disabled.
MAX Kit for PCs $169
Talk to the real world from a PC.
7 relays, ADC, DAC 8 TTL inputs
& stepper driver with sample
basic programs.
ETI 1623 kit for PCs $69
24 lines as inputs or outputs DSPTH-PCB and all parts. Easy to
build, low cost.
ETI DIGI-200 Watt Amp Kit $39
200W/2 125W/4 70W/8 from ±33
volt supply. 27,000 built since
1987. Easy to build.
ROLA Digital Audio Software
Call for full information about
our range of digital cart players
& multitrack recorders.
ALL POSTAGE $6.80 Per Order
FREE Steam Boat
For every order over $100
receive FREE a PUTT-PUTT steam
boat kit. Available separately for
$19.95, this is one of the greatest
educational toys ever sold.
in the family of three, is currently
being offered for a limited time at the
reduced price of $749.00 excluding
sales tax. The 865 features a basic
DC accuracy of .04%, selectable display modes, including Meter Mode,
Waveform Display, TrendGraph Mode,
In-Circuit Component and Logic Test
Mode. It is supplied with test leads
and battery eliminator and housed in
a shock-absorbing protective holster.
For more information, contact Obiat
Pty Ltd, 129 Queen St, Beaconsfield,
NSW 2014. Phone (02) 9698 4111; fax
(02) 9699 9170.
Mini-Circuits Designer’s Guide
To encourage
radio amateurs
to build and develop their own
communications
equipment, Mini-Circuits USA
are offering, free
of charge, their
RF/IF Designer’s
Guide. Mini-Circuits manufacture
an extensive range
of mini-modules,
such as RF amplifiers, freq uency
m ix er s, po wer
splitters, filters, detectors, attenuators, etc.
Circuits are available in various case style
packages to suit applications from surface mount
to external equipment mounts. Typical mixer
frequencies range from 10kHz to 4.3GHz, making
them ideal for LF to SHF work.
If you would like a free copy of RF/IF Designer’s
Guide, contact Mini-Circuits’ Australian representatives and stockists, Clarke & Severn Electronics,
PO Box 1, Hornsby, NSW 2077 or call (02) 9482
1944.
PCB POWER
TRANSFORMERS
Programmable
multimeters
Meter International has added
the MIC-3130 to the 3000 series of
programmable multimeters. These
allow the setting of low and high
levels of current, voltage or resistance. When a measurement falls
within the set values, a warning
tone is sounded. This can free an
operator from referring to the display when looking for a particular
measurement.
The Automatic Data Hold allows
the operator to concentrate on
probe placement, updating the display every three seconds on valid
inputs. A “beep” indicates the
reading is locked in. This feature
significantly reduces measurement
difficulty in confined areas and
increases safety when measuring
dangerous voltages.
A special feature of the MIC3130 is the option of connecting K
or J-type thermocouples, with the
display showing either °C or °F.
The MIC-3130 can also measure
capacitance from 1pF to 4µF over
four ranges. A frequency counter
to 4MHz is also included.
The unit comes in a rugged case
with pushbutton range selection.
The display has large 4000 count
1VA to 25VA
Manufactured in Australia
Harbuch Electronics Pty Ltd
9/40 Leighton Pl. HORNSBY 2077
Ph (02) 476-5854 Fx (02) 476-3231
digits with range annunciators.
A bargraph is incorporated into
the large 4000-count display. A
standard feature is the fast display
mode, which updates the display
every 50ms instead of the normal
300ms period.
For further information, contact
Computronics Corporation Ltd, 31
Kensington Street, East Perth, WA
6004. Phone (09) 221 2121; fax (09)
325 6686.
®
Design low frequency loudspeaker enclosures
fast and accurately with BassBox® software.
Uses both Thiele-Small and Electro-Mechanical
parameters with equal ease. Includes X. Over
2.03 passive crossover design program.
$299.00
RS-232 chips meet
ESD requirements
Analog Devices Inc has introduced
a family of +5V, RS-232 transceivers
which meets the European EMC
(Electromagnetic Compa
tibility) requirements. The ADM2xxE product
line is the industry’s first family of
robust, RS-232 and V.28 interface
tran
sceivers which provide ±15kV
of ESD (ElectroStatic Discharge) and
±2kV of EFT (electrical fast transient)
protection.
Designed for modems, printers,
laptop and notebook computers, the
devices offer low EMI (electromagnetic
interference) emissions in accordance
with EN55022 and provide compliance with the IEC-1000-4-x immunity
standards. These standards must be
met for all electrical or electronic
equipment carrying the “CE” (Comm
BassBox
Plus $6.00 postage.
Pay by cheque, Bankcard, Mastercard, Visacard.
EARTHQUAKE AUDIO
PH: (02) 9948 3771 FAX: (02) 9948 8040
PO BOX 226 BALGOWLAH NSW 2093
unaute Europeene) mark sold into the
European market after January 1, 1996.
Operating from a +5V supply,
all five devices come with latch-up
protection and immunity to high RF
(radio frequency) fields to allow for
operation in unshielded enclosures
and electrically-harsh environments.
The product line offers a variety of
driver/receiver combinations and all
devices are available in SOIC, SSOP
and TSSOP packaging
The ADM2xxE family offers a
pin-compatible upgrade for existing,
industry-standard +5V, RS-232 transceivers. Additional features include a
low power consumption of 17mW, a
guaranteed high data transmission rate
of 230 kbits/second, a 1µW shutdown
mode and operation over a temperature range of -40°C to +85°C.
For further information, contact
Hartec, 205A Middleborough Road,
Box Hill, Vic 3128. Phone 1 800 335
SC
623.
November 1996 81
COMPUTERS
Adding An Extra
Parallel Port
Recently, we added a second parallel port to one of
our old PCs and while we were at it, we upgraded the
serial ports with faster UARTs as well. What we did
can be applied to other machines.
By GREG SWAIN
I
N ITS DAY, our old 25MHz 386 computer was a very
impressive machine. Purchased new just six short
years ago, it came with a 120Mb SCSI hard disc drive,
a fancy Radius graphics card and a whole 4Mb of RAM.
Of course, those specifications would be sneered at today
but at the time, it really was the latest and the greatest.
After a couple of years use in a desktop publishing
role, the 386 was relegated to more mundane tasks,
such as wordprocessing, running payroll software and
These are the two cards that we added to our
486. The X-2233 serial card from Dick Smith
Electronics (above) gave us upgraded serial
ports, while the old printer card at right gave
us a second parallel port so that we could
permanently connect two printers.
82 Silicon Chip
maintaining a subscriptions database.
And, earlier in the year, we added
an external fax/modem so that faxes
could be sent directly from the computer.
When it recently conked out, it
didn’t take long to discover why. A
distinctive burn mark in the middle
of one of the main chips on the multi-I/O board told the tale and, as we
subsequently discovered, the mother
board had failed as well. Strangely,
everything else in the machine proved
to be OK, including the RAM, the disc
drives, the Radius video card and the
power supply.
As a result, the old 386’s role was
taken over by a 50MHz 486 machine
that had been sitting unloved in a
corner of the office, itself the victim of
a recent upgrading. This replacement
machine came with a 250Mb hard
disc drive, 8Mb of RAM and Windows
3.11. We swapped its graphics card for
the Radius card from the defunct 386
(so that we could still use the Radius
monitor) and we were up and running.
After that, it was simply a matter of
reinstalling the necessary software and
copying our backup data files onto the
replacement hard disc.
Parallel ports
Having come this far, we decided
to take a closer look at the 486 to see
if it could easily be improved in any
way. The first thing that could be done
was obvious.
For various reasons, we wanted to
permanently connect two printers to
the 486, one a laser printer and the
other a dot matrix machine (don’t
laugh; dot matrix machines are still
good for printing out address labels
and multi-part forms). In the past, with
the old 386, we had simply swapped
printer cables when ever the alternative printer was to be used but that’s
a clumsy way of going about things to
say the least.
Perhaps even more importantly,
there’s now a whole raft of non-printer
devices designed to run from a parallel port. These include such things
as the Snappy video capture system
described last month, as well as a
huge range of mass storage devices
such as Iomega’s Zip and Jazz drives,
external CD ROMs and even scanners.
The problem is, how do you connect
these devices without disconnecting
the printer?
One solution is to use a printer
The existing serial ports were disabled by changing
a couple of jumper settings on the multi-I/O card. We
also reassigned the existing printer port from LPT1 to
LPT2, to avoid a conflict will the “new” printer card.
switcher but the most elegant way is to
add a second parallel port. That way,
both printers (or a printer and some
other peripheral) can be permanently
connected to the computer and the
various applications can be set up to
print to a preferred default printer.
A quick rummage through our
computer junk box soon turned up a
dedicated printer card. Just where it
originally came from is now a mystery
but it proves that if you keep something for long enough, it will eventually come in handy. More to the point,
there was no literature with the card
and in any case, there are no on-board
jumpers to configure.
Assuming that it still worked, it
would give us our required second
printer port. We’ll come back to that
shortly.
Faster serial ports
The other thing that could be done
was to improve the performance of the
serial ports. As with other machines of
its vintage, our 486 used 8250 UARTs
(universal asynchronous receiver
transmitters) in its serial port circuitry
and these are only good for about 9600
Fig.1: to check which type of UARTs your machine has go to the DOS prompt,
type msd to run Microsoft Diagnostics and click on Com Ports (or press C). This
particular machine uses 16550 UARTs but if yours uses the older 8250s, it will
need upgrading to take advantage of the latest fast modems.
November 1996 83
baud. Anything faster and you need
the later 16550 UARTs.
Because our fax/modem is capable
of operating at 14.4Kb in fax mode and
28.8Kb in modem mode, we decided
that an upgrade would be well worthwhile. The answer of course is to add
a new serial card with 16550 UARTs
to the motherboard.
This time, we weren’t so lucky with
our junk box but a quick check in the
Dick Smith Electronics catalog soon
turned up a suitable RS232 serial card
(Cat. X-2233; $39.95). It comes with
two 16550 UARTs, two serial port
connectors (9-pin and 15-pin) and a
manual with all the IRQ (interrupt
request) and address configuration
details.
By the way, you can easily check
which type of UARTs your machine
has. Just go to the DOS prompt, type
msd to run Microsoft Diagnostics and
click on Com Ports (or press C). The
UARTs used in the computer will be
listed at the bottom of the display –see
Fig.1.
Resolving hardw
Installing the hardware
Unfortunately, it’s not just a matter
of plugging in the new cards and
expecting everything to work. If you
do that, the existing parallel and serial ports will conflict with the new
ones. More precisely, you will get
IRQ conflicts and conflicts between
memory addresses which could lead
to problems.
The trick is to reassign one of the
parallel ports from LPT1 to LPT2 and
to disable the existing serial ports.
Before doing that however, we ran
Microsoft Diagnostics (type msd at
the DOS prompt) to check on the IRQs
used by the existing serial ports (COM1
& COM2) and their addresses. This
showed that COM1 and COM2 used
IRQs 4 and 3 respectively, while their
memory addresses were 03F8-03FF
and 02F8-02FF respectively.
These settings are pretty much
standard and a quick check in the
manual soon revealed that these were
also the default settings on our new
serial card. If the latter had been different, it would have been necessary
to reconfigure the jumper settings to
match the existing ports.
For good measure, we also used
Microsoft Diagnostics to check on the
address and IRQ status of the current
parallel port (0378 and 5, respectively). This was mainly a precautionary
84 Silicon Chip
Clicking on Computer and then Properties
brings up the Computer Properties dialog
box below. This lets you view current IRQ
assignments and address allocations, so
that you can easily choose free resources
before adding new hardware.
ware conflicts in Win95
Provided you have all Plug and Play (PnP)
devices, Windows 95 will successfully allocate
resources to avoid device conflicts. The presence
of older (legacy) cards can lead to conflicts
however, which you’ll need to sort out yourself.
To bring up the System
Properties dialog
box, go to the Control
Panel and double-click
the System icon. The
system properties
dialog box will
immediately indicate
any resource conflicts.
To view the resources
assigned to a particular
item, select it in the
System Properties
dialog box, click the
Properties button
and then click the
Resources tab.
Any device conflicts
are indicated in this
panel. To change
resource settings,
deselect Use automatic
settings, select the
Resource type to be
changed (eg, Interrupt
Request) and click the
Change Setting button.
November 1996 85
The two additional cards were inserted into vacant slots above the multi-I/O
card. It’s a good idea to remove the connectors for the old COM ports if possible
to avoid confusion. If they can’t be removed, label them clearly with a sticker.
measure, in case we had to change
things later on.
Next, we pulled the power plug,
removed the back from the PC and
pulled the multi-I/O card. In addition to providing one parallel and
two serial ports, this particular card
also provides two IDE hard disc drive
controllers plus two floppy disc drive
controllers.
Because there was no way of config
uring the old printer card, the obvious
thing to do was to make it LPT1 and
reassign the port on the multi-I/O
card from LPT1 to LPT2. This simply
involved changing one of the jumpers
on the card. At the same time, we
changed the positions of two other
jumpers to disable the serial ports (it
really pays to keep the manuals that
come with computers).
And that’s really all there was to it.
We replaced the I/O card, plugged in
the additional serial and printer cards,
reconnected everything and found that
it all worked. Of course, you have to
remember to plug the mouse into one
of the new COM ports, since the old
COM ports no longer function. In fact,
it’s a good idea to remove the old COM
port connectors if possible to avoid
confusion, or at least label them with
a disabled sticker.
If you strike trouble, it’s probably
due to a resources conflict. To resolve
86 Silicon Chip
the problem, check the IRQ settings
and the memory addresses carefully
and try again. If your printer ports
don’t work, for example, try changing
the address on one of the cards to the
alternative setting.
Variations on a theme
All the foregoing is just one variation on a number of possible configurations although the basics still apply in
each case. For example, a single multi-I/O card could be used to provide
both the additional printer port and
the new serial ports – just remember
to disable the functions that aren’t
required on both the new card and the
existing card. As a matter of interest,
Dick Smith Electronics sell a multiI/O card with four serial ports and
three parallel ports (Cat. X-2573) for
$129 or you can buy a 2-port parallel
printer card (Cat. X-2548) for $49.95.
On late-model 486s (and Pentiums),
the I/O functions are integrated onto
the motherboard but these invariably
use 16550 UARTs anyway so you
won’t have to upgrade the serial ports.
If you do need to disable ports or
change address settings, this can be
done via the system BIOS. This should
only rarely be necessary if adding another printer port, however – in most
cases, you will be able to configure the
add-in card to avoid conflicts.
What about Windows 95? In this
case, Windows probably won’t notice
the new hardware when it boots and
you’ll have to run the Add New Hardware routine from the Control Panel.
You can then elect to have Win95 automatically detect the new hardware or,
if you are like me and are too impatient
to wait through several minutes of hard
disc rattling, you can manually select
the hardware to be added.
In the latter case, just say No to the
auto-detect routine, then select Ports
(COM & LPT) in the next dialog box
and finally Communications Port or
Printer Port as appropriate. Windows
95 will then assign resources to the
new hardware. If these resources conflict with those used by another device,
you can change them manually later
on – see panel.
At least, that’s the theory. We haven’t tried adding an additional printer
port on a system running Win95 but
the above procedure is routine.
Finally, if you have a computer
that’s already crammed with multiple
disc drives, a network card, a sound
card, a SCSI card and any other devices, check your system resources
carefully before trying to add more
hardware. There are only 16 IRQs
available to begin with and over half
of these are taken up by essen
tial
items before anything extra is added.
Once all the IRQs are gone, that’s it –
you can’t add new hardware unless
you’re willing to sacrifice something
SC
else.
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November 1996 87
VINTAGE RADIO
By JOHN HILL
A pair of Astor valve radios
Occasionally, I get to repair vintage radios
for other people and that’s what this month’s
column is all about. It concerns a couple of
interesting old Astors.
Noel, a new collector of my acquaintance, phoned me recently with
a problem. He had found a couple of
receivers in a local antique shop and
wanted my advice before buying them.
As both were priced at $75, I conjured
up a mental picture of a couple of
cracked Little Nippers with missing
knobs or something equally undesirable. $75 doesn’t buy much from an
antique dealer!
To my surprise, the radios were by
no means cracked Little Nippers but a
genuine 1940 Astor “Mickey Mouse”
and an early post war Baby Astor. The
latter is known to collectors as an Astor Football. Both are very collectible
items!
My first thought was one of annoyance that I had missed out on
two good radios, neither of which
was in my collection. But, on second
thoughts, I considered it better for
Noel to have them because I would
A 1940 BP model Astor “Mickey Mouse”. Although a very collectible item, it is
a fairly awkward receiver to work on and has no really outstanding features
apart from being very compact. No, the knobs are not the originals!
88 Silicon Chip
still get the job of repairing them and,
with a bit of luck, a Vintage Radio
story as well. That would keep us
both happy.
After a bit of bartering, the Baby
Astor was dropped to $50 and I took
both receivers home to see if Noel had
bought himself a good deal.
Fixing Mickey
The “Mickey Mouse” was the first
to be repaired. It was quite dead and
gave no response whatsoever, although
the valves lit up, which always gives
a little hope.
A closer inspection revealed that
the output transformer was open circuit and that someone had previously
disconnected the electrodynamic
loudspeaker and then mixed up the
leads when reconnecting it. The original 6Q7 detector/first audio valve had
also been replaced with a 6SQ7 which
is just about the same valve except that
it is a single-ended type and lacks a
top cap connection.
Unfortunately, those characteristic
“Mickey Mouse” control knobs were
missing. Apart from that, the rest of
the set looked fairly original.
Now while these so-called collectible radios are eagerly sought after,
those who repair them often see them
in a different light. This particular
“Mickey” is not what one would de
scribe as easily worked on and it has
a few undesirable features.
In its original form, the bulk of paper capacitors underneath the chassis
makes it impossible to gain access to
the valve sockets, to check voltages,
etc. This situation improves greatly
once the old capacitors have been
replaced with smaller, modern types.
Removal of the loudspeaker requires
the dial, dial cord and the dial light to
be either removed or disconnected, as
If it wasn’t for the “Mickey Mouse”
aspect of these radios they would be
just another old radio. Astor used the
Disney name without permission and
later dropped the “Mouse” bit. The
Astor “Mickey” was a very popular
post-war receiver.
is appropriate. And finally, fitting a
new speaker grille cloth is fairly tricky
due to the fact that the dial is in the
centre of the speaker opening.
All things considered, the Astor
“Mickey Mouse” is not the most convenient valve receiver to work on –especially when doing a full restoration,
as there are so many things that need
attention.
Apart from being a very small radio
(hence the name, “Mickey Mouse”)
there is nothing really outstanding
about this particular model at all.
The court wrangle with Disney over
the unauthorised use of the name is
what makes the set collectible. As far
as the receiver is concerned – it’s only
average!
After doing everything that needed
doing, it was tryout time. The set burst
into life and there was that feeling of
relief knowing that all the checking,
replacing, and repairing had finally
produced a positive result. But that
feeling of relief was short-lived because, 30 seconds later, the sound had
faded to nothing.
So many restorations have some
strange little quirk to them that hasn’t
been encountered before. In this case,
none of the parts overheated and there
were no crackles or hum. In fact, there
was nothing obvious at all – just a
volume fade off to nothing.
Although the valves tested OK, I
have learnt not to rely completely
on any valve simply on the basis of
This close-up shows the dial and speaker opening. Having the dial in the centre
of the loudspeaker makes a new grille cloth rather difficult to fit. Note the hole
in the dial (at 12 o’clock) where the dial lamp has “burnt” through the celluloid.
The Astor “Mickey” required several component replacements before it worked
satisfactorily. Some of the old resistors had tripled in value.
an emission test. This test does not
check a valve for all working functions
and other faults can be overlooked.
A replacement 6A8 sorted out this
particular problem but it took a while
to locate.
(Never overlook the limitations of
an emission tester. It does just that;
it tests a valve’s emission – nothing
more. Since the emission eventually
fails in any valve, it is a most logical
test to make. But that’s to say that this
is the only manner in which a valve
can fail; there are a whole range of
possibilities other than that of emission failure. Ed.)
Noel was pleased that the tattered
grille cloth was replaced with a piece
of original material obtained from
an old console cabinet. There were a
couple of good corners in this piece of
cloth and having the right fabric in a
collectible receiver such as a “Mickey
Mouse” really sets it apart.
From a performance point of view,
the 5-valve “Mickey Mouse” was only
average and any of Astor’s post-war
5-valve receivers would outperform
it by a fair margin.
One man & a baby
The second set, the model GR Baby
Astor was next and as this little receiver was in “working order” the job was
November 1996 89
ing the grid bias on the variable Mu
control grid of the 6G8G. So the 6G8G
performs quite a few functions.
Despite the clever circuit, the Baby
Astor needs a good aerial if it is to
give any worthwhile performance.
Even then it is basically a local station receiver and if a station is too
close it can give rise to a fair amount
of interference. The little Astor is not
very selective.
Parts replacement
The 1948 GR model Baby Astor was known to collectors as the Astor “Football”.
It is a 3-valve reflexed TRF receiver of fairly limited performance.
started knowing that it should be fairly
straightforward. Even so, the Astor
required quite a few hours of work to
complete the restoration.
On removing the chassis from the
cabinet it was surprising to see that it
was not a superhet but a simple 3-valve
TRF (tuned radio frequency) receiver.
The valves used are: 6G8G, 6V6GT and
a 5Y3 rectifier.
There is some trick circuitry in-
volved in the little Astor, which is a
reflexed TRF receiver. In a reflexed
receiver, one particular valve performs
a dual function, being used to amplify both radio frequency and audio
frequency signals simultaneously. In
the case of the Baby Astor, the 6G8G
valve does these two operations and
it detects the signal as well, using one
of its twin diodes.
The volume is controlled by vary-
This photo shows the rear view of Baby Astor chassis. The three valves are:
6G8G, 6V6GT and 5Y3 rectifier.
90 Silicon Chip
Replacements were confined to the
usual components, mainly paper and
electrolytic capacitors
One thing that could not be replaced
was the strong odour of mouse urine
which was nearly overpowering when
ever any soldering was being done.
There are few things worse to work on
than a well-saturated chassis. It really
turns my stomach!
There is a small bracket at the front
of the chassis near the bottom of the
loudspeaker. Mouse activity had been
intense in this area and the bracket has
obviously been a popular spot for the
relieving of bladders. Unfortunately,
the overflow had seeped down onto
the edge of the speaker cone and had
rotted out some of the cone.
The speaker was repaired using
Silastic silicone rubber compound. In
fact, the whole outer rim of the cone
was reinforced as the edge had become
very thin and fragile.
These speaker repairs proved entirely satisfactory and the receiver
could not have sounded better had a
new speaker been fitted. It is amazing
the cone reconstructions that can be
done with a bit of perseverance. The
silicon rubber treatment may not look
very dainty but it is usually effective
and long lasting.
The reason for all the previously
mentioned mouse infestation was the
fact that the speaker grille cloth and,
presumably, the cardboard baffle to
which it was attached, was missing.
This gave front door entry to any
rodent wanting to call the little Astor
home.
A replacement grille cloth baffle
was made from cardboard and, once
again, covered with another corner of
the tattered console grille cloth so as
to look as though it was the original
fabric.
One big advantage of using old
speaker grille fabrics is that such a replacement doesn’t look too new and is
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cracking the dial at the stud holes.
As luck would have it, I had a broken cabinet with the dial and studs
intact. Transferring these components
to the good cabinet did much to improve the general appearance of the
receiver.
"Silastic” silicone rubber was used to reinforce the outer rim of the speaker
cone. It mightn’t look too neat but it certainly makes an effective and longlasting repair. The dial cord was difficult to re-string.
more in keeping with the odd scratch
or chip in the cabinet. A restoration
that incorporates a good secondhand
grille cloth has a very genuine appearance to it.
Dial problems
The dial cord nearly always needs
attention and this particular one was a
bit tedious to string. It is one of those
with a hole through the tuner control
shaft and as the cord unreels on one
side of the hole, it winds up on the
other. The right number of turns needs
to be on the shaft and it must also be
wound in the right direction before
success is possible.
Of course, the best thing to do with
tricky dial cords is to sketch the layout before unstringing the cord. But
when the cord has broken or, worse
still, is missing, one has to start from
scratch and work it out the hard way.
There are some incredibly difficult
dial cord setups in old receivers, with
some taking several metres of cord to
make the long journey around all the
pulleys, etc.
The dial was also a problem on the
little Astor Football. Originally the
acrylic dial strip was attached to the
cabinet by a couple of split studs that
just “thumb-push” into the cabinet.
These had fallen out and had been
replaced with countersunk screws
which had been over-tightened, thus
Alignment
There is not much to align when
tuning up a Baby Astor. You just
adjust two trimmers on the tuning
capacitor and that’s it! The performance is reasonable when the set
is connected to a good antenna and
sound quality is excellent for such
a small receiver. But without an antenna it is a dismal thing, to say the
least, although it would work OK in
a capital city situation with an indoor
aerial –and that’s what it was originally designed to do.
Radio receivers such as the “Mickey
Mouse” and the Astor “Baby” are very
collectible items today and Noel has
done well to pick up these radios.
Although Noel has only four valve
receivers at this stage, he is putting
together an interesting collection and
SC
is off to a good start.
November 1996 91
ASK SILICON CHIP
Got a technical problem? Can’t understand a piece of jargon or some technical principle? Drop us a line
and we’ll answer your question. Write to: Ask Silicon Chip, PO Box 139, Collaroy Beach, NSW 2097.
Efficiency gain
seems magical
I was curious to read the article on
the High Quality PA Loudspeakers in
the September 1996 issue. In there
you state that having the four speakers
in a series/parallel connection could
increase the system efficiency by 6dB
(an increase of 3dB for every doubling
of the number of speakers?).
While I agree that the system overall
maximum volume is increased by 6dB,
how could efficiency increase by 6dB?
Does this mean that if I had 4,000,000
of the drivers in a series/parallel
arrangement I would have a sound
pressure level of 153dB/1W/1m? (P.
K., Buranda, Qld).
• In mathematical terms and using
Thiele/Small parameters, efficiency
is related to the loudspeaker free air
resonance cubed (fs)3 multiplied by
Vas and all divided by Qes. With two
loudspeakers connected in series, fs
and Qes remains the same while Vas
is doubled. Thus, the efficiency is
doubled.
However, the impedance is also
doubled and the current is halved, so
the sound pressure level is the same
Stereo simulator
can’t be varied
I have been having problems
with the Stereo Simulator from
your June 1996 issue. Also, a friend
who has built this unit has had the
same problem.
On both units, the setting of the
DIP switches makes no difference
to the stereo effect. The notches in
the left and right channels stay at
150Hz and are not affected by the
DIP switch settings. I believe the
fault is in the oscillator chip IC3.
I have changed IC3, IC4, IC5 and
IC6. (L. E., Deacon, Qld).
• We are not exactly sure what
you mean by “the notches in the
left and right channels stay at
92 Silicon Chip
as for a single driver. In other words,
while we are obtaining the same sound
pressure level compared to a single
driver we are only providing half the
power. This is equivalent to a 3dB
improvement.
When another series pair of speakers is connected in parallel with the
first series pair, the total impedance is
now the same as a single driver. For
a 2.83V supply, the power delivered
to the four speakers is the same as for
a single unit but the sound pressure
level rises by 6dB.
This is only true for a small number
of drivers when the total radiation
mass (air moved) is much less than
the total mass of the loudspeaker
cone and coil system. As the number
of drivers is increased, the efficiency
gains are reduced. The law of dimin
ishing returns applies here just as
everywhere else.
Using multiple
train detectors
I was interested in the notes on
the train detector pub
lished in the
September 1995 issue. In anticipation
of building my railway, I have made
150Hz”. Possibly you mean that
the right channel has a notch at
150Hz while the left channel passes this frequency with the delay
being 3ms.
The problem with not being
able to adjust the stereo effect is
possibly with IC5 and the delivery
of codes to IC2. Check that the E,
F and G inputs at pins 3, 4 and
5 change from +5V to 0V when
switches DIP1, DIP2 and DIP3 are
switched from open to closed.
If this functions correctly, try
changing the .012µF capacitor at
pin 6 of IC2 to .047µF. This will
extend the delay for the DATA signal to give time for the clock signal
(SCK) to trig
ger on the previous
DATA signal before it changes.
up four detector modules and have
connected them to my signal lights
circuits which, while on the bench,
work perfectly.
I then made up a track to test the
modules under actual working conditions but came to a sudden stop! I
had not realised that by having a circle
of track split up into four sectors and
using only one controller for the computer circuits, all the train detectors
will be interconnected by the fact of
connecting to the common rail and the
train controller.
I would like to connect the track as
in Fig.1 on page 62 of the September
1995 issue and still allow for reversing.
Would this method of wiring cause
some reaction between each detector
board and, if so, how can I solve the
problem?
Each signal board on my circuit
controls one section of isolated track.
Each signal board is connected to their
respective lights and isolated track.
My train controller is from the April/
May 1988 issues of SILICON CHIP. (R.
H., Bowral, NSW)
• As you have stated, with a circle of
track split into four sections and using
only one controller, all the train detectors will effectively be interconnected
by virtue of the common rail. However,
each section of track is only fed via the
diodes in its respective train detector
board. The system you are proposing
will work quite happily for forward
and reverse operation.
Power supply
confusion
I am writing in reference to the
circuit for the 100Hz Tone Burst
Generator published in the “Circuit
Notebook” pages of the August edition
of SILICON CHIP. After reading the article I was a little bewildered by the
description for the power supply. The
article states: “Power is derived from
a 15V transformer. D1-D4 rectify the
AC, while a 7815 regulator provides
the circuit with a 15V supply”.
This doesn’t seem to work, for the
following reason: 15V is being supplied to the rectifier circuit D1-D4.
Assuming a 600mV drop for each
diode, that would leave 13.8V peak,
less if you take the filtered voltage,
available to the input of the regulator.
The 7815 regulators have a dropout
voltage of 2V and a minimum input
voltage to maintain line regulation of
17.7V (National Semiconductor Voltage Regulator Handbook). What it boils
down to is you can’t get something for
nothing. 13.8V in (or less) and 15V
out? Am I missing something or what?
(C. B., Sale, Vic).
• The circuit description of the power
supply is correct. The 15V transformer
delivers a sine wave which will have a
peak-to-peak voltage of 42.4V or 21.2V
peak. After allowing for the voltage
drop in the diodes, this will produce
a filtered DC voltage of about +20V.
This is then regulated by the 7815 to
produce 15V DC.
Making safe
scope connections
I have a technical question. Picture
the diagram of a TV or computer power
supply. The mains is rectified and fed
to a switchmode supply. All components here are “hot” and a scope probe
cannot be grounded (to the non-isolated ground) in this section to carry out
measurements.
After the switching transformer,
isolation has been achieved and it is
safe to connect a scope and ground the
probe (to the isolated ground). If I now
connect the TV (or computer) power
supply via a mains isolation transformer, is the “hot” section now safe
to ground probes and hence carry out
measurements? I believe this assumption to be correct but have not had the
courage to try it. (I. B., Yallambie, Vic).
• As you have surmised, the only safe
way to connect a scope to the hot side
of the power supply is to use an isolating transformer. This should have
a rating much larger than that of the
set. Typically, for the power to work
properly, the isolating transformer
should have a rating of 500VA or more.
Battery charger
voltage shortfall
I have built your 10A Battery Charg
er as described in the June 1996 issue
and have encountered lesser voltages
than those in your circuit. It was
Unstable amplifier
draws lots of current
What causes a Mosfet audio
power amplifier to become unstable
when driving a very low impedance
load, say one or two ohms? My
suspicion is that the power supply
is being dragged down, unable to
supply enough current. If this is the
case, would upgrading the power
supply enable operation into low
impedances?
With reference to the amplifier
featured in the April 1996 issue, is it
possible to increase the power output capability to around 400W/4Ω
by simply adding more output
devices and providing a suitable
power supply? Or would it require
major changes to the preamp/driver
stages?
I have seen commercial units
capable of this sort of power output, with something like 14 output
devices (Mosfets in this case) per
channel but they are expensive and
I am sure the cost to build a similar
mainly when I tried 24V capability
that I considered the voltage not high
enough and looked further.
I cannot achieve a final output voltage of 14.4V (on 12V range) or 28.8V
(on 24V range) on the battery terminals
even though the charger goes into
trickle charge mode. I noticed in the
article that the voltage to pin 2 of IC2
should be 1V, 2V & 4V respectively,
for 6V, 12V & 24V batteries.
I have tried to troubleshoot the
circuit by removing the positive connection of BR1, removing IC2 and
connecting a variable power supply
to the battery connections to simulate
the battery voltages but I cannot find
a reason for the lesser voltage on pin
2 of IC2.
In this part of the circuit, the voltage
I am obtaining is +14.96V on pin 4 of
IC1, +13.6V on pins 7, 1 & 8, when
they are on, then +0.96V, +1.92V &
+3.63V respectively on the voltage
divider leg to pin 2 of IC2. Equating
this to the voltage divider circuit to
pin 1 of IC2 gives outputs of +6.86V,
+13.7V & +26V.
I have tried replacing IC1 and disconnecting the base connections to Q5,
Q6 & Q7. I also rechecked the resistors,
PA stage would be much less, given
that there didn’t seem to be much
difference in the rest of the circuitry.
Do you have any plans to publish
a high power design of this nature?
(S. W., Hamilton, NZ).
• While it is possible that running a low impedance load on
an amplifier could load its power
supply and thereby cause low-frequency motorboating it is more
likely that your Mosfet amplifier
is oscillating at an extremely high
frequency, possibly at 100MHz or
more, and this could happen under
certain load conditions. Unless you
check this out with a wide bandwidth scope, there is little way of
knowing.
It is possible to upgrade the
175W plastic power amplifier to
400W but we have not done any
work along these lines. You would
need to run eight power transistors
in the output and use supply rails
of around ±75V.
We published a 350W Mosfet
design in the August 1996 issue.
Q1 and associated D1 and D7 but I
cannot get the voltage correct. (G. H.,
Panania, NSW).
• The 330Ω resistor connected to
the 4.7kΩ resistor and thence to pin
2 of IC2 can be increased to give the
required output voltage. We suggest
changing the 330Ω resistor to 390Ω or
substituting a 500Ω trimpot instead.
Washing machine
causes EMI
I own a Fisher & Paykel washing
machine that produces interference
to the TV/radio and my 27MHz 2-way.
The interference is to the extent that
the 2-way cannot be used, the radio
becomes so noisy that the program
cannot be heard and the TV screen
is covered in broken lines diagonally
across the screen.
I contacted Fisher & Paykel and
they said it complies with the Australian Standards and the interference
is due to the computer-controlled
DC motor and associated systems. I
contacted the Spectrum Management
Agency who said physical screening,
like mesh or aluminium foil, around
the computer inside could solve the
November 1996 93
Getting more
bass boost
I have recently completed the
50W Stereo Amplifier and preamp,
and it works very well. Having
stated it works very well, I would
like greater or more bass boost.
What components should I change
to increase bass response? Also, if
I wished to tape record, say, “phono”, it would seem that “phone” to
“tape out” bypass the preamp and
amplifier. Can you help please? (M.
D., Beechboro, WA).
• You can increase the available
bass boost and cut at very low
frequencies by reducing the 22kΩ
resistors at each end of the bass
pot (VR2) to 10kΩ. However, doing
this is also likely to increase the
possibility of amplifier overload on
problem but this could then make the
warranty void.
Even when the washing machine
is switched off at the machine, there
is still interference but not so severe,
so the machine has to be switched off
also at the power point. I have contacted other people via my CB radio
that have the same problem so it is
generalised and I was disappointed
with the reply from Fisher & Paykel
who made it sound as if mine was an
isolated case.
I thought that because it was a problem affecting the public in general you
might be able to suggest some form
of suppression that could be added
externally to stop or at least reduce
the interference. The suggestion by the
SMA that none of the affected items
be used when the washing machine is
being used is unacceptable in 1996. (J.
C., Waroona, WA).
• We agree that the interference does
seem rather severe. At this stage we
can only suggest that you invest in a
good line filter; it will need to have a
rating of at least 10 amps and should
be capable of coping with any surge
current from the motor.
Single channel operation
for VHF receiver
I am a fanatical reader of your magazine which I am getting from a relative
of mine in Australia. As a student of
94 Silicon Chip
bass-heavy program material.
A better approach, which will
increase the apparent bass boost
and cut, is to reduce the .01µF
capacitor shunting VR2. This will
raise the turnover frequency of
the bass control so that it has a
more audible effect at higher bass
frequencies. Try a capacitor value
of .0068µF.
We should point out that raising
the bass turnover frequency in this
way will increase the interaction
between the bass and treble controls.
In virtually all amplifiers, when
the tape monitor function is used,
the amplifier circuitry is effectively
out of the picture. The only exception is if you are taping a record
and then the RIAA preamplifier is
in circuit.
electronics, I am very interested in RF
communications devices and I found
an article from your magazine, the
VHF Monitor Receiver from the March
1989 issue. I would be very obliged to
you if you can send me any schematics
to modify it in order to operate it as a
single channel receiver. (L. P., Athens,
Greece).
• There is no need to make any
modification to the circuit to operate
it as a single channel. Just use a multi-turn trimpot to tune it to the wanted
channel.
Message recorder
variations
I bought the 16-Second Solid State
Message Recorder at the time it was
published in October 1993. Then, in
October 1994, the Talking Headlight
Reminder circuit was published. I
kept the two magazines inside each
other, with the idea of using the message recorder for the headlights at a
later date.
Now that I have examined the two,
I notice that the updated ISD1416 has
a record pin (27) and a playback pin
(23). In the Message Recorder circuit,
pin 27 gets connected to the positive
rail to play back and to the negative
rail to record.
Could I still use the 555 of the later
circuit to turn on a PNP transistor
between pin 27 and the positive rail
to make the older chip work for the
headlights? Do you have any ideas
about this please? (D. S., Caloundra,
Qld).
• The Solid State Message Recorder
was published in July 1993, while a
version from Dick Smith Electronics
was published in the October 1993
issue. We are not sure which you are
referring to. However, for the October
1993 version we recommend connecting the pin 27 input of the recorder
to play back as selected by S1. The
cathode (K) of LED1 should go to
ground and the Vccd pin (pin 28) to a
switched positive supply. This could
be obtained directly from the pin 3
output of 555 timer IC1 for the Talking
Headlight Reminder.
If you are using the July 1993 recorder, the pin 3 output of the 555 can
connect directly to the S1 play switch.
TV pattern generator
output is distorted
I have a problem with the Colour
TV Pattern Generator which I have
put together in the correct format. The
seven separate patterns, except the dot
pattern, appear on the television but
there is a lot of distortion on the screen
and, therefore, the patterns don’t show
up as being clear. I get a lot of vertical
distorted lines with zig zags and it’s
off frequency. Could you please advise
me as to where the problem might be?
(M. S., Chiswick, NSW).
• From your description of the symptoms it appears likely that the circuit
is affected by hum breakthrough from
the power supply. The most common
cause of this is the failure to use a plugpack transformer of adequate rating. It
needs to be rated at 500mA or more.
A 300mA unit is inadequate.
Notes & Errata
175W Power Amplifier, April 1996:
to further increase the safety margin
in the event of amplifier failure, we
suggest that the fuses be changed to 3A
instead of 5A when 8Ω loudspeakers
are used.
Photographic Timer, April 1995: the
bridge rectifier specified as “WO4”
does not have the same pinout as
the DIP rectifier depicted on the PC
overlay on page 27. If a WO4 type is
used, two of the leads will have to
be swapped and sleeved so it can be
SC
installed in the PC board.
MARKET CENTRE
Cash in your surplus gear. Advertise it here in Silicon Chip.
FOR SALE
SATELLITE DISHES: international
reception of Intelsat, Panamsat, Gori
zont,Rimsat. Warehouse Sale – 4.6m
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All accessories available. Videosat, 2/28
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3100 8.30-5.00 M-F.
NEW MAGNETIC CARD READER-LOCK KIT: holds 8 cards (SC Jan
96 issue) $65.00. Tested + erased chips:
27C256 (200ns $1.20 ea; 150ns $1.50
ea). 68705P3 single chip micro $4.00 ea.
Track two magnetic card readers $10.00
ea (NEW). Chips min qty 10 of $7.50
P+P. Michael (03) 9803 3535.
PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD ASSEMBLY: small to medium quantities, professionally assembled. Also, instrument
case wiring and minor electronic repairs.
At prices you can afford. Phone Joe on
(02) 9826 0958.
LARGE 7 SEGMENT DISPLAY: super
bright red 660nm. 120mm x 90mm. Digit
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SOUTHERN CROSS II: 8031 single
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Ozitronics (03) 9434 3806. Email:
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BOOKS: technical, all very good
condition. RCA Tube Manual $3.00.
RCA Transmitting Tubes $3.00. Radio
Amateur’s Handbook 1941, 62, 78 $15
each. Radiotron Designer’s Handbook,
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Phone (02) 587 3491
November 1996 95
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Advertising Index
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Av-Comm.....................................75
B & M Electronics........................58
Dick Smith Electronics........... 12-15
Earthquake Audio........................81
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Send $2 stamp for catalog and price
list to: DIY Electronics, 22 McGregor
St, Numurkah, Vic. 3636. Ph/fax (058)
62 1915. Or Email laurie.c<at>cnl.com.
au and let us send details. Go WWW:http://www.cnl.com.au/~laurie.c or
BBS (058) 62 3303. Download details
free anytime.
WE APLOGOGISE. By the time you
read this the MicroZed Web page should
be ready: http://www.microzed.com.au
96 Silicon Chip
SIMMS
(Parity/No Parity)
4Mb 30 PIN-70
$52
$54
4Mb 72 PIN-70
$56
$36
8Mb 72 PIN-70
$103
$64
16Mb 72 PIN-70 $198 $159
32Mb 72 PIN-70 $359 $324
EDO SIMMS
8Mb (1Mbx32) – 60ns $67
16Mb (2Mbx32) – 60ns $161
32Mb (4Mbx32) – 60ns $324
MAC MEMORY
8Mb P’BOOK 190 $147
8Mb DOCK DUO $249
16Mb P’BOOK $257
LASER PRINTER MEMORY
2Mb UPGRADE
$150
COMPAQ
8Mb CONTURA AERO
$147
All other models available $Call
TOSHIBA
8Mb Portege/ Sat EDO
$135
16Mb Portege/ Sat EDO
$235
16Mb Tecra 500/610 Sat $298
All other models available $Call
CACHE
256K PIPELINE BURST
$25
256K 7200/8500
$93
VIDEO MEMORY
256K x 16 70ns (SOJ)
$17
1Mb 7200/7500/9500
$83
SO DIMMS
8Mb/16Mb
$93/202
Ex Tax Pricing – Delivery $8. Pricing as at 27/9/96. Phone for latest.
Sales Tax 22%.
Credit Cards Welcome. We Also Buy And Trade-In Memory.
PELHAM
Memory Pty Ltd
Suite 6, 2 Hillcrest Rd,
Ph: (02) 9980 6988
Pennant Hills, 2120.
Fax: (02) 9980 6991
Email: pelham1<at>ozemail.com.au
EDA Solutions.............................19
Harbuch Electronics....................81
Instant PCBs................................96
Jaycar ................................... 45-52
Kits-R-US.....................................80
Macservice....................................3
MicroZed Computers...................96
Oatley Electronics..........................7
RAIN BRAIN 8-STATION SPRINKLER
KIT: Z8 smart temp sensor, LED display,
RS232 to PC. Uses 1 to 8 DALLAS
DS1820. Call Mantis Micro Products,
38 Garnet Street, Niddrie, 3042. P/F/A
(03) 9337 1917.
mantismp<at>c031.aone.net.au
HOMEMADE GENERATORS: how to
instructions. Eight pages free text and
colour photos on the Internet at http:/
www.onekw.co.nz/
DATAMAN EPROM PROGRAMMERS:
S4 World’s leading handheld programmer/emulator, on-screen editor, over
1500 device types including EPROMS/
EEPROM/Flash up to 8Mbits. Dataman-48 up to 48-pin DIL. DOS/Win
software, free updates. Call or email
for details. DIGITAL GRAPHICS P/L,
PO Box 281, North Ryde 2113. (02)
9888 3105.
dgriffo<at>ozemail.com.au
http://www.ozemail.com.au/~dgriffo
WANTED
WANTED: any book on Tesla coil construction. Phone (069) 52 6396 to quote
price and where to send money order.
Pelham........................................96
RCS Radio ..................................95
Resurrection Radio......................91
Rod Irving Electronics .......... 33-37
Silicon Chip Bookshop...............IBC
Silicon Chip Back Issues....... 28-29
Silicon Chip Wallchart..............OBC
Zoom Magazine.........................IFC
_________________________________
PC Boards
Printed circuit boards for SILICON
CHIP projects are made by:
• RCS Radio Pty Ltd, 651 Forest
Rd, Bexley, NSW 2207. Phone (02)
587 3491.
• Marday Services, PO Box 19-189,
Avondale, Auckland, NZ. Phone (09)
828 5730.
electronic design, and applications.
The sixth edition has been expanded
to include chapters on surface mount
technology, hardware & software
design, semicustom electronics &
data communications. 63 chapters,
in hard cover at $120.00.
Silicon Chip Bookshop
Radio Frequency
Transistors
Newnes Guide
to Satellite TV
Installation, Reception & Repair.
By Derek J. Stephenson. First
published 1991, reprinted 1994
(3rd edition).
This is a practical guide on the
installation and servicing of
satellite television equipment. The
coverage of the subject is extensive, without excessive theory or
mathematics. 371 pages, in hard
cover at $55.95.
Guide to TV & Video
Technology
By Eugene Trundle. First publish-
ed 1988. Second edition 1996.
Eugene Trundle has written for
many years in Television magazine
and his latest book is right up date
on TV and video technology. 382
pages, in paperback, at $39.95.
Servicing Personal
Computers
By Michael Tooley. First published 1985. 4th edition 1994.
Computers are prone to failure
from a number of common causes
& some that are not so common.
This book sets out the principles
& practice of computer servicing
(including disc drives, printers &
monitors), describes some of the
latest software diagnostic routines
& includes program listings. 387
pages in hard cover at $59.95.
format and R-DAT. If you want to
understand digital audio, you need
this reference book. 305 pages, in
paperback at $55.95.
The Art of Linear
Electronics
By John Linsley Hood. Published
1993.
This is a practical handbook from
one of the world’s most prolific
audio designers, with many of his
designs having been published in
English technical magazines over
the years. A great many practical
circuits are featured – a must for
anyone interested in audio design.
336 pages, in paperback at $49.95.
Components, Circuits & Applica
tions, by F. F. Mazda. Published
1990.
Previously a neglected field, power
electronics has come into its own,
particularly in the areas of traction
and electric vehicles. F. F. Mazda
is an acknowledged authority on
the subject and he writes mainly
on the many uses of thyristors &
Triacs in single and three phase
circuits. 417 pages, in soft cover
at $59.95.
Digital Audio & Compact
Disc Technology
Electronics Engineer’s
Reference Book
Hard cove
Produced by the Sony Service
Centre (Europe). 3rd edition,
published 1995.
Prepared by Sony’s technical
staff, this is the best book on
compact disc technology that we
have ever come across. It covers
digital audio in depth, including
PCM adapters, the Video8 PCM
Power Electronics
Handbook
Your Name__________________________________________________
PLEASE PRINT
Address____________________________________________________
_____________________________________Postcode_____________
Daytime Phone No.______________________Total Price $A _________
❏ Cheque/Money Order
r
Edited by F. F. Mazda. version now
available
First published 1989.
6th edition.
This just has to be the best refer
ence book available for electronics
engineers. Provides expert coverage
of all aspects of electronics in five
parts: techniques, physical phenomena, material & components,
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Signature_________________________ Card expiry date_____/______
Return to: Silicon Chip Publications, PO Box 139, Collaroy NSW, Australia 2097.
Or call (02) 9979 5644 & quote your credit card details; or fax to (02) 9979 6503.
Principles & Practical Applications. By Norm Dye & Helge
Granberg. Published 1993.
This book strips away the mysteries of RF circuit design. Written
by two Motorola engineers, it
looks at RF transistor fundamentals before moving on to specific
design examples; eg, amplifiers,
oscillators and pulsed power systems. Also included are chapters
on filtering, impedance matching
& CAD. 235 pages, in hard cover
at $85.00.
Surface Mount Technology
By Rudolph Strauss. First pub
lished 1994.
This book will provide informative
reading for anyone considering
the assembly of PC boards with
surface mounted devices. Includes
chapters on wave soldering, reflow
soldering, component placement,
cleaning & quality control. 361
pages, in hard cover at $99.00.
Audio Electronics
By John Linsley Hood. Published
1995.
This book is for anyone involved
in designing, adapting and using
analog and digital audio equipment. Covers tape recording,
tuners & radio receivers, preamplifiers, voltage amplifiers, power
amplifiers, the compact disc &
digital audio, test & measurement,
loudspeaker crossover systems
and power supplies. 351 pages, in
soft cover at $52.95.
Title
Newnes Guide to Satellite TV
Guide to TV & Video Technology
Servicing Personal Computers
The Art Of Linear Electronics
Digital Audio & Compact Disc Technology
Power Electronics Handbook
Electronic Engineer's Reference Book
Radio Frequency Transistors
Surface Mount Technology
Audio Electronics
Price
$55.95
$39.95
$59.95
$49.95
$55.95
$59.95
$120.00
$85.00
$99.00
$52.95
Postage: add $5.00 per book. Orders over $100
are post free within Australia. NZ & PNG add
$10.00 per book, elsewhere add $15 per book.
TOTAL $A
November 1996 97
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