of course sure didnt i invent it :)rickmcinnis wrote:No, 200 mA.
Are you not float charging?
maybe a little too much ;)Enjoy the beer!
please tell me the dam's still alive?
of course sure didnt i invent it :)rickmcinnis wrote:No, 200 mA.
Are you not float charging?
maybe a little too much ;)Enjoy the beer!
It took me awhile to get what you are saying. We do not have power outages very often.nige2000 wrote:you no power outages over there?
volume seems the same i didn't measure it
I'm not with you here - maybe I'm dense? You have two pairs, that's 4 batteries on each channel? So you are putting 2 batteries in parallel for +3.3V & two in parallel for -3.3V, right? BTW, you should share the vref between both L & R channelrickmcinnis wrote:No, I am running two pairs of batteries (or will be) for each channel, each polarity, and sticking with Nigel's recommendation that 3.3 volts is sufficient. Only one battery per rail.
I was talking about 2 batteries in series (on each polarity) & using them for getting the original +/-4V vref of the DAm DAC - this was Nige's config originally which I was talking about.No question running 26650s at 2 volts would be a bad idea!
I think it's pointless (according to Nige's reports of 5V sound) & asking for trouble - who said you can run these batteries at 4V? 3.8V is considered max. OK, I know datasheet maximum voltages can be exceeded (DDDAC's PCM1794 DAC for instance) but there are audible gains realised with these overvoltages - in this case there doesn't appear to be any upside to this, only downsides.I am tempted, after all is actually running well at 3.3, to creep up the voltage and see what happens.
With the negligible current draw one wonders what would happen as you near 4 volts on one cell. After all you can charge them with 4 volts.
Do you think this is asking for trouble?
Thanks for your concern and your counsel.
I don't get what you're saying here - how would battery power negate the benefits? Oh, 15 minutes power down will not cause any problem with the batteries - if you are doubling them for each polarity then you should have many hours before running lowrickmcinnis wrote:It took me awhile to get what you are saying. We do not have power outages very often.nige2000 wrote:you no power outages over there?
volume seems the same i didn't measure it
Yes, I do plan on keeping the thing on all of the time so if there was one while at work and I left it on there would be the problem of the battery running the DAM and the regulator. I wonder how long it would take to bring the battery down with an extended power loss? Ours are usually less than fifteen minutes and rarely anywhere near that long. Compromise is always with us.
I wonder if battery power might negate the benefits of running the thing all of the time?
Yes, leaving on all the time allows ICs & clocks to reach stable operating conditions. What the DAM is doing is reproducing the very low level detail in the digital signal - the LSBs. These are at very low voltage levels & the stability of these very low voltages is what is the secret here - it's what gives the DAC it's realistic sound, I believe. The stability & low noise of the vref is the most crucial node in the whole DAC - it's this reference voltage that is used directly by the resistor ladder to generate the output voltages corresponding to the digital bits of the digital byte. These batteries provide a number of advantages for use in digital audio - they provide 3.3V fairly steady output for most of their charge - perfect V for most digital circuitry so don't need a voltage reg - they are so fast, low noise & stable that using them with a cap or voltage reg is usually detrimental to their operation. These 3 factors low noise, stability & speed are exactly what's needed for digital ICs & it's difficult to find regulators that combine these attributes - I believe the Paul Hynes come closest if not the equal of these batteries.I wonder if shift registers work better after "warming up"? I guess the clock would work better after being on awhile.
The current requirements are probably not very great in this part of the DAm but you are correct, the batteries are over engineered for the task of supplying such small currents - they are 2.3A rated but can provide 20Amps continuously or something like 120Amps instantaneously - which accounts for the voltage stability needed in this circuit.If you do not detect a volume change then no need to measure it. One more thing to make one think that 3.3 is just fine. Makes one wonder why SOEKRIS picked such an odd value for the voltage ... One thing for sure the batteries have infinitely better current delivery than that opamp based reg/reference which could well explain the ability to get by with less. Has anyone ever measure just how close those SOEKRIS regs track each other's voltages?
I haven't looked at them but if you are worried about the potentiometer, then find the setting that gives you 3.3V output, measure the potentiometer's resistance & substitute a fixed R of this value for the potjkeny, what do you think the real world capability of those reg/refs to supply "equal" voltages would be over time?
Metcal (OKI 9000) - I recommended it to Nige & he finds it great too. Various size tips depending on what I'm doing but the most useful one for smd work is this one OKI Soldr Tip SFV-CH15A Tapr Chisl 1.5mmWhat soldering iron do you use for your SMD work? What size tip?
Hope this helps you avoid the magic smoke?I am thinking my setup is just too large and I might be better off getting something more suitable before soldering anything to the board.
I worry that the more I obsess these details the more certainly there will be that the thing will blow up upon first turn-on.