there is diodes on the +/- out of the boards which conveniently act like a fuse when you get the polarity of a battery wrong oops....jkeny wrote:Right - the reason I asked was because that schematic shows protection diodes around the voltage regulators which probably helps the whole arrangement work. I'm not sure if it would work without or at least it would be much more precarious without them? Using floating voltages can be very tricky & great care needs to be taken to ensure no voltage feedback into points where there shouldn't be any - that's why the diodes helpnige2000 wrote:no its only a similar one for explanation purposes, i just google images for it actually think it happened to be from twisted pearjkeny wrote:Yea, this looks good so far - is that the schematic for the linear regulators you're using?
Are there diodes on the actual boards?
cant see how there could be reverse polarity though unless you make a mistake and connect stuff up wrong?
gnd the final frontierYep, ground is the biggest forgotten area in audio & keeping it as noise free as possible is crucial where sensitive, low voltage circuitry is concerned. Unfortunately ground is often used as a dumping area for noise in the belief that it is a infinite sink-hole.yes this is why it works, and the best thing is you can connect gnd to any point to get the negative voltagesEach leg is isolated & floating - there is no connection to mains groundim not sure its certainly going to be interesting as the transformers are isolators (from mains) it should really act the same as a battery pack, however its normal for dc gnd to be connected to mains earth and our friend gnd loop can appear with the many links in the audio chain gnding to earth.I wonder if this was powering your chipamp & you connected a grounded device to it, would it cause a problem?
one gnd earthing or no gnds earthing might sound best but that's probably not safe or compliant ?
we could have a very long thread discussing and trying to understand just that
i assume my power supply needs to be capable of 8 amps at 13.2v to maintain the possible draw on the chips lm1875
this is where things get interesting when monitoring the discharge of the cells
ive seen cells completely discharge when others stay at 3.3v
ive seen 2 amps been pulled into one cell from reg and other regs doing diddly squat
this is likely the reason cells might be dying
ill beef up my ps hopefully achieve over 2 amps per reg and retest
as at 4.5amps draw im only gettin about 20 mins before voltage starts to fall as regs cant keep up on an individual basis
not sure whats goin on
current 4 regs are only capable of 1 amp so if im outputting 4.5 there is a shortfall
will try to rectify this