rickmcinnis wrote:Randy,
Impossible to run twisted pairs. I am only attaching to the"non-ground" side of the of the shift register. Twisting is more of a factor for AC signals, not DC, anyway. I do not see any twisted pairs in your photo so I am baffled by this comment.
LMAO. So there is the stuff I know I should do, and then there's what I actually do. If I went for perfection, I'd never accomplish anything, so I've learned its better to throw things together, and just do the best I can. Otherwise I have a bunch of 1/2 finished projects laying around.
On this project, instead of twisted pairs of power and ground, I tried to tie the batteries to ground kind of close to the devices they would power. And I did it with a low impedance path. I'll admit I could probably do better if I tried a little harder.
My low impedance path is a piece of copper tape. I insulated the tape with kapton tape, and then folded it, so it doesn't look like a wide piece of tape, but it really is. For DC returns, cross section matters, or large gauge wire. For high frequency AC, you need surface area, so a wide piece of copper tape works better. I think my tape is 2 inches wide. Some of this is aimed at stuff in the Mhz and higher, but I apply to to digital audio stuff anyway, figuring it can't hurt.
And I'll admit I don't understand grounding as much as I should, I just do the best I can, with the effort I'm willing to put into this "hobby".
Randy
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