jkeny wrote:
Richard, have you blown up some of these chips with overvoltage on pin 7 - how sensitive is it to overvoltage i.e 1.1V is 1/6 of the 6.6V VDD would 1.2V kill it?
I've blown one or two with about double the 0.833V which is normal for 5V on VDD. Can't speak about 6.6V as I've never gone that high. They're so cheap it doesn't matter though.
I presume by organising the powering up of pin 7 after the main chip VDD & also ensuring it doesn't overvoltage we would be golden?
I presume so - I've never tried external power, when I blew my chips up I think it was because I tried a resistor to VDD.
Combining the trafo ideas & this chip - is there any advantages to using a transformer as a filter & I to V converter? Can it also be used in some way to deal with the NOS droop, either actively or passively?
Can't think of any advantage of using a trafo as a filter - its filtering parameter (inductance) isn't stable or predictable. When I want a filter I'll use a dedicated inductor - this can then fix up NOS droop by making the filter underdamped. I show an example on the DIYA thread about the Taobao DAC using 8 TDA1387s. Nige is on that thread already....
Pin 7 (voltage reference) seems to be a very critical element of the chips providing a reference to all output stages of the chip. Do you have experience of using voltage on pin 7 as vol control - any sonic downsides to this?
I've not done any serious listening with pin7 set below its normal value but I experimented to hear if there were any obvious artifacts going lower with pin7 voltage and there weren't, its well behaved.
An idea might be to design a trafo to provide more voltage than needed & use lower voltage on pin 7 to bring the volume down to the level needed - preventing any overvoltage.
Can't follow your thinking here.
Is Using a stepped attenuator as shunt R for vol control a worthwhile idea? High wattage resistors needed to drop 5.5V?
Nor here....