nige2000 wrote:jkeny wrote:Yea & VDD limits the Vref max V?
if using solely a cap on pin 7 (self powered) it is exactly 1/6 of vdd
and you can manipulate vref voltage to adjust the output current i believe also dependant on i/v r value
whenever the bag of chips arrive ill push em harder....
Yea, possibly with a capacitor in parallel. I'm thinking it would make for a neat volume controlled DAC driving headphones directly?
yes def really cool
either headphones or poweramp direct via transformer isolated + no output caps is really cool
any way of manipulating i2s to have the chips output either left right channel mono (merging l+r output)?
maybe that dont work?
For balanced configuration you need inverted L & R data
You can do this by inverting I2S data line using a simple logic inverter chip giving you -L & -R data
I'm not sure what is the optimal way of connecting differential I2S data lines to the DAC chips:
1) - should L & R go to one DAC chip & -L & -R data route to another DAC chip
2) OR -L & +L go to one DAC chip & -R & +R to another chip? Although this requires a further step in slitting out the L & R channel from the I2S data stream
edit: From memory, I believe the logic circuitry used in the 1794 DDDAC can be used to separate the I2S L & R channels but needs adjustment for 16bit rather than 24bit - don't think it deals with data inversion though we could shove an inverter chip in the logic path & adjust for half cycle delay or whatever it generates?
The use of differential signals into a transformer will help cancel noise common on both legs whether external or generated inside the DAC chip. I believe that option 2 gives better cancellation of internal DAC noise (appearing on both channels) as both -L & +L channels are handled by the same DAC as are -R & +R.
It depends on how much internal noise is generated by the DAC chip & whether it's worth the trouble to address this - maybe Richard knows?