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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 2:59 pm Post subject:
Chime Sim build issues |
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Hi,
Testing the chime, I stumbled into a strange problem. The trigger is not getting through and operating the module. I can tune the noise coming out of the module using the 3 trimpots and silence the constant tone, but after that, nothing happens.
Further, I measure -15V on pin 1 of IC1, which afaik is not right.
Any clues? _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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andrewF
Joined: Dec 29, 2006 Posts: 1176 Location: australia
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Posted: Tue Nov 04, 2008 3:51 pm Post subject:
Re: Chime Sim build issues |
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whomper wrote: | Hi,
Further, I measure -15V on pin 1 of IC1, which afaik is not right.
Any clues? |
All sections of IC1 and IC2 are set up as comparators (note the lack of feedback circuitry) meaning the outputs will either be +15V or -15V.
So IC1 pins 1&7 you should measure approx -15V, with nothing on the input.
IC2 pins 1&7 should be +15V, with nothing on the input.
You should be able to see IC1 pin1 or pin 7 go to +15V when you have a +3V signal on the appropriate input.
Assuming your LM358s are okay, maybe -
In his notes section, Ken mentions you made need to increase the value of a resistor that is part of the input section -
'If you find the damper kicks in too soon, replace the 100k on pin 5 of IC2B with something higher, e.g. 220 or 330k. ' |
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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Wed Nov 05, 2008 4:10 pm Post subject:
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Hi,
Thanks for the tips.
Did some basic testing; I could not get 15V at IC1 1&7, only 1.4V. Might be because of the voltage divider before it?
Input voltage above 3V does not influence the constant -15V at IC1 pin1.
Will try to play a little more with that and implement a change to 330K as Ken suggested. _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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andrewF
Joined: Dec 29, 2006 Posts: 1176 Location: australia
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Posted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 7:57 am Post subject:
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I should have said 3V (or more) trigger signal, the outputs of IC1 will only pulse high briefly as the input signal changes. The 10n caps on the input circuit block any DC, if you just apply 3V DC to the inputs nothing will happen.
1.4V might be all the multimeter can detect before the signal goes low again.
Do you detect the 1.4V just briefly and then it is back to -15V? That may mean it is okay. If it is a constant 1.4V, maybe not so okay.
Just checking, it is an LM358? |
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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 4:45 am Post subject:
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Yeah, I am feeding it a pulse/tri LFO that reaches above 4V.
Pin1 of IC2 is constant at 1.4V, and the input signal does not change it.
I am using TL072. With LM358, pin1 of IC2 is at 0V (might be a defective IC..)
I am out of ideas and am starting to give up on this module... _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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andrewF
Joined: Dec 29, 2006 Posts: 1176 Location: australia
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Posted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 7:26 am Post subject:
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whomper wrote: |
I am using TL072. With LM358, pin1 of IC2 is at 0V (might be a defective IC..)
I am out of ideas and am starting to give up on this module... |
Maybe a TL072 will give you trouble as IC1 or IC2. This was explained to me when I had similar problems. The TL series don't really like being used as comparators, when the output swings from one extreme to the other they can get stuck (latch) and don't reset 'til the power is turned off.
A TL072 cannot get much closer than ~1V to each power rail, which might be why you are reading 1.4V on pin1. It is trying to get to 0V but cannot . The LM358 can go from rail to rail, 0-15V.
Have you checked the power pins?
IC1 should have +15V on pin8 , -15V on pin 4. Should also have ~2V on pins 2&6.
IC2 should have +15V on pin8, 0V on pin4 and ~1.4V on pins 5&3. The outputs of IC2 should swing from 0V to +15V.
Don't give up, the night is always darkest just before dawn
its been about 5 years since I built this cct, don't remember having any trouble with it. Sorry if my help isn't helping much, the ccts I know best are the ones I made mistakes with, a good way to learn is by stuffing up......though it's better to learn from other people's stuff-ups. |
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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Fri Nov 07, 2008 12:39 pm Post subject:
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Thanks andrewF for all your time and help so far, including the warm encouraging words!
I'll buy a couple of fresh LM358 to eliminate faulty IC and run a clean test.
Will post results. _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Mon Nov 10, 2008 3:03 pm Post subject:
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Ok, placed new set of LM358.
Now it seems like the trigger phase works correctly as I can measure the right voltages across IC1 and IC2.
Next problem to solve; Why do I get a constant sound with no envelope and damping?
Strange thing, when I connect the + lead of a multimeter (or my body with a screwdriver) to IC2 PIN6 (or 547 pin 2), suddenly I am getting a short bell sound synced to the trigger (which goes to say the trigger is ok) and as soon as I disconnect the test lead, I can hear 2-3 more short bell sounds and then constant tone again.
I am not sure what to make of it. I have tried to change the 100K resistor to 330K and also to 33K but nothing changed. _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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andrewF
Joined: Dec 29, 2006 Posts: 1176 Location: australia
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Posted: Tue Nov 11, 2008 3:01 pm Post subject:
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Sounds like you are almost there, have trigger, oscillation....just the envelopes to go
Do both chimes on the PCB exhibit the same behaviour?
what transistors are you using, BC547 or a substitute?
Are you using 2 or 3 oscillators per chime? |
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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 1:48 am Post subject:
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Hi,
Well, after letting the module rest a bit in a box, I went back to it to test your comments.
I am using BC547B and all 3 OSC.
When testing the V across pin6 of IC2, I see that it slowly decreases over time after trigger and at the same time pin7 is at 0V. The effect is a constant sound after trigger and a slowly decreased volume until damper kicking in. This looks good.
My only issue now is the envelope. The 2u2 discharges too slow and it seems like the 100K pot makes no difference on the rate of decrease.
It seems like the envelope there is still not working correctly.
What are the components involved in the envelope? I see 1N4148, 2u2, 10K and 100K pot. Is the bc547 also part of the game? _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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andrewF
Joined: Dec 29, 2006 Posts: 1176 Location: australia
Audio files: 4
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Posted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 2:31 am Post subject:
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yes bc547 is a part of the EG, in the sense that it buffers the EG voltage, but it shouldn't have any effect on the decay time.
The 2u2 cap gets charged up, and it wants to unload. The Bc547 base and IC2, pin6 pass very little current (ideally 0), so the only place for the 2u2 cap to unload is thru the 10k resistor and 100k pot and into ground.
So you have a max value of 110k Ohm and a min value of 10K Ohm, depending how the pot is set. The higher the resistance, the slower the decay.
Maybe check with a multimeter, the resistance between the 2u2 cap/10k Ohm resistor node and ground (circuit turned off). Turning your decay pot should see the 10k-110k range. If you are seeing a much higher reading it might be the cause of the too slow decay. |
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whomper
Joined: Dec 15, 2007 Posts: 201 Location: Israel
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Posted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 4:49 am Post subject:
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ok, problem solved.
The root cause lies with the fact that on the silkscreen, pot1 and pot2 are switched.
As I was testing the board, I tested one path at a time and connecting only those parts, and as such the pot was always connected to the other path, leaving the path I was testing open. This is why I saw a long decay.
All is well now.
Thanks andrewF for your many ideas and comments, it allowed me to hang in there while I debugged. _________________ Erez Yaary
Home Page: http://www.yaary.com
Buy my CDs at http://www.mellowjet.de |
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andrewF
Joined: Dec 29, 2006 Posts: 1176 Location: australia
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Posted: Sun Nov 16, 2008 5:37 am Post subject:
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cool! |
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e-grad
Joined: Sep 12, 2008 Posts: 142 Location: Berlin
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Posted: Sun Apr 14, 2013 2:28 am Post subject:
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whomper wrote: | The root cause lies with the fact that on the silkscreen, pot1 and pot2 are switched. |
That solved my problem, too!
However, the output is rather quite. I think I'll increase the value of the resistor in the feedback loop at the output. |
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