![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim, I
really appreciate the advice. Your comments rekindle my drive, I had hit a low point after designing the data capture board, OS, circuits etc.. and then... being killed with RF noise. An odd, but beneficial I suppose, confluence of circumstances involving a broken window pane and a mischievous dog and a storm lead to water getting on the DC to DC power supply (11~14 DC - 12V, 5V, 3.3V +-) for the EPIA M motherboard. Not surprisingly it decided not to continue functioning. I then pulled out a traditional power supply to use, and.. amazingly 80% of the noise went away! I would hate to curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! ( http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently little RF and EMI protection. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. I don't want to go through the space and elaborate hastle of going from the 11-14V bus to 120V AC to a bulky PC power supply (space is critical) to 12,5,3.3V so I need to find a suitable non noisy power supply and then deal with the issues you knowledgeable fellows enumerated in the posts. Thanks again to Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim. Your comments rekindle my drive, I had hit a low point after designing the data capture board, OS, circuits etc.. and then... being killed with RF noise. An odd, but beneficial I suppose, confluence of circucumstances involving a broken window pane and a mischevious dog and a storm lead to water getting on the DC to DC power supply (11~14 DC - 12V, 5V, 3.3V +-) for the EPIA M motherboard. Not surprisingly it decided not to continue functioning. I then pulled out a traditional power supply to use, and.. amazingly 90% of the noise went away! I would hate to curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! ( http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently all the wrong harmonics. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. I don't want to go through the space and elaborate hastle of going from the 11-14V bus to 120V AC to a bulky PC power supply (space is critical) to 12,5,3.3V so I need to find a suitable non noisy power supply and then deal with the issues you knowledgable fellows enumerated in the posts. Thanks again to Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You're welcome! Keep us informed, please, of your trials and successes.
jcpearce wrote: Thanks Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim, I really appreciate the advice. Your comments rekindle my drive, I had hit a low point after designing the data capture board, OS, circuits etc.. and then... being killed with RF noise. An odd, but beneficial I suppose, confluence of circumstances involving a broken window pane and a mischievous dog and a storm lead to water getting on the DC to DC power supply (11~14 DC - 12V, 5V, 3.3V +-) for the EPIA M motherboard. Not surprisingly it decided not to continue functioning. I then pulled out a traditional power supply to use, and.. amazingly 80% of the noise went away! I would hate to curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! ( http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently little RF and EMI protection. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. I don't want to go through the space and elaborate hastle of going from the 11-14V bus to 120V AC to a bulky PC power supply (space is critical) to 12,5,3.3V so I need to find a suitable non noisy power supply and then deal with the issues you knowledgeable fellows enumerated in the posts. Thanks again to Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim. Your comments rekindle my drive, I had hit a low point after designing the data capture board, OS, circuits etc.. and then... being killed with RF noise. An odd, but beneficial I suppose, confluence of circucumstances involving a broken window pane and a mischevious dog and a storm lead to water getting on the DC to DC power supply (11~14 DC - 12V, 5V, 3.3V +-) for the EPIA M motherboard. Not surprisingly it decided not to continue functioning. I then pulled out a traditional power supply to use, and.. amazingly 90% of the noise went away! I would hate to curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! ( http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently all the wrong harmonics. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. I don't want to go through the space and elaborate hastle of going from the 11-14V bus to 120V AC to a bulky PC power supply (space is critical) to 12,5,3.3V so I need to find a suitable non noisy power supply and then deal with the issues you knowledgable fellows enumerated in the posts. Thanks again to Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! (
http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently all the wrong harmonics. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. The 110v power supplies used in desktop computers are also switching supplies. So the problem is the cheapness of the 12v unit you selected. I'd try another make unit and see if that works if not try putting the power supply in its own shielded case and shielding and ferrite beading the input/output leads from it. Good luck and let us know what you workout! John |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"jcpearce" wrote in message
ups.com... Thanks Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim, I really appreciate the advice. Your comments rekindle my drive, I had hit a low point after designing the data capture board, OS, circuits etc.. and then... being killed with RF noise. An odd, but beneficial I suppose, confluence of circumstances involving a broken window pane and a mischievous dog and a storm lead to water getting on the DC to DC power supply (11~14 DC - 12V, 5V, 3.3V +-) for the EPIA M motherboard. Not surprisingly it decided not to continue functioning. I then pulled out a traditional power supply to use, and.. amazingly 80% of the noise went away! I would hate to curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! ( http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently little RF and EMI protection. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. I don't want to go through the space and elaborate hastle of going from the 11-14V bus to 120V AC to a bulky PC power supply (space is critical) to 12,5,3.3V so I need to find a suitable non noisy power supply and then deal with the issues you knowledgeable fellows enumerated in the posts. Thanks again to Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim. Your comments rekindle my drive, I had hit a low point after designing the data capture board, OS, circuits etc.. and then... being killed with RF noise. An odd, but beneficial I suppose, confluence of circucumstances involving a broken window pane and a mischevious dog and a storm lead to water getting on the DC to DC power supply (11~14 DC - 12V, 5V, 3.3V +-) for the EPIA M motherboard. Not surprisingly it decided not to continue functioning. I then pulled out a traditional power supply to use, and.. amazingly 90% of the noise went away! I would hate to curse but the blasted PW-60 #!@! ( http://store.ituner.com/ituner/pw60caatxpos.html ) power supply was the primary culprit. It is a switching power supply with evidently all the wrong harmonics. I am trying to find another DC-DC power supply without these issues, they all appear to be switching power supplies, I would rather deal with energy/heat loss than RF noise. I don't want to go through the space and elaborate hastle of going from the 11-14V bus to 120V AC to a bulky PC power supply (space is critical) to 12,5,3.3V so I need to find a suitable non noisy power supply and then deal with the issues you knowledgable fellows enumerated in the posts. Thanks again to Dean, Elippse, Colin Lamb, Bob, AINut Don, Kayroc & Tim. Ahhh.... yes. I should have thought to mention the importance of a quiet power supply. A PI filter between the supply and the PC is a good idea to help ensure that switching noise from your supply doesn't get into your PC board. I'm used to designing my own power supplies for systems like this, so I didn't stop to think that you might be using an off-the-shelf supply. Dean |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 JC, Having tackled this issue myself for other apps, I can point you to an excellent resource, "The Art Of Electronics" by Horowitz & Hill. In there, they outline some techniques witch you may consider paranoid, but I have found to work. For instance, building an enclosure within an enclosure. The outer enclosure is little more than a way to terminate your outside wire connections (including power), allowing you to bring them into a controlled environment where you can then apply such gross tricks as caps & ferrite filters on your power lines and data lines (don't forget fuses!). After you have performed whatever magic you can on the in/outbound leads, you then bring the signal & power into the inner enclosure. Also remember that for homemade enclosures of bent & riveted aluminum, small gaps where one flap is riveted to another can have gaps in then which WILL leak RF. To fix this, your local electronics parts supplier (or Digikey) will sell conductive tape. Welding also works. When attaching the top of the enclosure, you could employ either one of those fine mesh springy wire gaskets, or ... more tape. Good luck, Evan Carew P.S. IF you want me to forward some of the specific steps outlined in TAOE, let me know. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFB/48apxCQXwV2bJARAl5fAJ9SEYjU1Cv42YAG12kRkQVl2034PwC fV4Wv SmcILTAIIIE+cHexj2fbBE0= =xelG -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you everyone for the input, now I am looking for some
prioritization. I received the new power supply from www.mini-box.com and it is substantially better than the previous version (http://www.mini-box.com/s.nl/sc.8/ca...it.A/id.356/.f ) however I still get some noise in the radios. The new version is too big to fit in the previous enclosure so it is sitting slightly apart from the MB on its own. I have started to jot down what the system wants to do, pictures and status at http://69.229.202.54:8080 Under the 'Image' folder one can see the plane, the EPIA in the nose and the prototype ADC board. So now I have a case that has to heavily part for the ATX power lines to come into it & a non cased DC power supply. I have attached ferrite beads to the power lines coming in/out with little improvement. It takes time for many of the steps so I am looking for what you folks think would be the 'biggest bang for the buck', or the right priority to proceed with. (IE, build a brand new case for everything, build a seperate case for the PSU, don't build a case right away but do X,Y,Z, etc..) Thanks once again for the brains helping noodle this over. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 JC, My comments/questions interspersed with your message: jcpearce wrote: Thank you everyone for the input, now I am looking for some prioritization. I received the new power supply from www.mini-box.com and it is substantially better than the previous version (http://www.mini-box.com/s.nl/sc.8/ca...it.A/id.356/.f ) however I still get some noise in the radios. The new version is too big to fit in the previous enclosure so it is sitting slightly apart from the MB on its own. I have started to jot down what the system wants to do, pictures and status at http://69.229.202.54:8080 Under the 'Image' folder one can see the plane, the EPIA in the nose and the prototype ADC board. So now I have a case that has to heavily part for the ATX power lines to come into it & a non cased DC power supply. I have attached ferrite beads to the power lines coming in/out with little improvement. Stupid question here JC, but it looks like you are using a PC style switching power supply [high noise] to power your standard ATX style PC board. Since most of the important voltages going into an ATX board are either 5V or 12V, why aren't you simply using regulators off the plane's battery to supply the power? It would seem to me to be both cheaper as well as inherently less noisy (not to mention lighter). You wouldn't even have to do any special parts sourcing on these regulators as they are redily available at you local radio shack (karmic regulators anyone?). For a break out of ATX voltages, see the following link: http://www.7volts.com/atx2.jpg It takes time for many of the steps so I am looking for what you folks think would be the 'biggest bang for the buck', or the right priority to proceed with. (IE, build a brand new case for everything, build a seperate case for the PSU, don't build a case right away but do X,Y,Z, etc..) Thanks once again for the brains helping noodle this over. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFCD7F5pxCQXwV2bJARAhMmAKCQkWmHv3zP3v1jPgaekZ pWtSSMaQCeLvo9 RfniUGRXnB7y9YA784UsIwg= =zPpX -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "jcpearce" wrote in message ups.com... Thank you everyone for the input, now I am looking for some prioritization. I received the new power supply from www.mini-box.com and it is substantially better than the previous version (http://www.mini-box.com/s.nl/sc.8/ca...it.A/id.356/.f ) however I still get some noise in the radios. The new version is too big to fit in the previous enclosure so it is sitting slightly apart from the MB on its own. I have started to jot down what the system wants to do, pictures and status at http://69.229.202.54:8080 Under the 'Image' folder one can see the plane, the EPIA in the nose and the prototype ADC board. So now I have a case that has to heavily part for the ATX power lines to come into it & a non cased DC power supply. I have attached ferrite beads to the power lines coming in/out with little improvement. It takes time for many of the steps so I am looking for what you folks think would be the 'biggest bang for the buck', or the right priority to proceed with. (IE, build a brand new case for everything, build a seperate case for the PSU, don't build a case right away but do X,Y,Z, etc..) Thanks once again for the brains helping noodle this over. Check out this machine, only +5vdc required, linux capable... http://www.diamondsystems.com/products/prometheus I'm sure there are many more similar... |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|