Re: Internal power supply and PSU mod
Posted: Feb 16th, '16, 09:30
Enter the world of easy DIY
http://www.e-licktronic.com/forum/
deejayraoul wrote:I kept my external power supply, didn;t do any scientific comparison, but it was obvious.EchoBoy wrote:@deejayraoul: Did you keep the external supply option to make a SNR comparison between external and internal supply?
I did not have time to investigate on my hum issue yet. Sorry Jeroenbvo for not having replied earlier.
In my case the hum is present on all outputs, whether instruments are played or not. This hum also exists with the external supply but >10dB quieter which makes it acceptable.
For now I suspect radiation from the toroidal transformer.
I gues i need to
find a shieldedtransformer (wich would be quie hard as the transformer hardly fits in the metal case at the moment)
ór
find a way to shield this transformer (does anyone know of a safe way/material to do this?)
ór
deal with the noise
ór
go back to the external power supply.
About the flat cables: I'm using PSK multi-pin connectors for the connection between the IO board and the main board. It's a bit more work (even more if you do not have the fitting crimping tool like me), but I think it pays off, because of the looks and being able to disconnect the two boards at any time. For the power cable I used a molex connector.bmaximus wrote: About the noise (the hum at 50/60 Hz) the true "Achilles heel" in my case were once again the flat cables that carry the audio signal to the two printed circuits. It can happen that some wires may become broken, while maintaining an unstable connection that causes a strong hum.
jeroenbvo wrote:
I have also connected the chassis ground to the PSU using a loop breaker intended to prevent earth/ ground loops to prevent hum when systems are interconnected.
Both set ups take an low voltage AC and convert it to DC. The difference between half and full wave rectified supplies is that the full wave has better ripple characteristics but requires a transformer secondary with a center tap. Those are generally only seen in internal transformers, external AC-AC bricks dont have a center tap. In this case, I am not convinced that an internal transformer is somehow better. Sticking a big ass magnet inside a tight case which leaks magnetic flux everywhere is probably going to cause more noise problems than it solveshofmann25 wrote:Also what is the benefit of changing the PSU into a full wave bridge/Full wave Rectifier (removing D1&2)?
Does this turn the PSU into DC?