Nemo de Monet
100+ Head-Fier
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2008
- Posts
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- 12
Quote:
Is an extra, oh, 2mA of current really going to help any? You wouldn't be losing voltage swing, just - literally - a few mA of current, where there is, under every circumstance I can think of, going to be plenty available.
Also, isn't that why we put blinkenlichten on these things in the first place - to indicate, in fact, that they're on? As the design stands, all the LED will tell you - because the switch is on the other side of the converter - is that the amp is plugged into a running computer. Even when you turn the amp off, the LED will stay lit. How useful is that?
Quote:
Um, no. See my comments above about the relative uselessness of the current LED position. Also, have you read the datasheet for the converter? It'll shutdown if it gets too hot - thermal overload protection, natch - but I'm unclear what if anything it'll do if you try to pull more current than it can provide (due, for example, to oscillating opamps, or a huge capacitor inrush current). Sag in voltage? Hold voltage and current steady at the maximum limit? Shutdown? Couldn't tell you. There are also a couple fun circumstances where the chip will shutdown, just as one example, if the input voltage at the chip sags too low, however momentarily.
My feeling is that if someone puts the amp together for the first time, plugs it in, gets a lit LED, turns it on, and nothing happens, that lit LED should provide some more useful troubleshooting information than "your USB port is supplying at least some voltage"; putting it on the isolated side of the converter will at least say "the power supply circuit is working as intended", or will narrow the problem down to one at the power end of things.
Originally Posted by rds /img/forum/go_quote.gif I agree with joneeboi - don't waste that current. Keep it for headroom. Do you really need a LED to tell you that the power supply is working? Personally I'd be able to tell that something is wrong when the amp is turned on and no sound is coming out |
Is an extra, oh, 2mA of current really going to help any? You wouldn't be losing voltage swing, just - literally - a few mA of current, where there is, under every circumstance I can think of, going to be plenty available.
Also, isn't that why we put blinkenlichten on these things in the first place - to indicate, in fact, that they're on? As the design stands, all the LED will tell you - because the switch is on the other side of the converter - is that the amp is plugged into a running computer. Even when you turn the amp off, the LED will stay lit. How useful is that?
Quote:
Besides that there's no reason to think the dc-dc converter will suddenly die. By this logic you'd want LEDs for every chip to indicate whether they are working or not. |
Um, no. See my comments above about the relative uselessness of the current LED position. Also, have you read the datasheet for the converter? It'll shutdown if it gets too hot - thermal overload protection, natch - but I'm unclear what if anything it'll do if you try to pull more current than it can provide (due, for example, to oscillating opamps, or a huge capacitor inrush current). Sag in voltage? Hold voltage and current steady at the maximum limit? Shutdown? Couldn't tell you. There are also a couple fun circumstances where the chip will shutdown, just as one example, if the input voltage at the chip sags too low, however momentarily.
My feeling is that if someone puts the amp together for the first time, plugs it in, gets a lit LED, turns it on, and nothing happens, that lit LED should provide some more useful troubleshooting information than "your USB port is supplying at least some voltage"; putting it on the isolated side of the converter will at least say "the power supply circuit is working as intended", or will narrow the problem down to one at the power end of things.