Silicon ChipTime for a total rethink? - August 2022 SILICON CHIP
  1. Outer Front Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Subscriptions: PE Subscription
  4. Subscriptions
  5. Publisher's Letter: The power of batteries
  6. Feature: Time for a total rethink? by Mark Nelson
  7. Feature: Net Work by Alan Winstanley
  8. Project: Multi-purpose Battery Manager by Tim Blythman
  9. Project: Simple MIDI Music Keyboard by Tim Blythman
  10. Project: NANO PONG ON YOUR TV by TIM BLYTHMAN
  11. Project: USB Power Delivery Chargers by Jim Rowe
  12. Feature: Make it with Micromite by Phil Boyce
  13. Feature: KickStart by Mike Tooley
  14. Feature: Max’s Cool Beans by Max the Magnifi cent
  15. Feature: Flowcode Graphical Programming by Martin Whitlock
  16. Feature: Circuit Surgery by Ian Bell
  17. PCB Order Form
  18. Advertising Index

This is only a preview of the August 2022 issue of Practical Electronics.

You can view 0 of the 72 pages in the full issue.

Articles in this series:
  • (November 2020)
  • Techno Talk (December 2020)
  • Techno Talk (January 2021)
  • Techno Talk (February 2021)
  • Techno Talk (March 2021)
  • Techno Talk (April 2021)
  • Techno Talk (May 2021)
  • Techno Talk (June 2021)
  • Techno Talk (July 2021)
  • Techno Talk (August 2021)
  • Techno Talk (September 2021)
  • Techno Talk (October 2021)
  • Techno Talk (November 2021)
  • Techno Talk (December 2021)
  • Communing with nature (January 2022)
  • Should we be worried? (February 2022)
  • How resilient is your lifeline? (March 2022)
  • Go eco, get ethical! (April 2022)
  • From nano to bio (May 2022)
  • Positivity follows the gloom (June 2022)
  • Mixed menu (July 2022)
  • Time for a total rethink? (August 2022)
  • What’s in a name? (September 2022)
  • Forget leaves on the line! (October 2022)
  • Giant Boost for Batteries (December 2022)
  • Raudive Voices Revisited (January 2023)
  • A thousand words (February 2023)
  • It’s handover time (March 2023)
  • AI, Robots, Horticulture and Agriculture (April 2023)
  • Prophecy can be perplexing (May 2023)
  • Technology comes in different shapes and sizes (June 2023)
  • AI and robots – what could possibly go wrong? (July 2023)
  • How long until we’re all out of work? (August 2023)
  • We both have truths, are mine the same as yours? (September 2023)
  • Holy Spheres, Batman! (October 2023)
  • Where’s my pneumatic car? (November 2023)
  • Good grief! (December 2023)
  • Cheeky chiplets (January 2024)
  • Cheeky chiplets (February 2024)
  • The Wibbly-Wobbly World of Quantum (March 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Wait! What? Really? (April 2024)
  • Techno Talk - One step closer to a dystopian abyss? (May 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Program that! (June 2024)
  • Techno Talk (July 2024)
  • Techno Talk - That makes so much sense! (August 2024)
  • Techno Talk - I don’t want to be a Norbert... (September 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Sticking the landing (October 2024)
  • Techno Talk (November 2024)
  • Techno Talk (December 2024)
  • Techno Talk (January 2025)
  • Techno Talk (February 2025)
  • Techno Talk (March 2025)
  • Techno Talk (April 2025)
  • Techno Talk (May 2025)
  • Techno Talk (June 2025)
Techno Talk Time for a total rethink? Mark Nelson The way we have electric power delivered to our homes – and the method in which we consume it – needs to be reconsidered. It’s inefficient and no longer rational says one think tank. So, what are we doing wrong, and why should we change? I ’m going to hazard a guess. If you are reading this article at home in the UK, then I can say with near certainty that your domestic electricity supply is delivered as alternating current (AC) at not far off 230 volts. Conveniently, your light fittings and electrical appliances are designed for a corresponding 230V AC supply, making for an extremely harmonious setup. But is this ideal? Is it even logical? Horses for courses Fifty or even fewer years ago the answer was undoubtedly yes. After all, your appliances (cooker, fridge, washing machine, TV and trendy music centre) and lighting (incandescent and fluorescent) all categorically required high voltages to work efficiently. But a lot has changed in recent decades. We now use LED light bulbs that could operate far more efficiently and effectively from a low-voltage direct current (DC) supply. Ditto for your flat-screen TV and other home entertainment devices. A low-voltage DC supply would be far more appropriate for your computers and other IT stuff, Wi-Fi, security alarm and Internet of Things products. For most people, it will also soon apply to the battery backup supply required to keep your landline telephone and broadband router alive during mains failures. All of these gizmos work inherently on low-voltage DC sources, yet we are still going through the wasteful process of transforming 230V AC down to a likely 12V DC. Obviously, we still need higher-voltage AC for cooking, heating, refrigeration and clothes washing, but that’s as far as it goes. Logic tells us that a dual-supply power system would make better sense and help reduce energy consumption and hence global warming. No novelty Thought along these lines is not new, although it has had little exposure or discussion in the media. Nor, as far as I know, has the subject had the possible endorsement of a political party. But that has now changed, with an initiative from 8 the Green Lib Dems, which functions as an environmental think tank for the Liberal Democrat party. You can read full details of the proposal, which was published last November, at: https://bit. ly/pe-aug22-acdc In a nutshell, it argues that according to the Committee on Climate Change, the UK will need a quadrupling of our electrical supply capacity to support electrification of heating and transport. This in turn will require a huge investment in new power distribution infrastructure, which offers a once-ina-hundred-year opportunity to replace our anachronistic AC power distribution with something much better and truly modern: a DC power distribution system. By establishing the UK as a leader, not a follower, DC switchover can be part of the Green Recovery and a significant export opportunity. Coexistence is the way forward The Lib-Dem proposal has plenty of merit, but it is not in harmony with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), which supports maintaining a mixture of AC and DC supply systems, to satisfy the applications that are appropriate for one system or the other. However, the IEC does accept that, ‘since the late 20th century, the proliferation of modern power electronics has heralded a growth in decentralised power generation. Coupled with a growing interest in renewable energy sources that generate DC power and the decentralisation of the electricity grid, a new era has begun of co-existence between AC and DC grids.’ Emphasising this duality, Jacques Peronnet, Chair of the IEC’s Technical Committee 64, declared earlier this year, ‘We are moving from a purely AC environment to one that is a combination of AC and DC.’ Do you sodder? No, it’s not a rude word and many PE readers indulge in soddering regularly. I confess that I do, although at first, I was unsure whether I would like it or was even capable. It didn’t take long to discover that I loved it and I still find the practice positively therapeutic. What’s more, I make no secret of this shameless pleasure. If you are not a sodderer, watch https:// youtu.be/BnbcTtMptkU where you’ll rapidly discover that soddering is how many Americans pronounce (and spell) the word soldering. Alternatively, just consult www.Urbandictionary.com, which pompously defines the word as an incorrect term for ‘soldering’, usually used by idiots and people with ‘labtop’ computers. I was certainly confused back in the 1970s when hobby electronics shops began selling small plastic containers labelled ‘Soder-Wick’. Always curious and easily beguiled by novelties, I asked what Soder-Wick was, and discovered it was a small reel of copper braid that had the amazing ability to absorb and removed unplanned solder splashes on PCBs and other unwanted effects of clumsy soldering. The product wasn’t cheap but was much less expensive than a proper solder pump; it saved my bacon many a time. But why did they call it ‘Soder-Wick’, and why the missing ‘l’? Was it a misprint or typo? Hardly, because the name was (and still is) a registered trademark. It was many years later that I learnt that ‘soder’ and ‘sodder’ are what we Brits call ‘solder’. A correspondent on Quora. com states that the word solder was borrowed from Norman French and, at the time, was spelled without the ‘l’. The ‘l’ was added, probably in the 16th century, by people who wanted to make the spelling of French-derived English words match their original Latin spelling. Thus, the traditional pronunciation of the word lacks the ‘l’ sound, and this ‘l’-less pronunciation is preserved in American English. (The word derives originally from the Latin verb solidare, meaning to fasten together.) So, our American friends are correct! I feel totally humbled. But I must concede that we Brits are inconsistent over pronunciation. Take the word ‘almond’; some people say ‘ah-mond’, while others say ‘al-mond’. Do you call salt ‘sollt’ or ‘sawt’? ‘Goll-f’ or ‘gofe’ for the game of golf? It’s a crazy, mixed-up world! Practical Electronics | August | 2022