Silicon ChipNet Work - February 2022 SILICON CHIP
  1. Outer Front Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Subscriptions: PE Subscription
  4. Subscriptions: PicoLog Cloud
  5. Back Issues: PICOLOG
  6. Publisher's Letter
  7. Feature: Should we be worried? by Mark Nelson
  8. Feature: Net Work by Alan Winstanley
  9. Project: Arduino-based Adjustable Power Supply by Tim Blythman
  10. Project: Battery Monitor Logger by TIM BLYTHMAN
  11. Project: ELECTRONIC Wind Chimes by John Clarke
  12. Project: Mini Digital AC Panel Meters by Jim Rowe
  13. Feature: KickStart by Mike Tooley
  14. Feature: Flowcode Graphical Programming by Martin Whitlock
  15. Feature: Max’s Cool Beans by Max the Magnificent
  16. Feature: AUDIO OUT by Jake Rothman
  17. Feature: Circuit Surgery by Ian Bell
  18. Feature: Make it with Micromite by Phil Boyce
  19. PCB Order Form
  20. Advertising Index

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

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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)
Net Work Alan Winstanley This month’s Net Work looks at the latest developments in the electricity generation sector and ideas for streaming favourite radio and music channels. But first, a practical ‘Net Workshop’ topic! H alf a century ago, when the author took his first steps in constructing amateur electronic projects, most designs were built on stripboard and housed in aluminium or plastic Veroboxes, or universal BIM boxes (the 1970s answer to Australia’s Jiffy boxes). In the writer’s case, a meagre assortment of workshop tools centred round a hacksaw, a few files and a handcranked drill for preparing panels for switches or controls. A teenager could manage it, but any tough steelwork, such as drilling or punching large holes for panel meters in a steel chassis meant calling for Dad and his electric drill. All the tools you need These days, hobbyists are totally spoilt for choice, with a dazzling variety of power tools and accessories that empower home constructors like never before. Since the 1980s, cordless drills and drivers have caught on, although it was soon discovered that rechargeable Ni-Cad batteries had a short lifespan with a poor ‘memory effect’ and seldom were they ready for action when needed. Worse, if spare batteries weren’t available then usually the whole tool had to be scrapped once the battery failed. Tired of wasting batteries and throwing away expensive tools, in the mid-2000s Ryobi’s OnePlus 18V tool system includes a soldering iron, rotary tool and USB powerbank adaptor. Note that 18V batteries and chargers aren’t included with ‘bare tools’. Third-party battery and power takeoff adapters are sold separately. 10 I invested in Ryobi’s OnePlus system which uses an 18V Ni-MH battery to power a range of ‘bare’ tools. It was a forward-thinking idea that would prove to be well ahead of its time. The product’s major USP was that batteries were exchangeable, and one battery fitted every Ryobi OnePlus tool: no need to invest in multiple battery packs. Initially, barely a dozen such tools were available, but Ryobi now offers more than a hundred in Europe, catering for a wide range of domestic tasks. Their cordless drills and drivers will appeal to DIY users and hobbyists but there are Ryobi OnePlus tools to help tackle many other home and leisure tasks: mowing, trimming, cleaning, power washing, vacuuming, grinding, sawing, spraying, stapling, tyre inflating, illuminating, cooling and more. Some readers might be interested in the Ryobi ONE+ soldering iron R18SOI0, a self-contained iron that clips onto their 18V OnePlus battery and would be good enough for quick repairs or working in the field. A mini rotary tool (R18RT0) has a flexible drive shaft for hobby projects, or there’s the new RRT18-0 pencil-style rotary tool. Ryobi’s mini 18V air compressor R18AC-0 might suit bench-top use, but single-phase oil-free compressors can cost much less. There’s even a USB accessory that turns a Ryobi 18V battery into a high capacity 5V powerbank, the R18USB-0. This and a Ryobi lantern are on standby here at home (along with an always-on battery charger) during the current season of stormy weather and power cuts. A variety of Ni-MH battery capacities is available from Ryobi – ‘starter kits’ often include a tool and battery or two bundled with a mains charger, and are a good place to start. All such tools have limitations, and sometimes you just can’t beat the clout of a mains-powered drill. One old ONE+ power drill/driver expired with a ‘phut’ when trying to screw tannalised timber sections together, but all was not lost as the battery was re-deployed on a replacement drill. In fairness, not every implement quite hits the spot, as some disappointed owners of Ryobi 18V lawnmowers have found, so it’s worth checking reviews first. Details of Ryobi’s European range will be found at, https://uk.ryobitools.eu For readers in the US, there’s a much larger market – view the nearly 200(!) attachments at: www.ryobitools.com Build a cordless toolkit If you are just starting out in DIY or hobby electronics, it’s worth considering gradually building up an 18V toolkit as the expanding Ryobi OnePlus system has withstood the test of time – check Amazon and use the Cameliser plugin in your web browser to alert about price drops. Alternatively, Bosch offers its ‘18V POWER FOR ALL’ system while Hitachi, DeWalt, Makita, Festool and others have pricey 18V and 40V systems for trade users. More recently, unofficial adaptors made by third parties now allow other brands of 18V battery to be fitted to Ryobi tools. So-called ‘power wheel’ adapters also allow batteries to be harnessed for kids’ motorised cars or bicycles, skateboards, portable lights, signs and so on, and hobbyists might be interested in using these wire-ended adaptors to power electronic projects or, say, LED effects. Search eBay and Amazon for them but, given the high capacity of these Ni-MH batteries, check cable ratings closely and do add an inline fuse. Streaming sensations Another ONE+ accessory that caught my eye was a new Bluetooth loudspeaker (Ryobi PAD02B) sold in the US by Home Depot (America’s answer to B&Q) but only just arriving in Europe. Amazon. com lists the Ryobi Bluetooth speaker at $29.00 + $10.00 shipping and duty to the UK, say £30. (The UK Ryobi website lists it at £51.99). It would probably be ideal for kicking around on the workbench, but it also reflects the trend towards listening to streaming audio via Wi-Fi or a mobile phone, which is the subject of my next topic. For home network users, gone are the days when radio listeners had to rely on receiving a strong FM or DAB signal, with all the aerial jiggling and Practical Electronics | February | 2022 are widely available), but versatile Bluetooth Tx/ Rx transceivers will work in either mode. These adaptors are rechargeable or might draw power from a USB port, but they can sometimes be frustrating to set up. Secret source tuning that it entailed. Some recent ‘retail therapy’ saw the delivery of a Bluetooth loudspeaker made by JBL. The JBL GO 2 is a very compact waterproof (IPX7) speaker that enables streaming audio to be enjoyed in, say, the shower or garden. It has a surprisingly rich tone for such a small unit – not ‘tinny’ at all. Available in several colours, the rechargeable speaker can last several hours between charges, and it paired fuss-free with an Android phone. A separate 3.5mm Aux In jack is fitted for times when Bluetooth isn’t available, and it can double as a speakerphone for hands-free conference calls or for quizzing Google Assistant out loud (both of which depend on using your smartphone’s microphone). The JBL GO 2 was remarkable value for a street price of under £20. Newer models (the pricier GO 3) are available, and there is, of course, a plethora of Bluetooth speakers sold by many other brands. Some also have a MicroSD slot to play audio files that way. Bluetooth is also built into many portable and tabletop radio receivers, TV sound bars, hi-fi units and so on, which enables audio to be streamed wirelessly to them from, say, a smartphone, laptop or tablet. Some devices incorporate NFC (Near Field Communications) which makes pairing as simple as touch-tapping it with a compatible smartphone: look for the NFC logo on the case. Where Bluetooth isn’t included in audio equipment then some easy options are available. Inexpensive Bluetooth transmitters are sold on eBay that plug into a 3.5mm headphone jack, allowing audio to be streamed, range permitting, to Bluetooth headphones, a sound bar or earbuds. Similar Bluetooth receivers are sold that fit an audio system’s Aux In socket (phono to 3.5mm adaptors Next, what about a streaming audio source? Spotify Free offers unlimited songs sprinkled with adverts, or a paid-for service costing £9.99 per month. Amazon Prime membership bundles a selection of two million songs to enjoy This SONRU Bluetooth 5.0 Transceiver has both a TOSLINK optical and a 3.5mm Aux jack. Select Tx or Rx mode as on a PC or Fire TV Stick, needed. (amazon.co.uk) which is also searchable using Alexa voice commands. Access playing CDs. (It’s also worth noting to Amazon’s full catalogue of 75 mil- that vinyl record and cassette tape lion songs costs from £7.99 a month. sales are resurging.) Apple Music sells a variety of plans Keen audio enthusiasts might like with different monthly tariffs as well. the Brennan B2, a self-contained CD There’s more than just music available ripper and amp which has a built-in online: Amazon’s Audible package offers Raspberry Pi module and will rip and podcasts and audio books for £7.99 a store thousands of CDs. A 2TB disk month, while https://audiobooks.co.uk can host up to 9,000 CDs as MP3s or (or .com) has a free 30-day trial then 4,400 in lossless FLAC format. The £7.99 for two books a month. Audio Brennan B2 will also stream Intermagazines and meditation or natural net radio stations, rip vinyl records soundtracks might be available as well. to MP3, back up to external drives As alternatives to DAB or FM radio, or appear on a LAN as a NAS music a myriad of radio stations stream their drive. Dongles are needed for Wi-Fi programmes online, accessible through and Bluetooth. Brennan also claims to apps or websites such as the free radio be the first such device to pair with a player (go to: www.onlineradiobox. wide number of Sonos speakers. For com). Sometimes, your scribe will be network media users, Brennan states found outside, tuned into Spain’s Spec- DLNA can be installed separately via trum FM Costa Blanca streaming over a software patch (check for details). Wi-Fi from the router indoors, with The Brennan B2 2TB model lists at earbuds offering a convenient hands- £569 and readers can check the specs free listening solution when paired to at: www.brennan.co.uk a smartphone. This system works well, and the range of the author’s domestic The winds of change Wi-Fi has proved surprising. (A mobile In last month’s issue I outlined some app such as WiFi Analyzer displays any bold plans by Rolls-Royce Group to manSSIDs in range and their signal strength.) ufacture small modular reactors (SMRs), which are nuclear-fuelled power stations Back indoors, another option is to that are ‘assembled’ onsite from sepastream Internet radio channels onto a suitable radio receiver such as the rate factory-built units. More countries PURE Evoke or the much-missed PURE are looking for ‘clean fuel’ SMRs as an Avanti Flow (which is exactly what the answer to the energy crunch, especialwriter is doing as he types this month’s ly as fossil fuel supplies are becoming copy). Radios usually need Wi-Fi, al- more restricted, and geopolitical tenthough some have Ethernet ports as sions between Germany, Ukraine and well. A few pricey streaming radio sets gas-supplier Russia are creating a great deal of uncertainty. are sold under the classic Roberts name It’s early days for SMRs, but Rollsand countless other Internet radios are Royce has ambitions to produce them sold under less familiar brands. Whether to migrate one’s listening at a rate of up to ten power plants a pleasures entirely to downloads is a year based on small, pressurised water reactors, and has submitted plans to matter of personal taste. Most music is now streamed online, but many of regulators for its 470MW design, accordus still enjoy the tactile experience of ing to World Nuclear News. Two sites Practical Electronics | February | 2022 11 The JBL GO 2 is a compact but punchy waterproof Bluetooth speaker for streaming audio wirelessly. For audio enthusiasts, the Brennan B2 plays and rips CDs onto built-in storage, plays Internet radio and drives Sonos speakers directly. Check the website closely for the full specifications. in north Wales have been earmarked as possible locations for Rolls-Royce SMRs, and a Memorandum of Understanding was recently signed with Sheffield Forgemasters to fabricate precision castings for them. Rolls-Royce faces stiff competition in the global SMR market. America’s NuScale Power is backed by multinational engineering giant Fluor, and has already gained approval for its own scalable SMR power plants in the US, claiming to be the first company in America to do so following lengthy pilot trials dating back as far as 2003. NuScale’s 77MW ‘VOYGR’ power modules will be factory-built and can be shipped by road for final assembly onsite. Multiple modules can be strapped together to build larger capacity: a VOYGR-12 will generate over 900MW of electricity, they say. The first completed VOYGR plant is expected by the end of the decade, and NuScale has also been an eager participant in the UK’s SMR plans since 2013. Possibly with current geopolitics in mind, the US Department of Energy is collaborating with the Ukrainian government to fund a ‘safety analysis report’ that would be ‘available to any utility [company] in Ukraine pursuing US SMR technology’. This would undoubtedly pave the way for the adoption of American SMR power plant in Ukraine; Romania is also signing up to a 6-module NuScale SMR, following a feasibility grant paid by the US Trade and Development Agency, says World Nuclear News. Two years earlier, GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy announced collaboration with Poland to manufacture a cost-effective 300MW SMR for the Polish market. More recently, the same SMR was ordered by Ontario Power Generation for completion by the end of the decade as Canada moves towards a fossil-free ‘clean fuel’ future. There’s more: America’s Holtec International has teamed up with South Korea’s Hyundai to produce a 160MW SMR for installation in the US and then worldwide. The direction of travel away from fossil fuels is clear, but it will likely be the end of the decade before SMRs come on stream, doubtless leaving existing gas and electricity supplies under greater pressure until then. The roll-out of Britain’s wind power programme continues as GE signed off last month the ‘financials’ for the third tranche (Phase ‘C’) of the Dogger Bank Wind Farm sited off the east coast of England. They claim Dogger Bank will be the world’s largest offshore wind farm, and Phase ‘C’ will use 87 uprated 14MW Haliade-X wind turbines, the largest currently available, making 277 turbines in total. The UK Government is also investing another £20m in tidal stream projects, with some developments aimed at the Welsh coastline. Unlike wind power, tidal energy is predictable and consistent. UK Government 1455F extruded flanged enclosures T-shaped pylons in Cambridge Science Park. (Image: Google Street View) reports state that £285m is being invested annually in this form of marine technology across the UK. Another Model T (pylon) In last December’s issue I mentioned a new T-shaped design of electricity pylon that is putting in a limited appearance in the UK. My thanks go to reader Andrew Parker of Cambridge, who writes: ‘I really enjoy reading your Net Work column every month, and I was particularly interested in your December article about the first new pylon design in Britain for more than 100 years. While they may claim to be the first redesign to be deployed in quantity, these new T-pylons in Somerset, England aren’t radically different to similar single-pole pylons erected nearly 40 years earlier, when the Cambridge Science Park was extended in the 1980s. ‘To enhance the site, a more elegant design was used for the short section where the electricity cables passed through the Science Park. Quite an impressive feat, and presumably very ! w ne Learn more: hammfg.com/1455f Contact us to request a free evaluation sample. uksales<at>hammfg.com • 01256 812812 12 Practical Electronics | February | 2022 costly, showing the power and influence of Trinity College – the landlord! I think they were replacements for the existing conventional pylons. These four Cambridge pylons can still be seen on the latest Google Street Views. They need a coat of paint! A picture of one of them is on the first page of a website dedicated entirely to photos of UK pylons, of all things, at: www.gorge.org/ pylons/envision.’ Andrew kindly sent a screenshot. The pylons are quite striking and it’s a shame that they are being allowed to decay. Other news At the time of writing, all eyes are on French Guiana as we await the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope, currently being installed on board an Ariane rocket for launch on 22 December. The space observatory is a joint venture between NASA, Europe’s ESA and Canada’s Space Agency, and it carries a 21-foot mirror made of 18 gold-plated hexagonal segments. It will gradually supplant Hubble as the West’s key space observatory. More information about the instruments it carries can be found at: https://bit.ly/ pe-feb22-obs and space fans can see details of various JWST deployments at: https://bit.ly/pe-feb22-webb Satcomms firm OneWeb is aiming to relocate its satellite production from Florida to the UK (see Net Work, May 2019). Partnered with manufacturer Airbus, OneWeb’s second-generation satellites are expected to roll out from the middle of the decade. Satellites are mostly launched from cosmodromes in Russia or Kazakhstan. Rolls-Royce has made what it claims is the world’s fastest flight in an all-electric plane (dubbed The Spirit of Innovation – see December issue). It’s emerged that the airframe was an off-the-shelf kit – the Nemesis NXT racing plane, which Rolls-Royce chose, sensibly enough, as a testbed for its electric propulsion technology. More at: www.nemesisnxt.com/kit/index.php In the UK, the dilatory roll-out of electric vehicle charging points lags well behind the uptake of EVs among consumers. Britain’s Society of Motor Manufacturers (SMMT) says one in five new cars sold in November was an EV, and in fact I can’t remember when I last saw a TV advert for a petrol or diesel car. New British homes, supermarkets and workplaces, as well as any undergoing major renovation, will be forced to install EV vehicle charging points from 2022, forthcoming Government regulations will state. That is all well and good for urbanites living in new homes or shopping in new supermarkets, but Good news for the UK’s successful satellite industry – OneWeb is aiming to relocate production to the UK, in partnership with Airbus. Practical Electronics | February | 2022 13 those of us living in rural areas – places where a diesel 4x4 is often essential transport – face great practical challenges. I doubt EVs will fare well in typical wintry storms or countryside snow or mud. The National Farmers Union (NFU) hopes to work with InstaVolt to build a network of charging points on private land or at farm shops. Judging by the PR, the deal struck with NFU Energy seems to be as much about helping farmers and landowners cash in by offering a charging service, as it is about encouraging rural motorists to somehow adopt EVs. Car breakdown service Britannia Rescue says that 37% of callouts for EVs were due to wheel and tyre problems – blaming the [up to] 50% extra weight EVs carry due to their battery packs. This is twice the call-out rate of petrol/diesel cars having wheel problems. Interestingly, EVs were also three times more likely to break down because of wheel and tyre problems rather than their batteries going flat, Britannia Rescue said. Planet of the Apes Elon Musk, of SpaceX, Tesla and PayPal fame, is not only into space-based broadband or electric cars: in between times his Neuralink technology company is addressing the thorny topic of interfacing technology directly with the brain. I struggle for words when it comes to describing the implantation of chips directly into one’s brain, so I will offer the Neuralink YouTube video of a cheerful monkey happily playing Pong at: https://youtu.be/rsCul1sp4hQ instead. Neuralink hopes its technology will initially help those with spinal cord injuries. Amazon Fresh has expanded its UK bricks-and-mortar real estate with two more ‘Just Walk Out’ stores in London, making ten in all (see Net Work, May 2021). UK supermarket giant Sainsbury’s has also opened its own ‘Smartshop Pick & Go’ till-free store in Holborn Circus, London. The store is Amazon’s first partner internationally to utilise Amazon’s own Just Walk Out systems. The Smartshop app is needed on a smartphone, a QR code is scanned on entry and then payments are charged to the linked payment card on exit. A ‘till receipt’ is emailed afterwards. Finally, this month, onto the Net Work naughty step goes Google, after the author’s Home Hub (now called Nest Hub) LCD display locked up without warning. Readers will know that I opted for Google Mini smart speakers (I have three dotted around) plus a desktop Home Hub LCD screen, but several months ago the LCD screen suddenly froze solid. Many hours were wasted rebooting, reinstalling and reconfiguring it on the Google Home app, all to no avail. Online forums highlight other Home Hub users having the same problem, with lock-ups of these first-generation screens being blamed on a firmware or system upgrade gone wrong. It’s unacceptable for new-ish and perfectly workable products to be ‘bricked’ this way through no fault of the owner. Attempts to reach technical support go unanswered, and Google’s PR has yet to respond after I contacted them. It’s no surprise that the global total of electronic waste has reached 57 million tonnes this year, according to the WEEE Forum, and it looks like my perfectly good bit of hardware will join it. Instead of buying another, I’ll use Google Chrome on a PC and my webcam’s microphone. Last, a reminder that all links will be ready-made for you in the blog on our website, so do check: www.electronpublishing.com Join me next month for another tasty serving of Net Work! The author can be reached at: alan<at>epemag.net