Silicon ChipAUDIO OUT - March 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: How resilient is your lifeline? by Mark Nelson
  8. Feature: Net Work by Alan Winstanley
  9. Project: Mini Isolated Serial Link by Tim Blythman
  10. Feature: I’m busy. Go away! by John Chappell
  11. Project: Battery Monitor Logger by TIM BLYTHMAN
  12. Project: ELECTRONIC Wind Chimes by John Clarke
  13. Project: Geekcreit LCR-T4 Mini Digital Multi-Tester by Jim Rowe
  14. Feature: Max’s Cool Beans by Max the Magnificent
  15. Feature: AUDIO OUT by Jake Rothman
  16. Feature: Circuit Surgery by Ian Bell
  17. Feature: Make it with Micromite by Phil Boyce
  18. Feature: Electronic Building Blocks
  19. PCB Order Form
  20. Advertising Index

This is only a preview of the March 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)
AUDIO OUT AUDIO OUT L R By Jake Rothman Analogue Vocoder – Part 5: Building the filters also a single card containing a high-pass channel and a low-pass channel called the ‘HP/LP board’. These all plug into a bus board with common busses for power, two audio inputs and the two audio summing lines. These boards are unique to the Analogue Vocoder, they’re not generic audio boards like the previous mic pre-amp and driver boards. This assembly is shown in Fig.1. Jelly bean circuits Fig.1. The heart of the vocoder with six band-pass filter cards and a high-pass/lowpass card. All plugged into the bus board. (No letters from lexicographical pedants please. It can be ‘bus’ or ‘buss’! However, it’s always ‘busses’.) TP2A TP+ TP2B TP- IC5 TPG TP1B TP1A C5 C4 TP5B C2 C13 Card position: TP4B C12 TP4A C7 TP3A TP5A C10 C11 TP3B parts together and soldering-up will take a long time, so you really need to pay attention! There are six band-pass cards, each containing two channels. There is POT1 nitty-gritty of the project – the filter cards, which are the heart of the Analogue Vocoder. Getting all the many POT2 T his month, we get to the real The full circuit of a band-pass card is shown in Fig.2. Take care with the dual-channel annotation. Luckily, it’s just a large number of ‘Jellybean’ parts, no weird expensive components. Note there are a few improvements (differences!) compared to the previous channel circuit given in the December 2021 issue. First, R24 should be 180Ω and the decoupling capacitors C14, C15 and C16 have been re-numbered in a different order. Ceramic rail-to-rail decoupling capacitor C16 has become C30 because I had to move it to the other end of the board where the NE5532 output chips were. This was necessary because 5532s are fussier about supply decoupling than TL082s. And another minor detail, the buffer around IC3a got its input pins mixed up – Fig.2 here is the correct version. IC3 IC1 Right out Vox in +ve Synth in Left out -ve Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd C1 C17 C15 C6 C27 C8 C3 IC C21 C18 C22 C29 IC9 C28 C25 C26 Filter frequency: T2 C19 IC6 C20 D4 C23 IC Fig.3. Band-pass filter card overlay showing common components highlighted in red. (PCB design by Mike Grindle) 46 04/01/2022 12:08 f=3.65 /Users/mg/Documents/PCBs/Jake/Vocoder/Bandpass/Bandpass.brd Practical Electronics | March | 2022 Fig.2. Full circuit of the band-pass PCB. Note this contains two complete channels. Identical parts across all six boards labelled in red. V + 1 5 V 1 0 µF 2 5 V 0 V 0 V 1 0 µF 2 5 V 1 0 1 4 1 8 1 9 2 S p e e c h in T P 1 A F ilte r o u tp u t D 1 1 N 4 1 4 8 R 7 100Ω – R 2 1 IC 1 a T L 0 8 2 3 C 3 R 4 6 + – R 9 100kΩ 5 R 5 R 8 100kΩ C 5 7 IC 1 b T L 0 8 2 R ig h t o u t 2 0 R 6 C 1 S y n th in 1 6 1 7 V – 1 5 V L e ft o u t 1 2 1 5 R 3 In p u t s p e e c h P le a s e n o te th a t th e r e is n o C 1 6 in th is c ir c u it 8 1 1 1 3 C 4 R 1 6 4 9 C 3 0 4 7 0 n F C 2 n 2 5 3 7 +C 1 5 R 3 5 33Ω 1 0 V +C 1 4 R 3 4 33Ω + 2 – 3 R 1 0 200kΩ V R 1 1MΩ D 2 1 N 4 1 4 8 C o n tro l o u tp u t V C A b ia s V + R 1 3 2.2MΩ R 1 4 100Ω C 6 V – R 1 2 47kΩ R 1 1 100kΩ 6 1 IC 2 a T L 0 8 2 T P 2 A – 5 + 7 IC 2 b T L 0 8 2 + 0 V 0 V C 7 R 1 5 6 R 1 6 C 8 0 V 3 + 2 IC 3 a T –L 0 8 2 1 In p u t s y n th 0 V + C 1 0 2 R 2 5 12kΩ ( o p tio n a l) R 2 3 22kΩ + R 2 0 R 1 8 10kΩ 1 1 4 R 2 4 180Ω R 3 6 100Ω + 2 1 R 2 8 12kΩ 3 7 6 0 V R 4 5 100kΩ R 4 2 C 1 7 2 3 – R 3 8 R 4 0 1 IC 6 a T L 0 8 2 C 1 9 6 + – 5 R 4 1 C 2 1 7 IC 6 b T L 0 8 2 R 4 4 100kΩ + 2 3 R 4 6 200kΩ V R 2 1MΩ D 5 1 N 4 1 4 8 – V C A b ia s V + D 4 1 N 4 1 4 8 R 4 3 100Ω R 3 9 R 3 3 2.2kΩ ( O m itte d fo r s te re o ) R 3 0 560Ω F ilte r o u tp u t C 2 0 7 IC 5 b 5 5 3 2 + V – T P 1 B O u tp u t r ig h t R 2 7 4.7kΩ R 2 6 10kΩ C 1 8 R 3 2 2.2kΩ – 5 8 6 0 V In p u t s p e e c h C 1 2 R 2 9 IC 4 a L M 1 3 7 0 0 5 T P 3 A O u tp u t le ft C 1 3 R 3 1 R 2 2 R 3 7 R 7 2 100Ω R 7 1 100Ω – 1 IC 5 a 5 5 3 2 3 T P 4 A V + – T P 5 A T R 1 B C 5 5 9 C C 1 1 R 2 1 R 1 9 7 IC 3 b T L 0 8 2 5 R 1 7 3.3kΩ D 3 1 N 4 1 4 8 C 9 2 2 n F – T P 2 B C 2 7 R 5 0 100Ω R 4 9 2.2MΩ R 4 8 47kΩ V – R 4 7 100kΩ 6 1 IC 7 a T L 0 8 2 C o n tro l o u tp u t – 5 + 0 V IC 7 b T L 0 8 2 7 + 0 V C 2 2 R 5 1 6 R 5 2 C 2 3 0 V 3 + 2 IC 8 a T –L 0 8 2 In p u t s y n th C 2 5 2 3 – R 5 6 IC 9 a 5 5 3 2 + 5 R 5 3 3.3kΩ D 6 1 N 4 1 4 8 7 IC 8 b T L 0 8 2 0 V + T R 2 B C 5 5 9 C R 6 2 12kΩ ( o p tio n a l) 1 1 R 6 0 22kΩ R 5 4 10kΩ R 6 1 180Ω – 0 V Practical Electronics | March | 2022 6 R 7 4 100Ω R 6 7 1 6 1 2 1 3 C 2 9 R 6 5 12kΩ C 2 8 1 0 R 6 3 10kΩ 6 – 5 R 6 6 IC 4 b L M 1 3 7 0 0 1 5 R 5 8 T P 3 B R 7 3 100Ω + 1 4 1 R 5 9 100Ω T P 5 B T P 4 B V + C 2 6 R 5 7 R 5 5 1 C 2 4 2 2 n F – IC 9 b 5 5 3 2 + 7 O u tp u t le ft R 6 8 2.2kΩ ( O m itte d fo r s te re o ) R 6 9 2.2kΩ O u tp u t r ig h t R 7 0 560Ω 9 R 6 4 4.7kΩ V – 0 V 47 Fig.4. Photo of band-pass board showing common components inserted. Note the white 3.9nF capacitors are the filter capacitors. Note the white silkscreen label areas. design by Richard Becker (ETI, September 1980). When I realised it wasn’t necessary it seemed silly not to do the mod. The second major change is that I’ve phase reversed every other channel by flipping the inverting and non-inverting pins on the transconductance op amp IC4b. This gives less phase cancellation in the frequency response overlap regions of the filters. When mixed together in mono a clearer sound is produced. Normally, an extra inverting op amp stage is used to do this, such as in the vocoder Getting stuffed On all seven filter boards (HP/LP and bandpass) the VCA and full-wave rectifier components are identical in all the filter channels, so when populating the boards it’s best to fit these first, as listed Band-pass channel and frequency R2, 5, 20, 29 R1, 19 R3, 21, 22 R38, 41, 56, 66 R37, 55 R39, 57, 58 Ch (kΩ) (kΩ) (kΩ) Freq (Hz) C1, 2, 3, 4, 10, 11, 12, 13 C17, 18, 19, 20, 25, 26, 28, 29 (nF) immediately below. The overlay for common components is shown in Fig.3 with a photo in Fig.4. I do a run like this of six band-pass boards. The HP/LP board also has these components. Then I add the eight main filter capacitors to the band-pass boards, where there are four values covering all the frequencies. Most are 33nF. Finally, the remaining components are installed which are unique to each filter frequency and the HP/LP board. These component values are given in Table 1. Mike Grindle, my PCB man, had the great idea of placing white areas on the silk screen for writing the frequencies. You must label the boards before building! Components – bandpass The following parts are common to all six bandpass boards. Frequency-specific parts for the bandpass boards are not listed, but are given in Table 1. (The parts in Table 1 are 1% 0.25W metal film resistors, and 5% (preferred) or 10% 5mm plastic film capacitors.) R4 R6, 31 C5 C6 C7 C8 R15, 16 R40 R42, R67 C21 C27 C22 C23 R51, R52 (kΩ) (kΩ) (nF) (nF) (nF) (nF) (kΩ) 1 86 / 125 0 .2 2 1 .6 5 6 3 3 0 1 2 6 8 1 0 0 3 3 0 1 0 0 2 2 3 9 0 2 135 / 60 1 .5 1 5 3 9 0 3 3 7 5 4 7 0 6 8 2 2 0 6 8 1 5 3 9 0 3 190 / 230 1 .0 1 3 2 7 0 3 3 5 6 3 3 0 4 7 1 5 0 4 7 1 0 3 9 0 4 280 / 340 0 .6 8 5 .1 1 8 0 3 3 3 9 2 2 0 3 3 1 0 0 3 3 0 6 8 8 2 5 420 / 500 0 .4 7 3 .6 1 2 0 3 3 2 7 1 5 0 2 2 8 2 2 2 0 4 7 8 2 6 580 / 720 0 .3 3 2 .4 8 2 3 3 1 8 1 0 0 1 5 5 6 1 5 0 3 3 8 2 7 860 / 1250 0 .2 7 1 .6 5 6 3 3 1 2 6 8 1 0 3 9 1 0 0 2 2 8 2 8 1350 / 1600 0 .1 5 1 .1 3 9 3 3 8 .2 4 7 6 .8 2 2 6 8 1 5 8 2 9 1900 / 2300 1 .0 7 .5 2 7 0 3 .9 5 6 3 3 0 4 .7 1 8 4 7 1 0 8 2 10 2800 / 3400 0 .6 8 5 .1 1 8 0 3 .9 3 9 2 2 0 3 .3 1 2 3 3 6 .8 8 2 11 4200 / 5000 0 .4 7 3 .6 1 2 0 3 .9 2 7 1 5 0 2 .2 8 .2 2 2 4 .7 8 2 12 5800 / 7200 0 .3 3 2 .4 8 2 4 .7 1 8 1 0 0 1 .5 5 .6 1 5 3 .3 8 2 Table 1. Frequency-specific components for band-pass filters. TP2A TP+ TP2B TP- IC3 IC1 C3 C15 D2 IC2 D1 D3 C8 C9 T1 Filter frequency: C21 C18 C22 C28 C14 IC4 C30 IC9 TP1B TP1A 5 C4 3 C2 3 C1 IC5 TPG POT1 POT2 TP5B C6 C13 Card position: TP4B C12 TP4A C7 TP3A TP5A 10 11 TP3B Right out Vox in +ve Synth in Left out -ve Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd T2 IC6 C20 C27 D5 D4 D6 IC7 C24 C23 IC8 Fig.5. Overlay of band-pass board, frequency-specific parts highlighted – green odd channels, blue for even. (PCB design by Mike Grindle) 48 04/01/2022 12:08 f=3.65 /Users/mg/Documents/PCBs/Jake/Vocoder/Bandpass/Bandpass.brd Practical Electronics | March | 2022 Also, 7 off female straight 10+10 pin double row header sockets for the bus board are required. Rapid part no. 22-5140. Manufacturer, Oupiin 2044-2*10G00SA. Tayda alternative 1690. Freaky filter values The filter frequencies for each channel are different, so most of the components associated with these have different values. Be careful here to avoid errors, which can be difficult to detect unless you can measure frequency response. Because the vocoder Fig.6. Completed band-pass board (note that since this prototype was made, a couple is effectively a parallel processor, it can work deceptively well with a few filter of capacitors have been repositioned). channels missing so it can be difficult to The quantities listed are for one bandpass board – you need detect errors by listening. These filter values comprised one to multiply quantities by the number of boards used, normally of the most tedious component lists I’ve ever typed, so I had six. All parts available from author (see AOShop ad on page 53). to resort to a spreadsheet, as shown in Table 1. You can download the table from the March 2022 page of the PE website. Semiconductors The next construction stage is to put in the filter components IC1-IC3, IC6-IC8 TL082 JFET input dual op amp or shown in the overlay in Fig.5 (it’s quite crowded, but you can equivalent (eg LF353 or TL072) download it and Fig.8 to view/print them magnified from the March IC4 LM13700 dual transconductance 2022 page of the PE website). Fig.6 shows a completed board. op amp IC5, IC9 NE5532 low-noise dual op amp or High-pass / low-pass board equivalent, such as LM833 The common components and circuitry is the same as the TR1, TR2 BC559C small-signal PNP (can be band-pass channels, but the topology of the high-pass and any general-purpose centre-base low-pass filters is different, it’s composed of standard caspin-out – eg, BC212) caded Sallen and Key second-order sections, rather than D1-D6 1N4148 multiple-feedback band-pass. The circuit for the LP/HP board is shown in Fig.7. the overlay in Fig.8 and a photo of Resistors the completed board in Fig.9. All 1% 0.25W metal-film R8, R9, R11, R19 R10, R46 R7, R14, R36, R43, R50, R59, R71-R74 R13, R49 R12, R48 R17, R53 R18, R54 R23, R60 R24, R61 R26, R63 R25, R28, R62, R65 R30, R70 R34, R35 R32, R33, R68, R69 VR1 and VR2 Capacitors C9, C24 C14, C15 C30 Miscellaneous Terminal pins IC sockets PCB plug 100kΩ 200kΩ 100Ω 2.2MΩ 47kΩ 3.3kΩ 10kΩ 22kΩ 180Ω 10kΩ 12kΩ (R25 and R62 not normally used), R24 and R65 have to be reduced to compensate. 560Ω 33Ω 2.2kΩ (see Stereo panning below, 4.7kΩ for mono channels) 1MΩ Side adjust/vertical trimmer 0.1-inch or TO5 spacing. 22nF 20% 5mm ceramic/plastic film 10µF 25V tantalum bead or radial electrolytic 470nF 20% X7R ceramic 0.1-inch single-sided 8 off. 8-pin DIL 8 off. male right-angle header 10+10 rows, Rapid part no. 22-0815, TruConnect. (Alternative: Tayda part no. 3420) Practical Electronics | March | 2022 Component list for HP/LP board Semiconductors IC1-IC3, IC6-IC8 IC4 IC5, IC9 TR1, TR2 D1-D3 TL082 JFET input dual op amp or equivalent (eg LF353 or TL072) LM13700 dual transconductance op amp NE5532 low-noise dual op amp or equivalent, such as LM833 BC559 small-signal PNP (can be any general-purpose centre-base pin-out – eg, BC212) 1N4148 Capacitors All are 5mm plastic-film 5% (preferred) or 10%, unless indicated with a ‘*’. C1, C8, C9, C13 470nF C8, C27 47nF C2, C3, C5, C6, C14, C15, C17, C18, C29 15nF (9 off) C10 150nF C11 33nF C12, C20, C31, C32 22nF 20% ceramic or plastic-film* C30 3.3nF C21, C22, C24, C25, C28, C33, C34, C36, C37 2.2nF (9 off) C23, C26, C35, C38 27pF ceramic C39, C40 10µF 25V tantalum or electrolytic* C41 470nF 20% ceramic X7R* 49 V + 1 5 V Fig.7. Circuit of the highpass/low-pass board. 1 0 µF 2 5 V 0 V C 1 4 7 0 n F R 2 180kΩ 0 V 1 0 µF 2 5 V C 2 1 5 n F R 1 22kΩ 3 + 2 IC 1 a T –L 0 8 2 R 6 180kΩ 1 1 0 1 4 1 8 1 9 S p e e c h in T P 1 A + IC 1 b T–L 0 8 2 6 R 5 27kΩ 7 R ig h t o u t 2 0 F ilte r o u tp u t C 8 4 7 n F R 1 2 100kΩ R 1 1 100kΩ 2 3 R 1 3 200kΩ R 9 62kΩ R 8 39kΩ D 2 1 N 4 1 4 8 – C o n tro l o u tp u t T P 2 A V R 1 1MΩ C 9 R 1 5 2.2MΩ 4 7 0 n F R 1 7 100Ω V – R 1 6 100kΩ V C A b ia s V + D 1 1 N 4 1 4 8 R 1 0 100Ω 5 S y n th in 1 6 1 7 R 7 180kΩ L e ft o u t 1 2 1 3 1 5 C 5 1 5 n F R 4 39kΩ P le a s e n o te th a t th e r e a re n o C 4 , C 7 , C 1 6 a n d C 1 9 in th is c ir c u it 8 1 1 C 6 1 5 n F C 3 1 5 n F R 3 180kΩ 6 4 9 C 4 1 4 7 0 n F V – 1 5 V In p u t s p e e c h 2 5 3 7 +C 4 0 R 8 2 33Ω 1 0 V +C 3 9 R 8 1 33Ω R 1 4 100kΩ 6 1 IC 2 a T L 0 8 2 – + 7 IC 2 b T L 0 8 2 5 + 0 V 0 V C 1 0 1 5 0 n F R 1 8 390kΩ R 1 9 390kΩ 6 2 C 1 1 3 3 n F – 3 7 IC 3 b T L 0 8 2 5 1 IC 3 a T L 0 8 2 T R 1 B C 5 5 9 C 0 V R 3 0 12kΩ ( o p tio n a l) In p u t s y n th C 1 3 4 7 0 n F R 2 3 180kΩ R 2 4 180kΩ C 1 4 1 5 n F R 2 2 1MΩ T P 4 A R 2 8 22kΩ 3 + 2 5 5 3 2 – 4 R 2 9 180Ω R 2 7 100Ω R 2 6 R 2 5 27kΩ 39kΩ 1 1 1 + 2 3 T P 3 A IC 4 a L M 1 3 7 0 0 7 R 4 3 5.1kΩ C 2 1 2 .2 n F C 2 2 2 .2 n F R 4 1 100kΩ C 2 4 2 .2 n F + 3 – R 4 5 27kΩ R 4 4 39kΩ C 2 5 2 .2 n F R 4 6 9.1kΩ C 2 3 2 7 p F T P 1 B + 6 IC 6 b T L 0 8 2 – R 5 9 68kΩ 6 2 C 3 0 3 .3 n F 3 – IC 8 a T L 0 8 2 1 – 5 + C 3 3 2 .2 n F R 6 2 10kΩ C 3 4 2 .2 n F R 6 4 5.1kΩ 3 + C 3 1 2 2 n F 2 R 6 3 5.1kΩ R 6 5 3.9kΩ 0 V 50 IC 9 a 5 –5 3 2 R 6 6 2.7kΩ C 3 5 2 7 p F R 6 9 180Ω R 6 7 100Ω T P 3 B – 3 V R 2 1MΩ D 5 1 N 4 1 4 8 IC 7 a T L 0 8 2 C o n tro l o u tp u t T P 2 B C 2 8 R 5 5 2 .2 n F 2.2MΩ R 5 7 100Ω V C A b ia s V + R 5 6 100kΩ V – R 5 4 100kΩ 6 1 – IC 7 b T L 0 8 2 5 + R 6 0 3.3kΩ 0 V + T R 2 B C 5 5 9 C 1 3 T P 5 B T P 4 B R 6 1 10kΩ V + 1 1 R 7 8 100Ω R 7 3 R 7 5 9.1kΩ C 3 6 2 .2 n F 1 6 – + 1 5 6 C 3 7 2 .2 n F R 7 4 9.1kΩ IC 4 a /(b )* * L M 1 3 7 0 0 1 2 1 4 7 + 0 V 7 R 7 0 12kΩ ( o p tio n a l) 1 2 R 5 3 200kΩ D 6 1 N 4 1 4 8 IC 8 b T L 0 8 2 R 6 8 22kΩ R 5 1 100kΩ C 2 6 2 7 p F 0 V In p u t s y n th C 2 7 4 7 n F R 4 9 62kΩ 0 V R 5 8 68kΩ R 5 2 100kΩ O u tp u t r ig h t 0 V D 4 1 N 4 1 4 8 7 R 4 8 39kΩ C 2 9 1 5 n F F ilte r o u tp u t R 5 0 100Ω 5 1 IC 6 a T L 0 8 2 2 R 4 2 5.1kΩ R 4 7 9.1kΩ R 4 0 2.2kΩ R 3 7 R 3 6 6.2kΩ 3.9kΩ R 3 2 4.7kΩ R 3 1 10kΩ 7 IC 5 b 5 –5 3 2 6 8 6 R 3 9 2.2kΩ + 5 V – In p u t s p e e c h C 3 2 2 2 n F R 3 5 180kΩ C 1 7 1 5 n F 5 O u tp u t le ft C 1 8 1 5 n F R 3 4 180kΩ 0 V C 2 0 2 2 n F R 3 3 100Ω – 1 IC 5 a R 3 8 100Ω R 2 1 10kΩ V + C 1 5 1 5 n F T P 5 A 0 V + + R 2 0 3.3kΩ D 3 1 N 4 1 4 8 C 1 2 2 2 n F – 1 0 R 7 1 10kΩ O u tp u t le ft + 5 6 IC 9 b 5 5 3 2 – 7 R 7 7 6.2kΩ R 7 9 2.2kΩ R 8 0 2.2kΩ O u tp u t r ig h t 9 R 7 2 4.7kΩ V – C 3 8 2 7 p F R 7 6 3.9kΩ 0 V Practical Electronics | March | 2022 C25 C27 C24 C26 IC9 C29 C37 C33 C32 C23 C38 C34 C39 IC4 C41 C6 C2 C1 C40 D2 D1 D3 C12 IC1 IC2 Filter frequency: C16 C8 C5 IC3 C11 C17 C7 C3 3 T1 C14 TP1B TP1A C4 C9 IC5 3 C10 C18 C15 C13 LP/HP TP2A TP- POT1 TP+ TP2B TP5A TP4A TPG TP4B TP5B C19 POT2 TP3B TP3A Right out Vox in +ve Synth in Left out -ve Gnd Gnd Gnd Gnd C36 T2 C21 C20 IC6 C22 C28 D5 D4 D6 IC7 C31 C30 C35 IC8 Fig.8. Component overlay of HP/LP board. (PCB design by Mike Grindle) Resistors All 0.25W 1% metal-film R1, R22 1MΩ R2, R3, R6, R7, R23, R24, R34, R35 ( 8 o f f ) 180kΩ R4, R8, R25, R44, R48 39kΩ R5, R26, R45 27kΩ R9, R49 62kΩ R10, R17, R27, R33, R38, R50, R57, R67, R73, R78 ( 1 0 o f f ) 100Ω R11, R12, R14, R16, R51, R52, R54, R56, R41 100kΩ R13, R53 200kΩ R15, R55 2.2MΩ R18, R19 390kΩ R20, R60 3.3kΩ R30, R70 (not usually used) 12kΩ R21, R31, R61, R62, R63, R71 10kΩ R32, R72 4.7kΩ R28, R68 22kΩ R29, R69 180Ω R36, R65, R76 3.9kΩ R37, R77 6.2kΩ R39, R40, R79, R80 2.2kΩ R42, R43, R63, R64 5.1kΩ R46, R47, R74, R75 9.1kΩ R58, R59 68kΩ R66 2.7kΩ 04/01/2022 12:09 f=3.64 /Users/mg/Documents/PCBs/Jake/Vocoder/HP LP/HP LP.brd Ω VR1 and VR2 1MΩ side-adjust/vertical trimmer 0.1-inch or TO5 spacing. Tuning for smoke The power-rail decoupling resistors (R34/R35, R81/R82) also provide protection and confine shorts to the card. Since there is a possibility of inadvertent short circuits during testing, these resistors should be mounted a few millimetres above the board (Fig.10). Burnt resistors cost a penny, a burnt PCB a lot more! On one PCB a small ball of solder got lodged between two pins under IC2’s turned-pin chip socket connecting the negative rail to ground, (pin 3 to 4) and it took ages to find. It was the first time I’ve seen it (Fig.11). Stereo panning On the band-pass boards, two summing resistors for the left (R32 and R68) and right (R33 and R69) mix busses are provided for each filter channel. Normally only R32 and R69 are inserted. This flips the channels alternately to left and right mixing busses as shown in Fig.12. However, for the mono Fig.9. Completed HP/LP board. Note this was an earlier version with a few extra component positions for experimental purposes. All the boards supplied by PE will exactly conform to the overlays. Practical Electronics | March | 2022 channels (the HP/LP board and both the channels on the lowest-frequency bandpass board), all four resistors are inserted. (For the HP/LP board these resistors are R39, R40, and R79 , R80). Fig.10. The power supply decoupling resistors R34 and R35 should be mounted off the board in case they get hot under fault conditions. Fig.11. Short circuits can occur in the oddest places. This is a reconstruction of what occurred on one of my boards. In reality, it was worse, the solder ball was behind the pins so couldn’t be seen and a Model 1000 Tracer had to be used to find it. 51 Fig.12. (above) To get a stereo effect, channels are panned alternately left and right by omitting resistors R33 and R68. Fig.13. (Right) For mono channels, all four resistors are inserted and their value increased to 4.3kΩ. In mono, to keep the relative levels the same on the band-pass board, the summing resistors are increased from 2.2kΩ to 4.3kΩ as implemented in Fig.13. Note that because the low-pass and high-pass filters have lower gain relative to the band-pass filters, their resistors are kept at 2.2kΩ. Bus board All the filter cards are plugged into a bus board, which is similar to a sophisticated Veroboard where the tracks don’t come off. This is shown in Fig.14. Note how the connectors are double pin to reduce contact resistance and give increased mechanical stability (Fig.15). Extra connectors are also placed on this board to feed in the power and connect to the drive amplifier and mixer boards described last month. There are also additional pins to the summing busses for feeding in dry signals from the microphone and synthesiser if required. Testing 1-2-3 As with all electronics, test in minimum-sized sections; get one channel card working at a time. If you connect the whole lot in one go, it’s guaranteed not to work. First, do a basic visual check that all the polarised components such as the op amps are in the right way. Then, apply power to check for heating of R34 and R35 caused by excess current. Follow this with checks for DC offsets on the op amp test pins (TP1A/B) along the top of the board. 100Ω resistors are connected in series with the pins to stop oscillation when long test leads are connected. Now you’re ready for the audio signal tests next month. Trimming Pricier vocoders (such as the Richard Becker design mentioned above) have typically five preset adjustments per channel. I reduced these to the absolute minimum of one for the VCA control voltage offset on each channel. VR1 and VR2 are trimmed to the point where the carrier signal (usually a string sound) is just backed off from breaking through. This point gives optimum linearity for best speech intelligibility. The band-pass filters’ Q can vary a lot with capacitor tolerances, since the multiple feedback band-pass filter equation assumes the two frequency determining capacitors are exactly equal. If cheap 10% types are used it is possible for their values to be up to 20% apart. When this happens, the resulting gain on individual channels can occasionally peak up excessively. If any frequencies dominate the output mix, the values of the filters’ input resistors R1 and 19 or R37 and R55 can be increased. The levels here can be checked on test points TP1A and TP1B. If you want to add extra presets this is one area where it could be beneficial. Alternatively, one could use close-tolerance polystyrene capacitors. Fig.14. The bus board – note a few summing resistors have been added to allow for auxiliary inputs. 52 However, they may be difficult to mount on the boards vertically since they are often only available in axial form. An example is shown in Fig.16. Next month In the next article we’ll cover the final construction and testing. Also, I’ll present a triple-rail ultra-low-noise power supply suitable for the Vocoder and other audio systems, such as mixers, that use many op amps and/or require phantom power. Fig.15. Connector plugs are doubled up to improve mechanical rigidity. Eight pins are used on the 0V rail for low impedance. Fig.16. There is just about enough room to use 1% polystyrene capacitors for the filters, if you can get them. These Philips 424 series were excellent audio filter capacitors, but because the foil material was the neurotoxic metal lead, they were banned. Practical Electronics | March | 2022