Electricity Primer: Difference between revisions
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==Introduction== | |||
This primer will help you power your Phidgets while being safe to the electronics. | |||
Basics | |||
* Your circuit is a collection of garden hoses | |||
** Voltage is pressure | |||
** Amperage is the amount of water | |||
* Interference can be created and absorbed by your circuit, both are undesirable | |||
** This interference is EM energy that travels through the air | |||
** It is especially produced by sudden changes | |||
*** Even common things do this such as plugging in a long extension cord with nothing on the other end | |||
**** The cord must equalize its electron balance with the wall | |||
**** The electron flow that makes this happen | |||
Picking a power supply | |||
* Over-voltage rating matters, this will probably kill your circuit | |||
** Similar to putting so much pressure within a garden hose it blows up | |||
* Over-amperage does not matter, the circuit can already control this | |||
** Similar to using a smaller nozzle on a garden hose - less flow | |||
* Under voltage or under amperage and your circuit will: | |||
** Just not turn on | |||
** Turn on and then realize demands are too high, then turn off | |||
** Turn on and off, trying to fill the demands and then protecting itself for a short time before trying again | |||
* Power supplies (even AC) have a set voltage, but that voltage is relative. | |||
** When a connection is first made, the board and supply settle their relative voltages. | |||
** This can generate a spark and feedback loop within the board | |||
*** The board will get hot and should be unplugged within the first few seconds to prevent permanent damage | |||
*** How to prevent? | |||
Shielding | Shielding | ||
* Hard to do right | * Hard to do right | ||
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***Use a USB isolator | ***Use a USB isolator | ||
***Use Ethernet for data rather than USB (or wireless), only for future Phidgets | ***Use Ethernet for data rather than USB (or wireless), only for future Phidgets | ||
* SBC complicates things...(three phidgets) | |||
Revision as of 18:12, 12 January 2012
Introduction
This primer will help you power your Phidgets while being safe to the electronics.
Basics
- Your circuit is a collection of garden hoses
- Voltage is pressure
- Amperage is the amount of water
- Interference can be created and absorbed by your circuit, both are undesirable
- This interference is EM energy that travels through the air
- It is especially produced by sudden changes
- Even common things do this such as plugging in a long extension cord with nothing on the other end
- The cord must equalize its electron balance with the wall
- The electron flow that makes this happen
- Even common things do this such as plugging in a long extension cord with nothing on the other end
Picking a power supply
- Over-voltage rating matters, this will probably kill your circuit
- Similar to putting so much pressure within a garden hose it blows up
- Over-amperage does not matter, the circuit can already control this
- Similar to using a smaller nozzle on a garden hose - less flow
- Under voltage or under amperage and your circuit will:
- Just not turn on
- Turn on and then realize demands are too high, then turn off
- Turn on and off, trying to fill the demands and then protecting itself for a short time before trying again
- Power supplies (even AC) have a set voltage, but that voltage is relative.
- When a connection is first made, the board and supply settle their relative voltages.
- This can generate a spark and feedback loop within the board
- The board will get hot and should be unplugged within the first few seconds to prevent permanent damage
- How to prevent?
Shielding
- Hard to do right
- Emissions hit shield and travel back to ground with resonance
Size of circuit
- Circuits are always loops, and loops will resonate like antennas at a frequency determined by their size
- The smaller the loop, the higher the frequency
- Higher frequencies have a smaller potential to interfere with circuit frequencies
- Keep hookup wires short
Multiple power sources
- USB is one source, wall and battery power is another
- With only one device, not really a problem
- With more than one device, you create a closed loop between the two devices and the power source
- Electrons can return via the grounds connecting both devices and the PC motherboard rather than just straight to wall or battery ground
- Solutions:
- Make the connections between all devices and battery or wall really desirable to electrons
- Low resistance
- Big fat wire
- As short a wire as possible
- Use a USB isolator
- Use Ethernet for data rather than USB (or wireless), only for future Phidgets
- Make the connections between all devices and battery or wall really desirable to electrons
- SBC complicates things...(three phidgets)