OK, my plan to get new Hammerhead PCBs got delayed a little. I had a new PCB layout ready to go, back in January, and home-etched one to test out... good thing, too, found a layout error. OK, fixed that.
But, I never liked the VCO audio I used, not enough frequency range, which is a fundamental limitation of using the 555. So, I decided to rip it out and do something different. I had hoped to use the VCO I designed for the fluxgate magnetometer, which worked quite well, and was roughly the same parts count.
But getting it to work with the PI second stage, is giving me fits. For one, probing the LM393 comparator doesn't give the signals I expect, at all. The inputs are clearly crossing, but the output doesn't budge. Yup, pullup installed, tried several chips, and all that. Also, I've picked up some new source of noise that's driving the PI crazy. Which makes working on it at the bench, a real pain.
Anyway, I'm open to suggestions on a good VCO audio stage. Would really like it if it fits in the current board space, and needs to use fairly standard chips. If I can't figure it out by the weekend, then the 555 goes back in.
- Carl
But, I never liked the VCO audio I used, not enough frequency range, which is a fundamental limitation of using the 555. So, I decided to rip it out and do something different. I had hoped to use the VCO I designed for the fluxgate magnetometer, which worked quite well, and was roughly the same parts count.
But getting it to work with the PI second stage, is giving me fits. For one, probing the LM393 comparator doesn't give the signals I expect, at all. The inputs are clearly crossing, but the output doesn't budge. Yup, pullup installed, tried several chips, and all that. Also, I've picked up some new source of noise that's driving the PI crazy. Which makes working on it at the bench, a real pain.
Anyway, I'm open to suggestions on a good VCO audio stage. Would really like it if it fits in the current board space, and needs to use fairly standard chips. If I can't figure it out by the weekend, then the 555 goes back in.
- Carl
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