[sdiy] Dual ground planes
Harry Bissell
harrybissell at wowway.com
Wed Aug 4 22:06:57 CEST 2010
I assume you are using this board material for the mounting of your PCB ?
Having one side of that board (preferably the one closest to your solder-side
traces, would reduce or prevent capacitive coupling from the next module. Copper
is good for capacitive shielding, but will not work for magnetic shielding.
I would ground that bracket to the chassis of the synth or take wires from there
to your power supply ground, rather that tie them to each independent circuit
common.
A steel bracket would be better still.
If you have a good component-side ground plane, that would help isolate modules
as well...
I like to have modules that totally do not interact with each other unless asked
(patched) to. Some folk like quirky interactions, that give "character"
One man's bugs are another man's features... :^)
H^) harry
----- Original Message -----
From: megaohm <megaohm1 at gmail.com>
To: Harry Bissell <harrybissell at wowway.com>
Cc: David Ingebretsen <dingebre at 3dphysics.net>, synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl
Sent: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 13:58:56 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Re: [sdiy] Dual ground planes
On Wed, Aug 4, 2010 at 11:13 AM, Harry Bissell <harrybissell at wowway.com> wrote:
> For boards mounted parallel to each other (like most right-
> angle mounted boards in modular racks) the ground plane could help a lot.
>
This very interesting. I had been under the impression that to get
effective shielding I would need to fully enclose the pcb in a metal
box/shield. But I guess that is just for specific types of
interference?
Presently, I have been using 3.5mm thick pcb material to mount my pcbs
on (right angle to the panel). I have gotten these made without any
copper because, in small quantities, the price is 1/2 without copper.
So I'm using it more for stability than anything else. But if using
copper on one side will help my future circuits be a little more
immune to interference I'll include it. Note that I haven't observed
any problems yet but my circuits so far have been fairly simple.
Also, my pcbs are close to one sided. I barely use the top copper so
the ground plane on top of the pcb is pretty much compete.
Would you suggest getting my pcb mount boards with a full side of copper?
If so, would this copper plane be connected to ground at the circuit
pcb, the panel, nowhere, or maybe in only one place? Should it be one
solid plane or is it OK to go nuts with funky artwork as long as it
covers the majority of the area?
I plan on ordering 100 of these mounting boards soon so the price
difference with or without a copper pour becomes less of an issue. If
it saves my ass with some design one day (or even helps a little bit)
I'd consider it a worthwhile expense.
Any advice appreciated.
Thanks,
Phil
--
Harry Bissell & Nora Abdullah 4eva
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