[sdiy] PWM control of Current Sink
Roman Sowa
modular at go2.pl
Fri Jun 26 14:22:33 CEST 2015
Just put the R-R opamp in there and you're done. I was sure the TL072
were supplied from +/- source, the schematics didn say anything about
supply...
Anyway, as an example MCP6L02 from Microchip. There are hundreds if not
thousands rail-to-rail opamp models in 5V supply range.
Roman
W dniu 2015-06-26 o 13:54, Tom Wiltshire pisze:
> Thanks everyone for all the helpful responses.
>
> Following on from what people said, I did some more investigations, and there are two problems:
>
> 1) The current sink's voltage compliance. The output voltage goes much too high for the 2.5V on Pin 6 of the PT2399. Lots of people suggested putting a potential divider in front of the op-amp to reduce the CV to a more reasonable level, and to reduce R5 to compensate.
>
> 2) The PWM filter is single-ended, and the op-amp can't get down to ground. This means there's an offset of about a volt, even with the PWM trying to set the CV to 0V.
>
> I'm going to redesign this section to solve these problems and I'll report back when I get it going!
>
> Thanks again,
> Tom
>
> On 25 Jun 2015, at 10:36, Roman Sowa <modular at go2.pl> wrote:
>
>> I'd replace R5 with 100 ohms and add voltage divider 24k/1.5k from IC1.2 output to IC1.1 input. This will not go higher on delay chip input than 0.3V and should be comfortable enough for it.
>> You may also add 10uF capacitor across the 1.5k reistor of the divider to filter out the PWM further.
>>
>> Roman
>>
>> W dniu 2015-06-24 o 20:52, Tom Wiltshire pisze:
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> Can I get a sanity check please? I've got the following circuit:
>>>
>>> http://www.electricdruid.net/images/CurrentSink.png
>>>
>>> The idea of this is to control the PT2399 delay using PWM from a micro controller. The PWM filter provides the current sink with a 0-5V, and the current sink is supposed to sink 0-3mA from pin 6 of the PT2399. Ryan Williams used a similar design, but his current sink was more complicated because he was using an inverting sink as a CV mixer, whereas I have a known CV source with defined limits.
>>>
>>> http://sdiy.org/destrukto/img/pt2399_current_sink.gif
>>>
>>> (from http://sdiy.org/destrukto/vc-echo.html)
>>>
>>> Trouble is, my version doesn't work. The result I'm getting is a very short delay, as if a large current were always flowing. Changing the PWM duty cycle pushes the PT2399 out of range altogether and kills even the short delay. The PWM-to-CV part seems fine, and I get 0-5V output for my PWM input. The problem is the current sink.
>>>
>>> I'm not sure at this point whether I've got a fault somewhere (e.g. it ought to work, but doesn't) or whether I'm just totally mistaken (e.g. it'd never work, even when well constructed).
>>>
>>> Any pointers appreciated.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Tom
>>>
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