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Tim(at)MyRV10.com Guest
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Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2006 9:18 pm Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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I'm looking to build/buy a simple regulated supply for my normally
AC powered Audio/Video players for in the airplane. I could use
an inverter, and then their AC supplies, but what I'd prefer
to do is just take the 12V in, and get 5V out. I just tried using
the 7805 3-pin T0-220 regulator from Radio Shack (was unable to use
a heatsink in the test), and one of them wouldn't push enough
current to drive one of my 2 devices. 2 of them in parallel would
drive it, but it wouldn't play through a movie.
Is there some heavier duty package that has worked well for people
in the past? I'd like to make it portable, so I can take it in
the car.
In the end, I'll have 1 lighter plug, driving 2 LCD headrest
monitors, 1 video splitter, and 2 MP3/Video players.
One of the players had an AC supply that says 5V(at)1A, and the
other says 5V(at)2A, so I would have thought the 7805 had a
fighting chance, but I guess that's with a heatsink or something.
Tim
--
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
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brian

Joined: 02 Jan 2006 Posts: 643 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
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Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2006 11:02 pm Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Tim Olson wrote:
Quote: | One of the players had an AC supply that says 5V(at)1A, and the
other says 5V(at)2A, so I would have thought the 7805 had a
fighting chance, but I guess that's with a heatsink or something.
|
Yes. If you look around you can find 12V-in-5V-out switching supplies.
That is what you really want.
--
Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak at lloyd dot com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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_________________ Brian Lloyd
brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery |
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Dan.Beadle(at)hq.inclines Guest
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 5:54 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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With a linear regulator, you want to drop 3A from 14V to 5V. That is 9*3
or 27 Watts. That is the heat released by a small to medium soldering
iron.
You could to it with a T0-3 package of a linear regulator (see Digikey),
but a switcher would be much more efficient.
Assuming 80% efficiency, you would only lose about 3 watts in heat.
Your system would only draw about 1 amp from the ships power.
You can build your own with a PCB from National Semiconductor. Their
WorkBench lets you design the parameters you want, then buy a kit of
parts. A kit is about $30.
Dan
--
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klehman(at)albedo.net Guest
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 5:58 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Hi Tim
I do agree with Brian as it sounds like you will probably need several
7805's and outlets to use them. Many folks opt for cigarette lighters
and a 12 volt adapter if available for entertainment devices. Those
adapters are likely linear regulators.
7805 devices are linear regulators so drawing an amp through one
requires it to dissipate 1 amp times the voltage drop. 14 volts to 5
volts is 9 volts times one amp or 9 watts. Twice that for 2 amps etc. So
you definitely need a good heatsink. An aluminum airframe has lots of
heatsink available. The TO-3 package will usually handle more current
than the TO-220 parts but they are harder to mount. I would not
recommend feeding 5 volts to a conventional cigarette lighter outlet
though as sooner or later someone will plug in something that wants 12
volts. AFAIK all the 78xx packages have overheat protection and will
(most of the time) shut off if overheated. They will also sometimes do
strange things if you don't use the recommended capacitors with them. My
vague recollection is 1 amp or so from a TO-220 part, 3 amps from a
TO-3, and 5 amps from a larger part (LM350?).
Ken
Brian Lloyd wrote:
Quote: |
Tim Olson wrote:
>One of the players had an AC supply that says 5V(at)1A, and the
>other says 5V(at)2A, so I would have thought the 7805 had a
>fighting chance, but I guess that's with a heatsink or something.
>
>
Yes. If you look around you can find 12V-in-5V-out switching supplies.
That is what you really want.
|
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Tim(at)MyRV10.com Guest
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 6:23 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Thanks for the suggestions, guys. Time is a factor too as I'm
hoping to use this all on the way to Sun-N-Fun.
So far I see these as options:
http://www.powerstream.com/dda.htm
http://www.powerstream.com/mini-itx.htm
The national semiconductor kit is appealing too, although once you
get to $30 it starts to make sense to buy a completed unit if
possible
I'm starting to lean back towards just buying another inverter
to dedicate to the plane, since it would be pretty flexible
for many uses, and is something I can just grab locally.
The largest concern with this whole project, and the reason
I wanted to build it, is that I want to ensure that the power
to the video/audio box is at the same ground potential
as the plane's system. I used a radio shack multi-output
lighter plug the other day with my old MP3 player and got
a nasty ground loop whine when I had the thing plugged in.
On batteries it was great. My concern is that perhaps with
an inverter or with a prebuilt converter that I won't have
a common ground potential.
Thanks for the tips thus far.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
Dan Beadle wrote:
[quote]
With a linear regulator, you want to drop 3A from 14V to 5V. That is 9*3
or 27 Watts. That is the heat released by a small to medium soldering
iron.
You could to it with a T0-3 package of a linear regulator (see Digikey),
but a switcher would be much more efficient.
Assuming 80% efficiency, you would only lose about 3 watts in heat.
Your system would only draw about 1 amp from the ships power.
You can build your own with a PCB from National Semiconductor. Their
WorkBench lets you design the parameters you want, then buy a kit of
parts. A kit is about $30.
Dan
--
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klehman(at)albedo.net Guest
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 7:03 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Tim
That intrigues me if you really had a ground loop whine with the device
grounded to the cig lighter plug. Was it in sync with the strobes or
transponder? My metal cig lighter outlets are mounted on a metal
instrument panel and I wondered if I might have to in the future
insulate them for some devices. I thought that was unlikely as most
everything goes to a common ground point in my machine. If you really
have a ground loop issue then I would expect it to still be there with
an inverter plugged into the same place although I guess extra
components in the inverter etc. might filter the noise out.
I would not expect a problem if the entertainment devices are insulated
from the airframe with no local grounds. ie insulate the device and run
both power and ground wires back to the cig lighter plug. My next step
would be to insulate the cig lighter outlet ground from the airframe if
you think the noise is being picked up in the ground between the outlet
and the common airframe grounding point/battery/alternator. You can get
plastic outlets from marinas but they don't seem to retain the plug very
well. Might be easier to filter the power I suppose.
Ken
Tim Olson wrote:
Quote: |
Thanks for the suggestions, guys. Time is a factor too as I'm
hoping to use this all on the way to Sun-N-Fun.
So far I see these as options:
http://www.powerstream.com/dda.htm
http://www.powerstream.com/mini-itx.htm
The national semiconductor kit is appealing too, although once you
get to $30 it starts to make sense to buy a completed unit if
possible
I'm starting to lean back towards just buying another inverter
to dedicate to the plane, since it would be pretty flexible
for many uses, and is something I can just grab locally.
The largest concern with this whole project, and the reason
I wanted to build it, is that I want to ensure that the power
to the video/audio box is at the same ground potential
as the plane's system. I used a radio shack multi-output
lighter plug the other day with my old MP3 player and got
a nasty ground loop whine when I had the thing plugged in.
On batteries it was great. My concern is that perhaps with
an inverter or with a prebuilt converter that I won't have
a common ground potential.
Thanks for the tips thus far.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
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brian

Joined: 02 Jan 2006 Posts: 643 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 7:12 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Quote: |
...
One of the players had an AC supply that says 5V(at)1A, and the
other says 5V(at)2A, so I would have thought the 7805 had a
fighting chance, but I guess that's with a heatsink or something.
|
Just for grins I did a search on Google. Seems that Mouser has several
that might work for you. Mouser is having a blow-out on discontinued C&D
switching DC-DC converters. Prices for a complete power supply capable
of delivering 25A at 5V are in the $10 range. There are also other
manufacturers.
Give the time and effort needed to build something vs. just buy a
high-quality DC-DC converter, I think the answer is pretty clearly "buy".
Give Mouser a call and tell them you need a 12V-in 5V-out supply that
can be isolated or non-isolated. You should be able to find something at
under $30.
--
Brian Lloyd 361 Catterline Way
brian-yak at lloyd dot com Folsom, CA 95630
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery
| - The Matronics AeroElectric-List Email Forum - | | Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:
http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?AeroElectric-List |
|
_________________ Brian Lloyd
brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery |
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Tim(at)MyRV10.com Guest
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 10:46 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Well, the ground loop in my case, I think it more like this:
(I called PS Engineering to verify)
The power is at airframe ground potential. The Audio panel also
grounds the barrels and shields to the same potential. But now,
if you use a DC-DC converter that's isolated, sure it puts out
5V between the 2 wires, but that voltage can often be many volts
above source input from a ground potential viewpoint. So
You might have ground = +8V and Power = +13V. Yes, it's 5V, but
the grounds are not equal. So then there's the potential
difference between the shield or barrel on the output wire
of the audio jack on the MP3 player, to the potential of the
barrel or shield on the audio panel when you plug them together,
and THAT's where the problems occur. It's not so much of
a "ground loop" issue, as it is a ground potential issue.
If you built a simple 3-pin regulator at the same ground potential,
you shouldn't have that problem....or, if you make sure your
DC-DC converter is not isolated from ground on the output it should
work too. You can buy them various ways.
The noise I had didn't increase with RPM or anything else....it was
more of a gradually increasing screech that got louder and louder
until you couldn't listen to it anymore.
One side note....I have both Bose headsets and other headsets with
ANR upgrade kits in them. I have ANR power jacks in the plane
that run 9V via a DC-DC converter. It's an isolated converter.
It works great with those headsets, but Bose internally wires
their grounds a bit different, using the signal ground to carry
the power ground as well. I originally the power source for
the bose coming off those other isolated ANR jacks, but it didn't
work. As soon as I moved them to be on the same ground potential
as the rest of the system, and didn't attach to the other isolated
jacks, my headsets worked. So there is truth to how this
works. I just don't have a lot of time for shopping.
Thanks Brian though for passing on the mouser info. I'll try to surf
them up today. Hopefully I can get this done quick.
Tim
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
Ken wrote:
Quote: |
Tim
That intrigues me if you really had a ground loop whine with the device
grounded to the cig lighter plug. Was it in sync with the strobes or
transponder? My metal cig lighter outlets are mounted on a metal
instrument panel and I wondered if I might have to in the future
insulate them for some devices. I thought that was unlikely as most
everything goes to a common ground point in my machine. If you really
have a ground loop issue then I would expect it to still be there with
an inverter plugged into the same place although I guess extra
components in the inverter etc. might filter the noise out.
I would not expect a problem if the entertainment devices are insulated
from the airframe with no local grounds. ie insulate the device and run
both power and ground wires back to the cig lighter plug. My next step
would be to insulate the cig lighter outlet ground from the airframe if
you think the noise is being picked up in the ground between the outlet
and the common airframe grounding point/battery/alternator. You can get
plastic outlets from marinas but they don't seem to retain the plug very
well. Might be easier to filter the power I suppose.
Ken
Tim Olson wrote:
>
>
> Thanks for the suggestions, guys. Time is a factor too as I'm
> hoping to use this all on the way to Sun-N-Fun.
> So far I see these as options:
> http://www.powerstream.com/dda.htm
> http://www.powerstream.com/mini-itx.htm
> The national semiconductor kit is appealing too, although once you
> get to $30 it starts to make sense to buy a completed unit if
> possible
>
> I'm starting to lean back towards just buying another inverter
> to dedicate to the plane, since it would be pretty flexible
> for many uses, and is something I can just grab locally.
>
> The largest concern with this whole project, and the reason
> I wanted to build it, is that I want to ensure that the power
> to the video/audio box is at the same ground potential
> as the plane's system. I used a radio shack multi-output
> lighter plug the other day with my old MP3 player and got
> a nasty ground loop whine when I had the thing plugged in.
> On batteries it was great. My concern is that perhaps with
> an inverter or with a prebuilt converter that I won't have
> a common ground potential.
>
> Thanks for the tips thus far.
>
> Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
> do not archive
>
>
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brian

Joined: 02 Jan 2006 Posts: 643 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 11:40 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Tim Olson wrote:
Quote: |
Well, the ground loop in my case, I think it more like this:
(I called PS Engineering to verify)
The power is at airframe ground potential. The Audio panel also
grounds the barrels and shields to the same potential. But now,
if you use a DC-DC converter that's isolated, sure it puts out
5V between the 2 wires, but that voltage can often be many volts
above source input from a ground potential viewpoint. So
You might have ground = +8V and Power = +13V. Yes, it's 5V, but
the grounds are not equal.
|
If the power supply is isolated then that means that neither output wire
is referenced to the input ground. In fact, there is no DC electrical
path from input to output at all. In that case it is completely safe to
tie the -5V lead to ground giving you ground an +5V relative to ground.
That will work just fine.
I have experienced audio problems with portable audio devices plugged
into audio panels when powered by the aircraft's electrical system and
power input was NOT isolated. Problems went away when the device was
operated off its own battery.
Brian Lloyd
brian-yak(at)lloyd.com
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_________________ Brian Lloyd
brian-yak at lloyd dot com
+1.916.367.2131 (voice) +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery |
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Tim(at)MyRV10.com Guest
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Posted: Fri Mar 17, 2006 11:41 am Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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Great tip Brian, I found them on Mouser, found a 10A version
that will do what I need, for only $8.50. Bought
2 just because they were cheap. Should easily be able to
do the job. I'll post back if it doesn't work. I bought
the NEF0100500S0.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
do not archive
Brian Lloyd wrote:
Quote: |
>
>
> ...
> One of the players had an AC supply that says 5V(at)1A, and the
> other says 5V(at)2A, so I would have thought the 7805 had a
> fighting chance, but I guess that's with a heatsink or something.
Just for grins I did a search on Google. Seems that Mouser has several
that might work for you. Mouser is having a blow-out on discontinued C&D
switching DC-DC converters. Prices for a complete power supply capable
of delivering 25A at 5V are in the $10 range. There are also other
manufacturers.
Give the time and effort needed to build something vs. just buy a
high-quality DC-DC converter, I think the answer is pretty clearly "buy".
Give Mouser a call and tell them you need a 12V-in 5V-out supply that
can be isolated or non-isolated. You should be able to find something at
under $30.
|
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Tim(at)MyRV10.com Guest
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Posted: Sun Mar 26, 2006 4:52 pm Post subject: 5V regulated supply |
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I wanted to post back to the list that I did get these parts
and have them working. I actually had to re-order as I accidently
ordered the ones listed below, and I needed NEF0100500B0. The other
ones were surface mount...didn't catch that quick enough.
The 5V DC-DC converters hold a solid 5V real well, it's a 10A unit,
and has multiple outputs. I have now flown and used it and it works
very good. I don't get the huge screeching nose I used to. I
do still get a slight alternator whine, so I'd be curious as to how
an isolated converter would be in comparison....I may order one
just to try it out. They were only $8.50, so it's a great deal
on a nice converter.
Tim
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
Tim Olson wrote:
Quote: |
Great tip Brian, I found them on Mouser, found a 10A version
that will do what I need, for only $8.50. Bought
2 just because they were cheap. Should easily be able to
do the job. I'll post back if it doesn't work. I bought
the NEF0100500S0.
Tim Olson - RV-10 N104CD - Flying
Brian Lloyd wrote:
>
>
>>
>>
>> ...
>> One of the players had an AC supply that says 5V(at)1A, and the
>> other says 5V(at)2A, so I would have thought the 7805 had a
>> fighting chance, but I guess that's with a heatsink or something.
> Just for grins I did a search on Google. Seems that Mouser has several
> that might work for you. Mouser is having a blow-out on discontinued C&D
> switching DC-DC converters. Prices for a complete power supply capable
> of delivering 25A at 5V are in the $10 range. There are also other
> manufacturers.
>
> Give the time and effort needed to build something vs. just buy a
> high-quality DC-DC converter, I think the answer is pretty clearly "buy".
>
> Give Mouser a call and tell them you need a 12V-in 5V-out supply that
> can be isolated or non-isolated. You should be able to find something at
> under $30.
>
|
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