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Old December 9th 04, 11:12 PM
Ken
 
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On 9 Dec 2004 10:22:56 -0800, "Psychiatrist to keyclowns"
wrote:
OOPS...didnt see the part about it needing to be a 6 volt adapter. In
that case you change from a LM7812 chip to an LM317, which is a
variable regulator. Might add 1 buck to the cost, cuz you need a
potentiometer to set the output voltage from the LM317.
You can run a 2 conductor wire off a 13.8 v. power supply and use the
'317 to lower the output to 6 volts on a line just to your Icom.


Thanks for your response.

I have plenty of big, smooth power supplies in my shack. I want to
use a wall wart for travel.

The wall warts are putting out the right DC voltage, but they are
noisy. Are there some simple, small components that will filter out
the 60-cycle buzz of the transformer warts ot the staticky hash of the
switcher warts? Ferrite toroids seem to have no effect.

I don't mind soldering something up.

Ken
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Old December 9th 04, 11:12 PM
Ken
 
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On 9 Dec 2004 10:22:56 -0800, "Psychiatrist to keyclowns"
wrote:
OOPS...didnt see the part about it needing to be a 6 volt adapter. In
that case you change from a LM7812 chip to an LM317, which is a
variable regulator. Might add 1 buck to the cost, cuz you need a
potentiometer to set the output voltage from the LM317.
You can run a 2 conductor wire off a 13.8 v. power supply and use the
'317 to lower the output to 6 volts on a line just to your Icom.


Thanks for your response.

I have plenty of big, smooth power supplies in my shack. I want to
use a wall wart for travel.

The wall warts are putting out the right DC voltage, but they are
noisy. Are there some simple, small components that will filter out
the 60-cycle buzz of the transformer warts ot the staticky hash of the
switcher warts? Ferrite toroids seem to have no effect.

I don't mind soldering something up.

Ken
(to reply via email
remove "zz" from address)
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Old December 9th 04, 11:12 PM
Ken
 
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On 9 Dec 2004 10:22:56 -0800, "Psychiatrist to keyclowns"
wrote:
OOPS...didnt see the part about it needing to be a 6 volt adapter. In
that case you change from a LM7812 chip to an LM317, which is a
variable regulator. Might add 1 buck to the cost, cuz you need a
potentiometer to set the output voltage from the LM317.
You can run a 2 conductor wire off a 13.8 v. power supply and use the
'317 to lower the output to 6 volts on a line just to your Icom.


Thanks for your response.

I have plenty of big, smooth power supplies in my shack. I want to
use a wall wart for travel.

The wall warts are putting out the right DC voltage, but they are
noisy. Are there some simple, small components that will filter out
the 60-cycle buzz of the transformer warts ot the staticky hash of the
switcher warts? Ferrite toroids seem to have no effect.

I don't mind soldering something up.

Ken
(to reply via email
remove "zz" from address)
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Old December 10th 04, 09:31 AM
Psychiatrist to keyclowns
 
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Ken,
Since you need it for travel, I would suggest build the assembly in a
small box that goes inline between the wart and the radio. Just
interrupt the cable and extend it a bit. You could build the whole
thing in a box the size of PEZ dispenser and have room left over.

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Old December 10th 04, 09:31 AM
Psychiatrist to keyclowns
 
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Ken,
Since you need it for travel, I would suggest build the assembly in a
small box that goes inline between the wart and the radio. Just
interrupt the cable and extend it a bit. You could build the whole
thing in a box the size of PEZ dispenser and have room left over.



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Old December 10th 04, 09:31 AM
Psychiatrist to keyclowns
 
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Ken,
Since you need it for travel, I would suggest build the assembly in a
small box that goes inline between the wart and the radio. Just
interrupt the cable and extend it a bit. You could build the whole
thing in a box the size of PEZ dispenser and have room left over.

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Old December 10th 04, 09:41 AM
Psychiatrist to keyclowns
 
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An additional idea...If you measure DC coming out of the wallwart
instead of AC, it likely just needs filtering. Skip the rectifier and
go with just the capacitor and the regulator. Maybe you could start
with a higher voltage wall wart, too. The 317 regulator can handle up
to 37 volts input. If you do that the variable voltage property of the
LM317 chip would be great to use for other items requiring a wall wart,
but one of different voltage. Maybe a 14 volt or 15 volt wart would be
a start. If it puts out AC, include the rectifier diodes. If not, skip
'em.

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Old December 10th 04, 09:41 AM
Psychiatrist to keyclowns
 
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An additional idea...If you measure DC coming out of the wallwart
instead of AC, it likely just needs filtering. Skip the rectifier and
go with just the capacitor and the regulator. Maybe you could start
with a higher voltage wall wart, too. The 317 regulator can handle up
to 37 volts input. If you do that the variable voltage property of the
LM317 chip would be great to use for other items requiring a wall wart,
but one of different voltage. Maybe a 14 volt or 15 volt wart would be
a start. If it puts out AC, include the rectifier diodes. If not, skip
'em.

  #19   Report Post  
Old December 10th 04, 09:41 AM
Psychiatrist to keyclowns
 
Posts: n/a
Default

An additional idea...If you measure DC coming out of the wallwart
instead of AC, it likely just needs filtering. Skip the rectifier and
go with just the capacitor and the regulator. Maybe you could start
with a higher voltage wall wart, too. The 317 regulator can handle up
to 37 volts input. If you do that the variable voltage property of the
LM317 chip would be great to use for other items requiring a wall wart,
but one of different voltage. Maybe a 14 volt or 15 volt wart would be
a start. If it puts out AC, include the rectifier diodes. If not, skip
'em.

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