
Re: cell phone interference
On Mon, 17 Dec 2007 17:43:29 -0800 (PST), gearhead
<nospam@billburg.com> wrote:
>I made a tiny amp for my electric guitar with the LM386 chip and a
>small speaker
>http://www.national.com/ds/LM/LM386.pdf
>I hooked it up just like the basic circuit in the datasheet, grounding
>the inverting input and leaving the gain and "bypass" pins open. I
>put a 0.1 uF cap across the power pins, and now it works great, with
>one little problem -- cell phone interference. Every so often my cell
>phone apparently gives a little shout-out to the system, whereupon the
>amp goes chirp chirp. When the cell phone rings, the amp goes nuts.
>I'd like to know where the interference gets in and what you do to put
>a damper on it.
First thing to try is putting the amp in a metal box. Connect the
shield from the input connector to the box. Ground the
metal box to the powerline ground. (Assuming you used a decent
transformer-isolated power supply.) Then put a small filter on the
input, something like 1k series and 0.02 uF to ground. If this
doesn't solve the problem, try removing the guitar connector from the
input and seeing if the amp still picks up the interference. If not,
you have to look at the guitar and amp as a system. Make sure
the cable shields are intact and connect ultimately to the metal
box.
Best regards,
Bob Masta
DAQARTA v3.50
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
http://www.daqarta.comScope, Spectrum, Spectrogram, FREE Signal Generator
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