Hi, and thanks for reading.
I have a heavily modified guitar which includes a synth controller, about a dozen capacitive & resistive controls, and microcontroller. The synth controller is older Roland(24 pin), uses bipolar 15vdc, and consists, among other things, of a six pole magnetic pickup feeding six high gain op-amp circuits. There is also a six position Ghost piezo pickup feeding its own preamps, etc. This requires 9vdc. I've picked off 9vdc for the latter, and 5vdc for the microcontroller from the Roland +15vdc line w/ regulators. This much is mostly well behaved.
The problem occurs when I try to power an ipod touch ( +5vdc) from any source in the guitar. It induces a strange, pink noise-type of hissing sound, along with a separate very low freq (20-25hz?) rumble. EDIT: The iPod has no other electrically conductive physical connection to the guitar besides +5v & Gnd. Not using audio.
What I've tried(aside from various Electrolytic caps):
Powering from the 5vdc regulator mentioned above.
Powering from a 5v regulator, applied to various pickoff points on the 15vdv/Ground traces on the main pcb.
Powering from a 5v regulator downstream of the 9v regulator mentioned above.
placing ferrite toroid coils in series w/ the ipod supply lines.
I can make the noise worse, but no better. If I power it w/ a 5v regulator attached to a 9v battery, the noise is gone, even if I ground the neg lead to the guitar, so I assume the ipod is inducing noise in the guitar's ps rails, which is picked up by the fairly high impedance amps. What perplexes me is how this propagates back through the regulators...
I'm not knowledgeable about power supply design, and I apologize if this post sounds ignorant. I'm at the limit of my ability to troubleshoot this, and if anyone could shed any light on a sure-fire way to decouple this ipod touch, I'd be pretty grateful. It's unusable as it is now.
Thanks.
I have a heavily modified guitar which includes a synth controller, about a dozen capacitive & resistive controls, and microcontroller. The synth controller is older Roland(24 pin), uses bipolar 15vdc, and consists, among other things, of a six pole magnetic pickup feeding six high gain op-amp circuits. There is also a six position Ghost piezo pickup feeding its own preamps, etc. This requires 9vdc. I've picked off 9vdc for the latter, and 5vdc for the microcontroller from the Roland +15vdc line w/ regulators. This much is mostly well behaved.
The problem occurs when I try to power an ipod touch ( +5vdc) from any source in the guitar. It induces a strange, pink noise-type of hissing sound, along with a separate very low freq (20-25hz?) rumble. EDIT: The iPod has no other electrically conductive physical connection to the guitar besides +5v & Gnd. Not using audio.
What I've tried(aside from various Electrolytic caps):
Powering from the 5vdc regulator mentioned above.
Powering from a 5v regulator, applied to various pickoff points on the 15vdv/Ground traces on the main pcb.
Powering from a 5v regulator downstream of the 9v regulator mentioned above.
placing ferrite toroid coils in series w/ the ipod supply lines.
I can make the noise worse, but no better. If I power it w/ a 5v regulator attached to a 9v battery, the noise is gone, even if I ground the neg lead to the guitar, so I assume the ipod is inducing noise in the guitar's ps rails, which is picked up by the fairly high impedance amps. What perplexes me is how this propagates back through the regulators...
I'm not knowledgeable about power supply design, and I apologize if this post sounds ignorant. I'm at the limit of my ability to troubleshoot this, and if anyone could shed any light on a sure-fire way to decouple this ipod touch, I'd be pretty grateful. It's unusable as it is now.
Thanks.
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