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Re: Music VU Meter


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Not too shabby for a "too simple of a circuit". Notice the blur, I sure don't.



Oh, and the chips don't get hot either. Where do get all that from?

________________________________

The whole story.

http://s81.photobucket.com/albums/j230/sparky3489/VU%20Meter/

http://s81.photobucket.com/albums/j230/sparky3489/LED%20Panels/

http://s81.photobucket.com/albums/j230/sparky3489/New%20Box%20-%20VU%20meter/

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The first schematic shows green LEDs driven from two LM3916 ICs set for an output current of only 8mA. The input of the IC is a half-wave rectifier so the LEDs average only 4mA when the music is blasting.

If the green LEDs are 2.2V and the car battery is 13.8V then each output transistor in the IC dissipates an average of (13.8V - 2.2V) x 4mA= 46.4mW. The IC dissipates a little more than 464mW when all 10 LEDs are lighted and the music is blasting. The max allowed dissipation of the IC is 1365mW.

My Sound Level Indicator uses a peak detector that lights the LEDs continuously instead of half-wave. They are set for 25mA each so the IC gets hot. I added a power resistor in series with its power pin to share the heat.

EDIT:
Don't post your schematics over at PHOTOBUCKET. Their images disappear after a while. Instead attach your schematics here to your posts.
Here is the first schematic that was saved as a fuzzy JPG file type:  

post-1706-14279143926091_thumb.png

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The first schematic didn't use green LEDs, all I had were yellow and red to test my prototype. The actual output of the LM3916s drives 3906 transistors to run blue and yellow/red LEDs.

Schematic.jpg

[img width=680 height=235]

[img width=680 height=510]

All home made.

I've had my photos at photobucket for over two years with no problems and only change because I changed them. I wanted a rapid response so I opted out of a peak detetctor. This actually increases LED efficiency and longevity as well.

The "fuzzy" is from selecting a low resolution when I converted from my CAD program to JPG.

The rest of the pics - http://s81.photobucket.com/albums/j230/sparky3489/New%20Box%20-%20VU%20meter/

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Don't you know that images at PhotoBucket disappear? Sometimes that website is asleep.
But images posted here stay with your thread here and open immediately.

JPG file type is for photos not schematics and has fuzzy losses. PNG has no losses and is very clear for schematics. Why don't you switch to very clear?

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WOW!!!!!

My photos at Photobucket have NEVER disappeared in the 3 years I've used it. Never had a problem with them, maybe it's your ISP causing your problems.

What green LEDs are you talking about? There are no green LEDs in that circuit whatsoever. Never have been. NONE!  AND as I've explained the ouptut drives a transistor not an LED.

I didn't want a peak detector because it's better for the LEDs as it makes them more efficeint and increases their life span. I'm not sure where you are getting they are a dim blur?!?!? They are very bright in fact.



So the schematic is fuzzy, I'm not going to change it. I don't need to. I have the schematic in my CAD program and that's good enough for me.

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My last post shows a copy of your schematic that you posted with green LEDs operating at a low current.

Your low level LEDs are bright. But the high level LEDs are dim because they are turned on for such a short amount of time that our vision can barely see them. When the pulse width is less than 20ms then they look dimmed. Many pulses are less and on your simple circuit they cannot be seen.

A peak detector circuit turns on every LED long enough to be seen brightly and clearly.

Your LEDs are lighted for half the time because the input is a rectifier. Then your brightest LEDs are also dimmed.

The datasheet for the LM3915 bar graph driver recommends using a peak detector circuit. Every "VU" meter circuit I have made has it. You should try it.

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Try going by what I have connected instead of what I have drawn.


It's apparent you don't understand the advantages of making LEDs efficient. My LEDs are lit for half the time because I wanted the efficiency. My LEDs are just fine, but thanks anyway. The effect is still there.

http://www.youtube.com/user/sparky3489

Good day.


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I don't like the ballistics of an old mechanical VU meter.
I like the electronic peak reading meter instead.

The old one allows peaks to be clipped with severe distortion because the peaks are not shown.
The peak detector allows the peak voltage to be seen clearly so that clipping is avoided.

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Ummm, yeah.

Clipping in mobile audio is minimized by proper gain settings so clipping isn't an issue. This allows the true measurement of a VU meter.

__________________________________

The purpose of the gain is to match the signal volts RMS coming from the source (CD player, etc.) to the input of the amp for correct power matching and to minmize clipping.

Here is a guide that will help you set the gain correctly http://www.box.net/shared/uchv4dbk88

You'll need a multi-meter (AC voltmeter, $15 from Radio$hack), Microsoft Excel and a way to burn an audio CD from an MP3 (test tone included).

If you don't have Excel, you can download (free) OpenOffice by Java (Sun Micro systems) from here to read spreadsheets (and you thought spreadsheets were for business) - http://download.openoffice.org/index.html

The best way to set the gain is with an O-scope, but not everyone has a $2000 scope so that's why I made this.

______________________________________

All about PEAK power.

First off, ignore peak or max watts.

For speakers:

Peak or Max watts represents the absolute maximum wattage a speaker can handle for a split second. Since music doesn't play at this wattage at long intervals, it's not a good representation of true power handling.

For amplifiers:

Peak or Max watts represents the maximum wattage an amp can push for a split second and since music plays an average signal longer than a split second, it isn't a true measurement of actual power.


Continuous or RMS (Root Mean Square) is the true output power. Especially on CEA-2006 compliant amplifiers.

Being CEA compliant is a voluntary action by the manufacturer to have their amp tested by the CEA (Consumer Electronics Association) using standardized test methods. Those amplifiers that are not CEA compliant can put whatever they want for power ratings as they use tricky methods for testing which are unregulated. You know exactly what you're getting from a compliant amp.

Some speaker/sub manufacturers have also gone with CEA testing for loudspeakers to ensure pruduct claims.

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