Yep, for this design (with ASRC engaged) at the final output we always see a fixed and high sample rate (clock of the final DAC stage) at many MHz with a lot of glitch energy.Bravo! A lot of work but a simple fix. If you need an unaltered stock board for reference,
I have a second Khadas board!
Question:
The choice of 220pF is not sampling frequency dependend, as the DAC puts out
the same sampling rate no matter the source?
I think, a normal 220pF capacitor with a width 5mm betwinn pins might fit as well.
It just has to be glied on before soldering...
With 100R in series results were generally worse with C4 installed. Differential noise gain shows heavy peaking at 10Mhz (1/ß zero shifted downwards) in the sim.So circuit and opamp depending solution then.
@Ben1987 also solved it but in a different way (different circuit)
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Your C4 makes a lot of sense.
What are the results with C4 but with the original R2/R3 ?
And pay for the work.Awesome! Now the manufacturer should implement the improvements in a new version and release it to all customers.
Great job.
I might try that with the D10B as it is much more modding-frienly than the KTB. I'm also inclined to think than when that "normal class" RT6862 is having such problems then better opamps will be better but not fully immune to those very fast glitches.Great and very informative!
I did several simulations with the same circuit configuration as the Soncoz SGD1, and I think the 10R and differential input capacitors are effective even with a fast and stable op-amp like the OPA828. (The capacitor value could be lowered.)
Are they pin compatible with something better? If so, replacing them isn't hard if you have the right tools.You know, this is basically a workaround for those less than stellar RT6862 OpAmps used which are tough to replace on the board.
Are they pin compatible with something better? If so, replacing them isn't hard if you have the right tools.
And they did not keep it on the Tone2 Pro too ( 4 OPA1612 instead of 1xRT6863 + 2xRT6862)@Grooved...Topping D10 Balanced. I don't know how much impact the standard subtractor circuit (RT6863D) has on the result... the D10B doesn't use one
I usually use an IR heater below the PCB and apply hot air onto the chip from above. It's obviously impossible to do with a soldering iron.@mansr, reworking those OPs, with that thermal pad and all, I would consider expert level. I'll might give it a try with my own board, first. I haven't dealt with replacing DFNs before...
So if OPA1612 is not available in DFN-10, what are the pin-identical alternatives to replace RT6863/62?It's DFN. The "pins" you see are just the PCB pads extending beyond the chip edge with some solder on them.
The RT6862 apparently has the same DFN-8 package as many other opamps, including OPA1612. 10-pin opamp packages are less common, and the extra pins don't necessarily have the same functions.So if OPA1612 is not available in DFN-10, what are the pin-identical alternatives to replace RT6863/62?
It can't be done with a soldering iron. You need a hot air rework station. Then it's easy.Is any of the PCB pads extending beyond the chip edgde connected to the ground plane
the chip? This could male at least removal a tad easier, as the solder could be directly heated.