Friday, October 8, 2010

Grounding

For some time already, people are experiencing the problem of incorrect grounding. Most young (and even advanced) hobbyists/engineers think the the "negative wire doesn't do anything, i will just connect it to ground". That doesn't do anything bad in circuits which do not involve video or sound. However it makes a huge interference and additional noise in sound and video applications.

When you are grounding, you want to connect all grounds to one conductor, which should have same potential, however if you connect some ground outputs to one conductor at different places, the conductor will have small, but different potentials on its body. This is called a ground loop. To avoid this you can keep on these instructions:

1. Star ground principle. This photo (not mine) illustrates that pretty clear. Every ground should have its own wire, and they should be connected to the final ground wire at one point.
2. Ground wires should be as short and thick as possible. It would be best to use monolithic wires for this purpose.
3. If you are making an amp with two modules, make sure it is symmetrical and the ground wires are exactly the same length.
4. If you are shielding inner wires, the shielding should be connected only in ONE side. If connected to both, it won't be a shield anymore - it will be a bad conductor, which will generate trash sounds even more than if it wasn't shielded at all.
5. Divide signal and power grounds. In that way trash sounds from power line will have harder way getting to your speakers :)
6. Ground wires shouldn't cross other ground wires, or AC ones, which would be even worse. 

The rest part applies for PCB's:
7. When making ground tracks, try to have it as straight as possible, don't do any spirals (they will work as capacitors) .
8. Ground tracks should be as far as possible from input tracks. 
9. If possible split the PCB to few parts like preamp, back amp, power supply, etc.

28 comments:

  1. Thanks for this. I never realized that part about shielded wires but it makes perfect sense.

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  2. hm, very interesting post kind sir- ill look into it more.

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  3. this isn't an obvious concept, but now that I actually read about it, it really seems like common sense

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  4. Wow. thanks for this, I would have messed something up for sure.

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  5. Pretty interesting stuff, I'll be sure to read your stuff in the future.

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  6. Thanks, this info really helped me out!

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  7. lol what is this?i can't understand

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  8. i understood nothing, but i bet its helpful to others

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  9. finally i never got how grounding worked until this post

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  10. Great post! Now I understand grounding, thanks!

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  11. Wery informative post...waiting for more posts :)

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  12. thnx for the info nice post

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  13. Son you're grounded

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  14. Great tutorial on grounding. Any idea what this device does?

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  15. Great information. Thanks for sharing. Following and looking forward to more.

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  16. very nice thnx for the info

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  17. well maybe it's gonna work for small projects but i can't imagine putting something with tons of cables into a box just for grounding :)

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  18. Details details. I indeed always thought neg had no impact on the sound, but this will def be handy knowledge when I apply for the Counter Intelligence Agent pos at Best Buy

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