It can be used with different devices - MP3 players, Walkmans, Radios, .etc. It can be used also for your own designs - can be connected to the analog outputs of audio DACs, to the outputs of self made radios (for example using TDA7000, or TA7642) or other gadgets.
In comparison with the other instructables, this will not give you an exact instructions how to do the job, but will give you the idea and show you for example how it can be realized in a particular case. The success of this project will relay on your imagination and capabilities ...
The main idea here is - why to make something from scratch, if it exists...
Where an existing audio amplifier can be taken from?
The answer is - from a defect computer CD-R,W, DVD-R,W reader, writer, ROM-drive..
All they have audio output for headphones, which has almost always a volume control.
When those devices broke, normally the malfunction is always in the mechanics, in the laser system, in the optics, but, I think never in the audio headphone amplifier.
Where to find a defect drive?
You decide - at scrapyard, at the place were you company throws away the broken equipment for recycling, in some garage sale, to ask your friends, eBay...
Let's suppose, we have found our defected drive.
Let's go for the first step.
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Signing UpStep 1: Exctracting the audio amplifier board
The audio amplifier board is normally placed directly behind the front panel of the drive. The PCB in most cases has a long narrow shape. Between the audio amplifier board and the "main" board of the drive a flat cable connection is done. Unsolder it from the main board. May be will be possible to use it, if needed.
Do not forget to extract also the laser diodes and the electric motors - they can be used for other instructables.
On the pictures can be seen the extracted board, which was placed behind the front panel and contains the audio amplifier.











































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I used an old DVD drive for the laser and now I could also use it to build a headphone amp. Thank you very much! I checked with the datasheet and the multimeter and the pins on the flat cable were next to each other:
[?] [5V] [GND] [in1] [in2] [...]
As I wrote :
"This instructable describes how to "make" a simple audio headphone amplifier.
It can be used with different devices - MP3 players, Walkmans, Radios, .etc. It can be used also for your own designs - can be connected to the analog outputs of audio DACs, to the outputs of self made radios (for example using TDA7000, or TA7642) or other gadgets.
In comparison with the other instructables, this will not give you an exact instructions how to do the job, but will give you the idea and show you for example how it can be realized in a particular case. The success of this project will relay on your imagination and capabilities ..".
I want to give only an idea how to do the amplifier, without saying that exactly this type of opamp must be used.
Ofcourse, if your CD ROM has a driver chip inside, you can use it only as buffer to some audio DAC or chip without output stage.
If you want to have real amplifier - than you have to find such kind of pcb.
May be you can even change the feedback resistors in the way that you have the gain that you want.
And finaly, I do not think that the hoby activities are lost of time.
It is way of learning...
Best Regards
Milen
It is diffucult to say.
can you publish a photos of the pcb taken from the both sides?
Regards
Milen
You have to know which is the audio chip. I thnik they use alos 7805 or some similar chip there (the 3 pin one). You have to decide - shall you use it also fro the supply of the audio, or you will use some batteries.
Find the inputs for the audio signal - may be they are close to the volume control potentiometer. Practically you have to have around 4-6 connections from the PCB which you cut - the inputs, GND - the biggest area plate, supply, and may be some controls (for LED, mute...etc)
As the specs for the PSU voltage are 3-6v (typically 5v) you could make the project simpler by using three AA/AAA baterries to run this and cut out the regulator. You might even get away with just two batteries. This would mean you are not having to bother with making up the voltage dropper bit, AA/AAA batteries are cheaper than 9v ones and last longer and in addition you are not wasting power in the voltage dropper so they should effectively last even longer. Three AAAs wouldn't be much bigger either.
I'll get one and try it.
If you do not understand something, do not hesitate to ask me. I will try to answer all your questions.
Regards
Milen
It denends on the amplifier chip and the load resistance of the speaker.
The chip used in this design can drive ~140mW in load 16 Ohm.
Normally the speakers have 4 or 8 Ohm resistance. May be exist also with 16 Ohm...
If you connect only 8 Ohm you can reach more power, but you can overheat and burn the chip. May be if you connect two 8 Ohm speakers in series for a channel - will be OK. Once again - it depends on the chip!
If you use active speakres (PC) - there is not any problem!
The other posible solution - to make additional simple amplifier.
For example two transistors NPN and PNP connected as emitter followers - you can find circuits in the net...
Regards
Milen
here's the datasheet
http://www.datasheet4u.com/html/G/1/4/G1401_GlobalMixed-modeTechnology.pdf.html..
please help
( + input B 5) + ( - input B 6) = output B 7 or second speaker
4 is negative supply
8 is positive supply
Great Instructable though!
you are right - it should work if everything is done right...
About the ICś - I would like to advice you ...to use them :-)
They make the life easier...
Regards
Milen
Thanks
You are right - I use voltage regulator 78L05 which is similar like 7805 but with smaller driving capability - but for this case enough... see step 4
And I have a question: I dug some old Cd drives here (5 so far) and most of them had a single board with every controller on it, so I thought they wouldn't be very easy to cut/find connections and stuff. But I did find one that only controlled the front of the CD reader. BUT the chip doesn't have a brand, it only says "3543" and I couldn't fin the datasheet for it so far. Since the number is close to the number of the one you showed on the instructable, maybe it works the same way?
I don't have a lot of knowledge on electronics, but I got some tools like a multimeter to test it, and could send you some macro pictures of the board if it'd help; i'm at a loss here ^^'
thanks for the attention!
I also was not able to find the chip in the Internet.
It can be some ASIC.
Normally those chips have the same pining as the standard, but it is not always true.
I would suggest the following:
The main task is to find the ground and the supply pins.
Outputs are connected to the phone jack.
The inputs you can find scanning all cable inputs with a signal source through capacitor ~ 10uF.
Usually the ground pin of the chip is connected to the biggest plate on the PCB. Decoupling capacitors between this plate must exist. Their "-" lead is soldered there. Check which chip pin is soldered there. This is "vss".
Check also which other pin has connected capacitor to the ground plate.
This can be the "vdd" (supply) pin.
Try to apply there ~5 V.
Apply signal to the wire of the connection cable and scan all of them.
I hope that you can hear the signal when you touch2 of them.
But have in mind that this instruction will work in the case that the chip has single supply (mostly seen). In the other case it becomes more complicated.
I wish you luck
Milen
P.S. If it didnot work, you can send me macropicture of the PCB - both sides...
Well, after taking ages to get time to work on it (more so since my laptop stopped working) I got it working today o/
But I tried something different; since the borad was double-sided and there were stuff covering some parts of it, I decided to keep the board as a whole and focused my research on the flat cable that connects it to the main drive. looking it carefully I was able to name the function of 8 out of 13 wires, so I only had to work on the remaining 5; and today I found that 3 of them were supply XP
Lots of thanks, now I just have to search for a casing and some minor details ^^
In case someone wants to know, I used a LG cd reader 52X, and the wiring was like this:
1 and 2 - buttons
3, 8 and 9 - supply (I tried today with 12V, but I think it works on 6V)
4 and 7 - audio input
5 and 6 - ground
10 and 11 - open tray sensor
12 and 13 - motor
First, congratulations !! Very nice instructables!! I'm just about to build it up, but I want to know if it's possible to use another energy source..like two AA batteries..does it really need a 9.6v current?
Thanks from Brazil!
I salute Brazil!
I have used 9V battery because I decided to use a linear regulator producing 5V supply voltage and it needs higher input voltage (min. 6.7V ) and the easiest way was to use a 9V battery.
If your amplifier is able to work with voltages ~2.6 V you can use directly 2 AA batteries, for 4V you will need 3 of them...and so.
You can check the minimum supply voltage in the datasheet, when you identify the chip type and find the spec in the Internet.
It is possible to use also boost converter - it will produce high supply voltage for the amplifier based on lower input battery voltage - on the homepage of the National semiconductors ( http://www.national.com ) is placed "Wavebench designer". In the tab "Power" You can enter the input, the output voltage, the desired current and it recommends you which chip can be used. But the circuit is normally complicated and I am not sure how nice the ripples in the generated supply can be filtered in the way that they do not disturb the sound quality. So... my advice - the simplest way to use AA batteries is to connect more of them in series ( min 3 if possible or 4 )
Regards
Milen