[aprssig] Kenwood TH-D7 GPS connector grounding
Dave Baxter
Dave at emv.co.uk
Fri Sep 12 08:36:53 EDT 2008
Looking at a schematic.
The Battery -ve only connects directly to ground, when the
power/charging plug is removed, and it does so through the switched
connection.
With the plug in, the -ve is then connected to the charge regulator
circuit Q6 and R12, via D4, hence when you tried to find continuity, you
couldnt.
If you want to look yourself, I can make a .gif avaiable of that
schematic.
The Battery +ve however, is always present on the charge/power jack
center pole, at all times. But be aware that there is no current
limiting or fuse in that line!
73
Dave G0WBX
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Greg D. [mailto:ko6th_greg at hotmail.com]
> Sent: 12 September 2008 06:54
> To: 'TAPR APRS Mailing List'
> Subject: [aprssig] Kenwood TH-D7 GPS connector grounding
>
>
> Hi folks,
>
> So, I'm still working on mounting a GPS unit on top of my
> TH-D7. I have it all running, somewhat lashed-up, and it's
> great not having all sorts of little things strung together.
> Currently the GPS is being powered by 4xAAA 900mAh NiMH
> cells, and they seem to work great. For the curious, pictures at:
> http://home.wavecable.com/~ko6th/Ham_Radio-IMG_0232.jpg and
> http://home.wavecable.com/~ko6th/Ham_Radio-IMG_0233.jpg. The
> GPS unit is an EM-406A from Sparkfun.com; runs on 4.5 to
> 6.5v. The TTL output is inverted with an NPN transistor, and
> then direct into the TH-D7.
>
> But, batteries make the attachment too big, and need to be
> charged separately from the unit. So, I want to tap into the
> main battery pack, which is a Batteries America BT-11h with
> 6xAA 2700mAh NiMH batteries. Then I can mount just the GPS
> part of the board on the radio.
>
> But, I want to do this safely.
>
> That's the puzzle. I took an ohmmeter to the unit, to be
> sure that I'm not introducing a ground loop by doing this. I
> expected that the ground side of the GPS port on the side of
> the radio would be tied to the negative side of the battery.
> Instead I get no connection at all. Infinite resistance. I
> guess it's possible that they went to the trouble of
> isolating the two; perhaps they had to. But my mental
> warning alarm is going off...
>
> Does anyone know if grounding the GPS port common terminal to
> the battery negative will cause a problem? My plan is to tap
> into the BT-11h, picking up the negative from the top of the
> right-hand column of cells (as you look at the pack with the
> lid open); that's the same as the negative of the overall
> pack. Then, 4 cells-worth up the 6-cell string is right next
> to it, at the top of the middle column. Easy to pick that up
> too. Drill a small hole, and out come the wires with about
> 5v on them. The result will be a little uneven in the
> discharge, with an extra 50ma load on 4 of the 6 batteries
> when the GPS is on, but I figure that overall it won't be
> noticed. The alternative is to add a regulator to the GPS
> board, but then I'd need to dig deep into the battery pack to
> get at the positive terminal. I like simple.
>
> But either way, the negative of the battery pack will be
> connected to the ground side of the GPS port. Is that going to be ok?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Greg KO6TH
>
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