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Has anyone bought an aftermarket clock (ex. LC AUDIO XO2) that outputs a 5V signal, but wanted to run it into a chip that runs on 3.3V or lower? Was a simple resistor divider good enough to scale down the voltage? What was the magnitude of the resistors (ohm, Kohm, Mohm)?I want to preserve the clock waveform integrity and just remove the excess voltage. Thanks for all your input,Vinnie
Hi Vinnie,If you build a resistor divider, I would think something in the low Kohm range maybe. You don't want to go too low, because then the resistor to ground would load down the signal. If you go too high, you're putting a lot of res ...
Hi Randy,Thanks for your reponse. Well, I tried a 1K and 2K resistor divider to make the output 3.3V. The output went from 0-5V to about 2-4V, and it became a triangle on the scope instead of a square-wave. Maybe an impedance mismatch issue, or maybe I'm loading down the output putting the 2K to ground? This is strange indeed Should I try a 10K and 20K to see if this improves, or maybe a 100K and 200K? Also, right before the output of the X02, the signal goes through a 56ohm resistor ...
With the 2K to ground, sounds like you loaded it down, maybe. See what happens with 10K and 20K, I think 100K is kind of big. One thing is you are building a RC network, because the IC inputs always have some capacitance. If your resistor is too big, the C comes into play, and you will have a sine wave instead of a square wave.BTW, I always figured if the chip was made to handle a 5V input, it should be OK, at least it was not damaging the chip, but I see your point, it could have been less than ideal.Randy
Has anyone bought an aftermarket clock (ex. LC AUDIO XO2) that outputs a 5V signal, but wanted to run it into a chip that runs on 3.3V or lower? Was a simple resistor divider good enough to scale down the voltage? What was the magnitude of the resistors (ohm, Kohm, Mohm)?I want to preserve the clock waveform integrity and just remove the excess voltage.