Author Topic: Ground to inductor to ground capactior mystery  (Read 545 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline sausageTopic starter

  • Regular Contributor
  • *
  • Posts: 50
  • Country: au
Ground to inductor to ground capactior mystery
« on: January 25, 2021, 01:38:56 am »
Hi all.

I'm currently troubleshooting a dead Commodore 64C and I found what I thought was a short across C56 which is a ceramic type capacitor. I took the part out and it was fine. Then I looked at the schematic and discovered this:



The point of interest is highlighted in blue. The Power Input comes from an external transformer. Pins 1, 2 and 3 on that plug are ground.

The mystery for me is this: The incoming grounding path goes through an inductor to the PCB ground. Before the inductor is one side of the capacitor. Essentially both sides of the capacitor will appear as a short, or at least plus the resistance of the inductor.

I'd be interested to know what this technique is for, and what it might be called so I can read up on it.
« Last Edit: January 25, 2021, 01:47:42 am by sausage »
Would love to meet up with people in the Canberra/Queanbeyan region who are keen to learn together.
 

Offline M0HZH

  • Regular Contributor
  • *
  • Posts: 211
  • Country: gb
    • QRPblog
Re: Ground to inductor to ground capactior myster.
« Reply #1 on: January 25, 2021, 01:55:19 am »
L1 seems to be a common mode choke; the DC return will minimize core flux in L1.

C56 will mostly have an effect at high frequencies (transients?).

 
The following users thanked this post: Ian.M

Offline retrolefty

  • Super Contributor
  • ***
  • Posts: 1648
  • Country: us
  • measurement changes behavior
Re: Ground to inductor to ground capactior mystery
« Reply #2 on: January 25, 2021, 01:57:01 am »
Looks like a high-pass filter (cap/inductor) on the ground line. Helps to filter out noise.
 

Offline sausageTopic starter

  • Regular Contributor
  • *
  • Posts: 50
  • Country: au
Re: Ground to inductor to ground capactior mystery
« Reply #3 on: January 25, 2021, 02:27:04 am »
Thank you muchly to you both.
Would love to meet up with people in the Canberra/Queanbeyan region who are keen to learn together.
 


Share me

Digg  Facebook  SlashDot  Delicious  Technorati  Twitter  Google  Yahoo
Smf