Dear all,

The problem is solved as far as it can be solved. It is not a power 
stability issue as I thought it was although it was not far from it. The 
specific microchip sensor itself needs grounding when it is used in a 
battery powered situation. Unfortunately that was not in the datasheet of 
the sensor that I used but it was found in a similar device's design 
guide: http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/40001716C.pdf (page 
23 if you are interested). Luckily the sensor will be used in the proximity 
of a decent amount of brass (trumpet) so my problem is more or less solved.

Thanks for paying attention if you did.

Best, Hans.



Op vrijdag 13 maart 2020 17:41:00 UTC+1 schreef Hans Leeuw:
>
> Dear all,
>
> I am not completely sure where my problem is but I think I have narrowed 
> it down to its core and it seems to be a power (stability) issue. Solving 
> it might be a hassle but maybe you can help.
>
> I have a 3Dtouch sensor from microchip: 
> https://www.microchip.com/DevelopmentTools/ProductDetails/DM160225
> And I also have a Wifi USB dongle from Edimax: 
> https://www.edimax.com/edimax/merchandise/merchandise_detail/data/edimax/global/wireless_adapters_ac1200_dual-band/ew-7822ulc/
>
> Both are connected through USB to the beaglebone, the 3Dtouch on bus 002 
> (the USB bus on the pins) and one on bus 001 (the micro USB OTG connection) 
> using a micro USB to USB A female adapter.
>
> The board is powered with a duo cell LiPo using a step down regulator from 
> Pololu (5V, 5A) on Vin and VB and Vin-USB (pin 1-1, 1-5, 1-7).
>
> Sensordata from the 3Dtouch gets distorted by the Wifi dongle and I 
> suspect that interference on the power bus is the cause of it since a 
> stronger power regulator does help somewhat in stabilizing the issue. 
> Furthermore using a USB extension cable on the USB wifi dongle reduces the 
> problem substantially. Such a cable on my project would aesthetically and 
> practically not be preferred though. From the schematic of the board I see 
> that USB1 and the micro USB are connected with a ferrite bead (FB1).
>
>
>    1. Would it be an option to remove FB1 and power USB1 separately from 
>    the microUSB?
>    2. Would it be possible then to power the USB bus 002 with the sensor 
>    board on pin 1-5 and 1-7 and the rest of the board including the micro USB 
>    bus 001 through V1-1 with a separate power supply (separate power 
>    regulator)?
>    3. Should I also do something with Vbat?
>
> And of course would that probably solve my problem? Or does someone else 
> recognize my issue and has a better solution?
>
> Thanks for paying attention.
>
> Best, Hans.
>

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