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| Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews Are you building an electronic project or want to? Maybe you need some assistance? Come and submit your electronic questions here and let our experienced members find a solution. |
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| I've been breadboarding and building electronic devices for many years. No matter how experienced you are, there are times when help is needed. This is one of those occasions. I've got an elderly and chronically ill relative. She can use a computer, but I've always helped her out when she's having problems. Her old V.90 modem needed to be replaced. Please, don't tell me that dial-up is dead. I've offered to pay for any broadband service she might like to try. She's online for about 45 minutes each day and she only visits a few web sites. Like millions of others, she doesn't need broadband. I decided to buy the best 56K modem I could find. I wanted a true hardware-controller based internal PCI modem. I selected a MultiTech MultiModem ZPX, which has a flashable BIOS. A lot of modem manufacturers use words like "controller based," buy they actually rely on a DSP. The moment I removed the modem from the shipping carton I knew I had made a mistake. This relative has significant hearing loss. I plugged a pair of amplified speakers into a jack on her old modem so she could hear the dialtone and handshaking. This high end MultiModem didn't have any jacks. I didn't care about voiding the warranty. I wanted to get the thing installed in her PC as fast as possible. I used a short length of narrow gauge coax audio cable and connected it across the two pins on that micro sized piezo speaker element found on every 56K modem. I installed a monaural jack through one of the retaining brackets in an empty expansion slot. Since all speakers are configured for stereo, I used a stereo-to-monaural adapter plug. I coupled the center conductor from the audio coax through a 1 uf capacitor. The braid went to ground. When I prompted the modem to connect all I heard was a low level oscillating noise. I tried pulling to piezo element from the card, but it didn't make any difference. Strangely enough, if I break the ground connection I can hear a barely audible dialtone and handshaking. Turning the volume control all the way up doesn't help. Is there a schematic I could look at that would help me resolve this problem? Even better would be some small add-on kit that I could interface with this modem. Last edited by Oakton; 26th August 2006 at 04:37 PM. | |
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| Is the "speaker" on the modem really a piezo device? Ohm meter it to be sure. I suspect it really has a small voice coil of 100 ohms or so. Does one side of the "speaker" on the modem go to ground on the card or is it driven in a bridge configuration? Again, ohm meter it to be sure. Quote:
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| The telephone line and the modem speaker are balanced. Your amplified speakers are unbalanced. Add a 1:1 transformer to keep the telephone line parts balanced then the secondary can be unbalanced to the amplified speakers without problems.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| Thank you kchriste and audioguru. I apologize for my rambling and lengthy post. When it comes to designing and building circuits a schematic, block diagram, or picture is worth a thousand, no, more like a million words! I don't think I've ever seen a schematic of a 56K modem. I know the basics of how they work, but I've never studied one in detail. Thanks again! Oakton | |
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