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Bluetooth radio clock
Bluetooth radio clock











  1. #Bluetooth radio clock mod#
  2. #Bluetooth radio clock Bluetooth#

8V-12V is ideal for using a bridge rectifier, however 6.3V won’t provide a high enough rectified and smoothed voltage to feed a 5V voltage regulator, so in this case we need to use a voltage doubler as in the circuit below: The basic idea is to rectify the AC, smooth it and then feed this through a 5V voltage regulator. Another alternative I have used is to connect my power supply in parallel with the filament of a vacuum tube. We can just convert the 6.3V AC into 5V DC. Some radios have a transformer that provides the filament voltage, and these are probably the cleanest way to power the device. We will probably need to convert some AC voltage into a DC voltage. The module only draws at most 80mA, so let’s see if we can provide that directly from the radio. You could provide this with a battery pack or an external 5V supply and you could wire this power source in to the switch so that it only powered the module when it was selected as an input, but you would need a three-pole double-throw switch to do that. Both of these are normally provided with the module. If it is not connected it will be flashing, and if there is no power, it will be off! The capacitor is just a decoupling capacitor. The LED indicates the state of the module. We are just going to provide it with a Vcc of +5V and use OUTL and OUTR like so: KRC-86B Connections There are a lot of possible connections that we aren’t going to use.

#Bluetooth radio clock Bluetooth#

My preferred Bluetooth module is the KRC-86B, pictured below: If all else fails, use a three-pole double-throw switch to disconnect the power to the Bluetooth unit when listening to broadcasts. I have found that if you connect it to the volume ground terminal, you will hear hash from the Bluetooth receiver when listening to broadcasts.

bluetooth radio clock

NOTE: The point that the auto-transformer is connected to chassis ground can be important. In some scenarios, the chassis ground (GNDD) may be the same as the power supply ground (GND). This can help to remove ground-loop hum that can arise depending on how the new source is powered. The second purpose is that it can act as an isolation transformer to decouple the new audio source from the radio. Triad make another transformer – the TY-142P that can give a boost of 1:2.24 or 1:4.48 depending on how it is wired. If it is wired as shown in the diagram it gives a 1:2 voltage boost, which seems about right on all the radios I have modded. The particular model I am using is the TY-141P. The first is to boost the output of the Bluetooth module so that it has about the same loudness for a given volume setting as the radio itself. The next block we will talk about is the auto-transformer. The use of these resistors prevents the output from one channel destroying the other channel. You will see that the right and left channels are connected together via two 1k resistors. The next block to look at as the one marked Bluetooth. This helps stop sound from the RF/IF stages of the radio from bleeding through to the speaker. In the diagram above you can see (hopefully) that when our new audio source is connected, the original one is connected to ground rather than just left floating. NOTE: It is a good idea to use shielded cable to make the connections between the radio and the switch. In the other position it will connect our new audio source instead. In one position the switch will connect that wire back to the volume control.

bluetooth radio clock

A double-pole double-throw switch is simply a switch with two positions (double-throw) that switches two sources at the same time (double-pole). we will cut this wire and route it to a double-pole double-throw switch. We are going to wire our new audio source across the volume control.įind the lead going to the volume control that is not connected to ground and does not go to the audio ouput stage. The modification here is the same regardless of what external source we are going to wire in.

#Bluetooth radio clock mod#

This shows a high-level view of what we are going to do: Bluetooth Mod Overview Radio Modifications

bluetooth radio clock

This solution wires the Bluetooth ‘dongle’ into the radio directly, so that it comes on when the radio comes on. this certainly works (and you can use most of what is here to do that), but you still need a Bluetooth dongle and leads, and you have to charge it up and turn it on and switch the radio to aux-in. One solution to this is to add an aux-in so that you can plug in an external source and play it through the radio. I don’t like my radios to be shelf-queens, I want to be able to use them and honestly, the sound from the bigger radios is great. Even if that weren’t the case, let’s be honest, most of what people listen to these days is streamed. Most vintage radios are AM only, and in my part of the world, the only thing on AM is talk radio.

bluetooth radio clock

I’m writing this as much for my own use as anything else – I keep having to re-invent this solution every time I fix a vintage radio.













Bluetooth radio clock