The Important Of
Feedback In Electronic Circuits
According to
Dictionary.com the word “Feedback” referring to
electronics, is the
process of returning part of the output of a circuit, system, or
device to the input, either to oppose the input (negative
feedback) or to aid the input (positive
feedback).
Do you know that
there are actually quite a number of feedback circuits in
electronic equipment without you realizing it? The most common
feedback circuit in electronic equipment is the Switch Mode Power
Supplies. The feedback circuit in SMPS is used either for
regulation, protection or for both function purposes. If
without/lost of the feedback signals, certain circuits like the
CPU/MCU will not function properly and the power supplies may go
into shutdown mode. If you want higher
chances in successfully repair electronic equipment, you need to
understand the function of the feedback circuit. I will share with
you some of the typical feedback circuits that can be found in
Monitor.
a) The Switch Mode
Power Supply (SMPS) feedback circuit mostly can be found in the
area at the secondary side of the Optoisolator IC. This feedback
signal is tapped from the B+ voltage line and is needed to regulate
the power supply through the Optoisolator IC so that the output
power will always be steady (see photo below).
In some design, the
feedback signal is taken from one of the winding in primary side
instead from the output B+ line as seen in photo below. Please
observe the power IC (I901) pin 7 written as FB which means
“Feedback”.
b) If you are
repairing CRT Monitor and Television, I’m sure you have seen the
“Sync wire” before which is located on the flyback transformer. The
signal from the wire is send back (feedback) from the flyback
transformer to the switch mode power supply in order to synchronize
the frequency. If you remove this wire from the circuit, you will
see that the display have wavy lines running vertically across the
display. That means, in the future, if you see any wavy lines
across the screen, your logical thinking will tell you to check the
sync wire and the corresponding components.
c) There are few
ways to control the output of the high voltage in the anode. One of
the ways is to tap a feedback signal from one of the flyback
transformer pins. The signal generated from the flyback transformer
will be fedback to the Pulse Width Modulation IC (PWM) UC3842 thus
controlling the total amount of high voltage at the anode. If the
Monitor have shutdown problem due to higher than normal high
voltage (exceeding 24 KVDC), I guess you need to check all the
corresponding components along the feedback line.
d) I have seen a
unique Monitor design that used the feedback from one of the
flyback transformer pins that sent to the CPU in order for the
Monitor to function properly. That means, although the CPU is
working fine, if the flyback transformer have problem and no signal
feedback to the CPU within a second or two, the power LED will
change from Green to Amber color. If you do not understand this
type of circuit, you may have thought that either the CPU or EEprom
IC (data corrupted) have problem. Troubleshooting the wrong circuit
will definitely waste your precious time.
e) Ever wonder why
when the LCD Monitor/LCD Television/Notebook backlight have problem
(broken or weak backlight) the display will shutdown? Thanks to the
feedback circuit that was designed to send the error signal back to
the inverter IC, thus shutting down the waveform to the high
voltage transformer. If the high voltage transformer did not
energize, there will be no high voltage produced thus the backlight
will not light up.
Conclusion- The
above article is not necessary applicable only to Monitor
electronic repairers, you may use it as a guide to understand your
type of electronic equipment (i.e. – Television (CRT/LCD),
Satellite Receiver, DVD, Audio Equipment, Xbox and etc). Fully
aware of the feedback circuit that present in your type of
equipment will add advantage to you because it could help you to
solve a particular problem fast that was caused by the feedback
circuit. What you need to do now is to get the schematic diagrams
of your type of electronic equipment and begin to pinpoint/search
how many feedback circuits do the equipment have and jot down all
the feedback circuits and analyze it. This will greatly improve the
repair rate of your type of equipment. Alright, that’s all for this
month and hope to see you again next month. All the
best!
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