Guest
Heya,
I've soldered a texas instruments PC1804 A/D converter to a SSOP28
adapter board. At the moment, all adjacent pins are measuring about
400-700 thousand ohms of resistance between eachother.
However, when I hook up the digital and analog voltages to the chip, it
appears that the analog voltage pins (Vcc, 5 volts) are getting very
hot and possibly reflowing the solder and shorting out? The leftover
flux will start to smoke. I'll disconnect everything and measure the
resistance between the Vcc and Analog Ground pins, and there's anywhere
from almost no resistance to 10 thousand ohms.
I'm hooking it up like this:
http://www.pixelwrench.com/schem3.jpg
Could it be that the pins are just shorted? or am I hooking something
up wrong and it's shorting internally? All I've had hooked up to the
PCM1804 was just the Digital and Analog voltages and grounds, nothing
else. Any ideas?
Regards,
Matt
I've soldered a texas instruments PC1804 A/D converter to a SSOP28
adapter board. At the moment, all adjacent pins are measuring about
400-700 thousand ohms of resistance between eachother.
However, when I hook up the digital and analog voltages to the chip, it
appears that the analog voltage pins (Vcc, 5 volts) are getting very
hot and possibly reflowing the solder and shorting out? The leftover
flux will start to smoke. I'll disconnect everything and measure the
resistance between the Vcc and Analog Ground pins, and there's anywhere
from almost no resistance to 10 thousand ohms.
I'm hooking it up like this:
http://www.pixelwrench.com/schem3.jpg
Could it be that the pins are just shorted? or am I hooking something
up wrong and it's shorting internally? All I've had hooked up to the
PCM1804 was just the Digital and Analog voltages and grounds, nothing
else. Any ideas?
Regards,
Matt