this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
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That looks like a really simple USB C port in legacy A (with DP/DM charge signals) configuration. The single IC most likely does the USB negotiation and the CC/CV charge of the battery.
Often these devices are tightly coupled with the USB state machine. Just applying 5v without terminating the sense resistors won't do anything.
Also be very careful with Qi chargers. The resonant circuit produces voltage spikes in the tens of volts. It is usually regulated and smoothed to 5v out. But it's also very bursty. Make sure your output circuit after the coil is fully regulated 5v voltage. I've seen them be varying voltages and even current mode outputs.
Thanks is there a way to know if the voltage spikes are properly filtered out without a spectrum analyzer I only have a multimeter ( and It shows something around 5v )I also noticed the coils will randomly die, I have altrady bought 2 from china and now I'm wondering if it has something to do with me charging the headphones via USB c while the coil Is plugged in ... I Will add photos of the circuit as soon as possibile thanks again for your help
You generally can't just connect two power supplies together. Usually you'll want some sort of power path style controller.
You'd want to check the output with an oscilloscope.
Thanks i Will make sure to connect only One at a time ... ๐๐ป
Cheap power supplies being back-powered from the output will die. By connect together I mean put in the same circuit. Not use at the same time.
You're possibly powering the other power supply through the feedback resistors, ESD diodes, etc. You really want a controller that can share between the two sources or just 2 diodes if you can take the voltage drop
Oh now its clear i dont have a special controller neither the space to fit It inside the headphones so i will go the diode rout, if i pay attention not to plug them both in at the same time could I use only one for the wireless circuit ? How do I know if I can take the voltage drop ?