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Basically yes and yes. LM2596 is a relative slow switching device and not expected to generate much high MHz interferences. There should be a ceramic filter capacitor on the right side of the ferrite bead. You also may want to add a ferrite bead on the input side and/or common mode filtering torid cores to stop interferences from being conducted and radiated by the supply cable.Could I get away with 1 and 2?
I plan to mount antennas directly to the module, if that makes any difference.
By the filter capacitor, are you referring to the schematic image? Meaning that inbetween FB101 and VBAT, I should add yet another filter capacitor in addition to 330uF and 100nF? Can I use e.g. value of 100nF?There should be a ceramic filter capacitor on the right side of the ferrite bead. You also may want to add a ferrite bead on the input side and/or common mode filtering torid cores to stop interferences from being conducted and radiated by the supply cable.
By mounting directly to module I meant that I mount extension cables directly to the module, instead of having external PCB antenna interface. The antenna itself will be placed outside the module(plastic casing).The nearby antenna can pick up interferences radiated from the switch mode regulator. A continuous copper pour on the bottom side below the switching regulator circuit should usually reduce interfernces to an acceptable amount, but only a final try with local versus cable connected remote antenna can tell if you succeded.
What kind of affect would this have?A point to consider, even if the ferite bead is rated for e.g. 3A, the inductance may drop to a small fraction due to saturation.
Of course the GSM module will be transmitting occasionally...For that low current level I see no reason not to use the linear regulator.
It's simpler and you don't have to worry about switching noise.
That's why I asked the original question.For that low current level I see no reason not to use the linear regulator.
It's simpler and you don't have to worry about switching noise.
Hello! I'm designing SIM908 based Car GSM module, in which I need 12V to 4V PSU. The device in 99% in sleep mode in minimal current consumption and GPS only available on-demand.
!
It was actually also in "idle mode" with the 5mA consumption(sorry, I messed up the words). In this application the GSM modem must be connected to the network at all times, but everything else is sleeping.I believe that in most mobile applications, total energy bilance and in addition peak power capability of the battery are the important parameters. With 12 V battery, a LDO can be acceptable if the GSM module is most of the time in sleep mode (2 mA curent range). If it's receiving in idle mode (20 mA range) for a considerable amount of time, a switched mode converter (with better performance than LM2598) already pays.
That's a good point. It's definitely using mostly less than 30mA, so I think LDO is indeed sufficient.The easy answer is do a heat loss comparison.
Oh right indeed! It's indeed in the sleep mode, I have CSCLK=2. I can't believe my absence of mind anymore. I'm glad that I don't need to switch the module because of this.I'm not working with SIM900, but according to hardware design manual, the modem will connected to network in sleep mode, with only 1.0 to 1.5 mA current consumption. So there might be a specification misunderstanding. Of course I don't know if the manual is correct in all details.
It's actually 2A for 577us. Datasheet's example power supply circuit has 330uF output cap and 100uF input cap.Make sure you have the Current surge capacity and power dissipation capacity for Tx which may be 1A .
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