Key fob only works on battery and not power supply. What?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the issue of a key fob that operates only on battery power and not when connected to a power supply. Participants explore potential reasons for this behavior, including electrical characteristics, current requirements, and the role of components within the fob. The conversation includes technical explanations and hypotheses regarding the fob's design and functionality.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes that the key fob did not work with a power supply, despite being functional with a battery, and speculates about the power supply's frequency noise affecting performance.
  • Another participant questions whether the power supply was connected with reversed polarity, suggesting that this could have damaged the fob.
  • Participants discuss the current output of the power supply, with one noting that the current was too small to measure accurately.
  • Concerns are raised about whether the power supply can maintain the necessary voltage during transmission, and whether the multiple pads on the battery contact serve a functional purpose.
  • One participant suggests that the lack of sufficient buffer capacitors in the fob may prevent it from handling high-frequency currents when powered by a supply.
  • Another participant proposes adding a capacitor to the battery terminals when using a power supply, believing it may resolve the issue.
  • There is speculation about the battery potentially acting as an antenna, with discussions on the implications of lead length and inductance on transmission capabilities.
  • One participant expresses uncertainty about the power supply's ability to deliver the necessary current peaks for transmission, suggesting that the wiring may inhibit high-frequency current flow.
  • Another participant mentions the importance of hand positioning when testing the fob's functionality, as it may affect the antenna's performance.
  • There are discussions about the specifications of the batteries used, with clarifications on the differences between CR2016 and CR2032 batteries.
  • One participant expresses concern about damaging the fob while troubleshooting, indicating a desire to avoid further complications.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the reasons for the key fob's failure to operate with a power supply. There is no consensus on the underlying cause, and various hypotheses are presented without resolution.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the uncertainty surrounding the power supply's current output, the potential effects of lead length and inductance, and the role of the battery in the fob's operation. The discussion also highlights the need for further testing and experimentation to clarify these issues.

thatsmessedup
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TL;DR
Key fob only works on battery and not power supply. What's going on here?
Yesterday the batteries died on my key fob and I didn't have the appropriate batteries to replace them. I thought I could use my power supply to operate the key fob to open the car door but it did not work. I thought that it may be caused by a noisy power supply at the higher frequency range of 432MHz but when I got my hackRF to investigate the waveform with the battery and then with the power supply, I was shocked to find no signal at all. I have since replaced the batter and everything works great, but as a recently graduated EE I am at odds with what is going on. Can anyone help me figure out this mystery. Here is a youtube link of the issue
 
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Any chance you connected the PS with reversed polarity? (Although I'd be surprised that it didn't blow up the fob) Full disclosure -- I didn't watch your video.

Also, what did your PS show as output current?
 
Polarity is good and I tested to make sure it was 6[V] with a multimeter. current is too small to measure on the power supply so I don't know off hand. I suppose I could measure it if it will help.
 
What current did your power supply show?
 
berkeman said:
What current did your power supply show?
current is too small to measure on the power supply so I don't know off hand. I suppose I could measure it if it will help.
 
Trasmit current will be measurable, no?
 
berkeman said:
Trasmit current will be measurable, no?
I have measured the current to be 5.5-6.5 [mA] when the button is pressed
 
Is the current limit on the power supply set high enough (do you maintain full 6V at transmit?). Are the multiple pads (square array) on the negative battery pad there for a functional reason? Must admit I'm flummoxed...grasping at straws
 
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I cranked up the current limiter and also tried a different variable power supply with no luck. I can't imagine that the grid is anything more then to make sure the battery is touching.
20210823_221054.jpg
20210823_221042.jpg
 
  • #10
This is the power supply I'm using.
20210823_221445.jpg
 
  • #11
20210823_220747.jpg
20210823_220508.jpg
 
  • #12
Here are some closeups of the two major chips on the PCB.
20210823_221339.jpg
20210823_221349.jpg
 
  • #13
Is the battery used as the antenna somehow? (I see no real antenna.)
 
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  • #14
The thing has no sufficient buffer caps. Through a battery this is not a problem, it can support some silly big current peaks on short term: but a PSU wiring will prevent going through any HF current, so no power for transmit.
Add some 100uF tantal (or: ceramic - a miracle that you can have these in ceramic!) to the battery terminals when it's with a PSU. I think it'll work with that.
 
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  • #15
hutchphd said:
Is the battery used as the antenna somehow? (I see no real antenna.)
the looped trace in post 9 , i presume.
 
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  • #16
Rive said:
The thing has no sufficient buffer caps. Through a battery this is not a problem, it can support some silly big current peaks on short term: but a PSU wiring will prevent going through any HF current, so no power for transmit.
Add some 100uF tantal (or: ceramic - a miracle that you can have these in ceramic!) to the battery terminals when it's with a PSU. I think it'll work with that.
That makes a lot of sense. Maybe I can give this a try at some point but right now I don't have one of those on hand. Thanks!
 
  • #17
Your video shows it working with the battery and you holding it with one hand.
With the power supply, you are holding it with two hands, left hand to push the button and the right hand holding the clip lead on the battery contact. The index finger of your right hand is contacting the antenna loop around the edge of the pc board, thereby greatly loading and detuning the antenna; probably enough to to disable the xmit oscillator.

A method for power connection is to insert a piece of paper and a piece of Aluminium foil between the circuit board and the battery, foil against the board, paper to insulate the battery. You can then clip the power supply lead to the foil without frying the battery, while still powering the board.

Cheers,
Tom
 
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  • #18
I think adding the capacitor will make it work. One last thing I tried was smaller leads but I think they were still to long. The wavelength at 432[MHz] is about 70[cm] so the leads would need to be much smaller than that to have a chance at sourcing power in a timely manner to be transmitted. Additionally, even a few [nH] of inductance will create a lot of reactance at these high frequencies. So, I'm hoping that a low inductance, close proximity source will operate the key fob. I've got some tantalum caps on the way... We will see. Thanks for all the helpful tips and lessons and ill keep you updated if the caps do the magic.
 
  • #19
The last picture in this post shows a CR2016 which is a 3V battery.

[Edit:]But the video shows that there two of them so that is good (CR2032 equivalent).
 
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  • #20
pbuk said:
[Edit:]But the video shows that there two of them so that is good (CR2032 equivalent).
(forestalling unfortunate incidents)

The CR2032 is a 3V lithium single cell just twice as fat . Two CR2016 in series are not equivalent so I am not sure what you are saying
 
  • #21
hutchphd said:
(forestalling unfortunate incidents)

The CR2032 is a 3V lithium single cell just twice as fat . Two CR2016 in series are not equivalent so I am not sure what you are saying
Nor am I :oops: - edited.
 
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  • #22
thatsmessedup said:
I think adding the capacitor will make it work. One last thing I tried was smaller leads but I think they were still to long. The wavelength at 432[MHz] is about 70[cm] so the leads would need to be much smaller than that to have a chance at sourcing power in a timely manner to be transmitted. Additionally, even a few [nH] of inductance will create a lot of reactance at these high frequencies. So, I'm hoping that a low inductance, close proximity source will operate the key fob. I've got some tantalum caps on the way... We will see. Thanks for all the helpful tips and lessons and ill keep you updated if the caps do the magic.
Have you tried the suggestion in post 17? You can test if hand position is affecting the antenna while you are waiting for the caps.
 
  • #23
Rive said:
The thing has no sufficient buffer caps. Through a battery this is not a problem, it can support some silly big current peaks on short term: but a PSU wiring will prevent going through any HF current, so no power for transmit.
Add some 100uF tantal (or: ceramic - a miracle that you can have these in ceramic!) to the battery terminals when it's with a PSU. I think it'll work with that.

Gave it a try with a 100[uF] tantalum capacitor on the terminals. Not a single blip from the HackRF.
20210827_121737.jpg
 
  • #24
This is a pretty simple looking device as far as individual components go. Have you made a schematic and taken some voltmeter readings? Are you sure you are actually getting the unit powered?
 
  • #25
Averagesupernova said:
This is a pretty simple looking device as far as individual components go. Have you made a schematic and taken some voltmeter readings? Are you sure you are actually getting the unit powered?
No I have not made a schematic, but I really thought the cap would make the fob do the magic. There are still many things that can be going on here. Possibly taking out the battery removed quite a bit of metal from inside the loop that is supporting the antennas resonance. At this point it would be hard to test as I need this keyfob to use my car and I'm a little scared ill do something stupid and damage the unit.
 
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  • #26
NTL2009 said:
Have you tried the suggestion in post 17? You can test if hand position is affecting the antenna while you are waiting for the caps.
I tried different hand positions and there was no difference.
 
  • #27
I would like a pic of the OP lugging that bigass power supply around on his keychain
 
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  • #28
DaveC426913 said:
I would like a pic of the OP lugging that bigass power supply around on his keychain
It is possible that the power leads introduce too much radiation damping into the circuit. If it is a super regen receiver they are very sensitive to having too much loading.
 
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  • #29
With the fob on battery power and producing the pulse train can you threaten it with the power supply leads (one side at a time) and make it stop ??
 
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  • #30
Right, might be nothing to do with this, but as a high school physics teacher, we sometimes make electromagnets with a nail and a coil of wire.
As a young teacher, short of batteries, I assumed I might be able to make these using school power packs which look a bit like that supply you have there. But no, they made rubbish electromagnets, batteries are miles better.
At some point, maybe when teaching ac/dc to students, I realized that the trace on the dc supply is nothing like the battery, it's 1/2 wave rectified and not particularly pretty (yes, I know, this shouldn't have been a surprise to me).
I assume that was what made the made it fail as an electromagnet.
Is that why it's not working for you?
 

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