P
Peter
Hi All,
I wonder if anyone has come across this... The ADS7828 is a I2C
interface converter. Like a lot of I2C devices, you send it an
addressing byte, of which 2 bits have to match the state of two
external inputs.
In that way, one can have a number of such devices on the same
data/clk bus.
The 7828 data sheet states that the device latches the A0/A1 states at
power-up. BUT this would make it unusable unless they were both tied
it GND (because of the unpredictable input thresholds while VCC is
rising) and certainly they could not be driven from any external
logic. Unless the latching was done some tens of ms after VCC has
risen... but the data sheet does not say that!
I am trying hard to get an answer from TI on this but their support
engineer doesn't appear to really know...
Can anyone offer any light on this?
Peter.
I wonder if anyone has come across this... The ADS7828 is a I2C
interface converter. Like a lot of I2C devices, you send it an
addressing byte, of which 2 bits have to match the state of two
external inputs.
In that way, one can have a number of such devices on the same
data/clk bus.
The 7828 data sheet states that the device latches the A0/A1 states at
power-up. BUT this would make it unusable unless they were both tied
it GND (because of the unpredictable input thresholds while VCC is
rising) and certainly they could not be driven from any external
logic. Unless the latching was done some tens of ms after VCC has
risen... but the data sheet does not say that!
I am trying hard to get an answer from TI on this but their support
engineer doesn't appear to really know...
Can anyone offer any light on this?
Peter.