Comment on Building a USB-C DAC in as small a package as possible

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northernscrub@lemmy.world ⁨1⁩ ⁨day⁩ ago

I’ve put some thought into it, but realistically I lack the experience to flesh out the idea.

I’ve seen a few small DAC concepts out there, like www.elektroda.com/rtvforum/topic4091483.html or that iPhone modification that Strange Parts did a few years ago, but none of these really 100% match my needs. As for the sizing, the only real answer I have for you is “small” - whilst it is intended for integration into a phone, I’m going to be building a housing for that phone from scratch, so the size requirements are somewhat led by the dac itself. I had a few ideas about using a flexi-strip in place of a solid PCB too, but I think that’s aiming too high for my non-existent skillset. Instead, I have no problem redesigning the board to be long and thin if necessary, or squat and fat in the alternate. Realistically, it’s probably going to be somewhat L-shaped, but there’s a good two inches or more of width and something like six inches of height to work with - minus the PCB of the phone, that is.

The actual handset it will be accompanying is a Sony Xperia 1 IV, but that’s largely meaningless as we can add pretty much any additional size to it up to a reasonably large handset within the last ten years (preferably with an OLED display, but I’ll be somewhat limited in terms of compatibility anyway and might have to end up running the screen in an alternate fashion somehow, I haven’t thought too hard about that side of things because the project is useless if I can’t design a DAC inthe first place).

The heatsink stuff was really just a suggestion, I’m not actually sure if it will be necessary, but it’s good to have the option.

Specifications wise, it essentially needs to do four things:

The bit that I’m stuck on, really, is the addressable EQ. I could possibly go with some sort of Arduino-esque solution, but that’s a lot of lifting for a single-purpose device. I have no idea where else to start looking - I know there are RISC chips out there that run on nothing but a button cell, but again I’m clueless as to whether or not this is a good idea.

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