Hello,
This is my first post, and my first electronic project of any kind (aside from assembling kits in 20 years ago in high-school), so please be kind.
The goal is to add Bluetooth to my 1986 IROC, recently inherited from my mother. The complication is that I want to keep the original head-unit.
After much research, I found out how the AC Delco radio boys add an aux output to the original radios, and which wires to splice in, (basically the FM signal from the radio to the amplifier), so that should not be a problem. (They also recommend replacing some caps on the amplifier, so, with any project, the more you get into it, the bigger it becomes
).
However, what they tend to do is add a five-wire aux port that switches between passing the existing FM signal though, or switching in the AUX signal. Fine if all you want to do is to plug you iPhone in; not very elegant for a permanently installed Bluetooth receiver, as you would have to plug the headphone wire in and out all the time.
Fortunately, the Bluetooth receiver I found has a control wire that is on when the Bluetooth is on, so all I need is an audio switch.
Again after much research, and education, and following some of the debate on the internet about audio switchers (how IC's are great/good/in league with the devil), I decided that the better was the enemy of the good and settled on a plain old 4066. But then I realized that there were about a thousand different plain old 4066's. After more reseach I settled on the Max4066, due to the low Ron, and wide input voltage (which I though I would use, but in the end added a linear regulator).
More research about audio line level, coupling capacitors, decoupling capacitor, not gates, transistors, resistor networks, and diodes, (I really was starting at the basics), I came up with the following:
The voltage regulator is basically to provide power protection to the rest of the circuit. I settled on 8 volts as it was the highest (I think) that the LM78xx series does, starting from 10.5V (low, but not knowing what power regulation, if any is in the car, I designed if for 10.5-14.5V). (please comment).
Then I decided it would be nice to add some leds to show if everything was working, so back to the books to learn about how not to blow up a led. I stumbled upon a bi-colour led to be blue when the bluetooth was on, or green for FM, but had to hit the books again becasue it was a common cathode led (figured out I needed a PNP transistor, not an NPN.
In a case of the project growing in scope, It occurred to me that the automatic antenna should not be raised when the Bluetooth is on (which it otherwise would be as this is where I will splice into), so more research showed how to build an And gate (actually 1/2 of an And gate) with another transistor. More research on how not to blow up a transistor when switching a relay.
Then, to avoid having a separate box for the fuses, I added fuses for the Bluetooth receiver as well (plus a USB port to charge the iPhone with) (I decided to call it quits here, and just buy a DC-USB power converter here, as opposed to more circuits). (Again, the problem with project creep). I know I will need wide traces at this end of the board.
I am going to breadboard it next, but I wanted to post what I have so far and see if anybody would like to comment. Basically, I would like to know if I made any obvious mistakes as to where I will let all the magic smoke out, or if I am doing anything particularly hard or convoluted.