Today, most telephone equipment use a DTMF receiver IC. One common DTMF
receiver IC is the Motorola MT8870 that is widely used in electronic
communications circuits. The MT8870 is an 18-pin IC. It is used in
telephones and a variety of other applications. When a proper output is
not obtained in projects using this IC, engineers or technicians need to
test this IC separately. A quick testing of this IC could save a lot of
time in research labs and manufacturing industries of communication
instruments. Here’s a small and handy tester circuit for the DTMF IC. It
can be assembled on a multipurpose PCB with an 18-pin IC base. One can
also test the IC on a simple breadboard. For optimum working of
telephone equipment, the DTMF receiver must be designed to recognise a
valid tone pair greater than 40 ms in duration and to accept successive
digit tone-pairs that are greater than 40 ms apart.
It will be high for a duration depending on the values of capacitor and
resistors at pins 16 and 17. The optional circuit shown within dotted
line is used for guard time adjustment. The LEDs connected via resistors
R11 to R14 at pins 11 through 14, respectively, indicate the output of
the IC. The tone-pair DTMF (dual-tone multi-frequency) generated by
pressing the telephone button is converted into binary values internally
in the IC. The binary values are indicated by glowing of LEDs at the
output pins of the IC. LED1 represents the lowest significant bit (LSB)
and LED4 represents the most significant bit (MSB). So, when you dial a
number, say, 5, LED1 and LED3 will glow, which is equal to 0101.
Similarly, for every other number dialled on your telephone, the
corresponding LEDs will glow. Thus, a non-defective IC should indicate
proper binary values corresponding to the decimal number pressed on your
telephone keypad.
To test the DTMF IC 8870/KT3170, proceed as follows:
To test the DTMF IC 8870/KT3170, proceed as follows:
- Connect local telephone and the circuit in parallel to the same telephone line.
- Switch on S1. (Switch on auxiliary switch S2 only if keys A, B, C, and D are to be used.)
- Now push key ‘*’ to generate DTMF tone.
- Push any decimal key from the telephone keypad.
- Observe the equivalent binary as shown in the table.
- If the binary number implied by glowing of LED1 to LED4 is equivalent to the pressed key number (decimal/A, B, C, or D), the DTMF IC 8870 is correct.
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