So I have been renovating some old Steadicams. These run off V mount batteries on the bottom brackets which feeds power to the camera and accessories on the top stage and the monitor on the bottom bracket.
Electrics is not something I know too much about but I’ve tried to do some research and taught myself to solder. I installed all the wiring and sockets and made up all the cables for the power and the video feed from the camera to the monitor and everything worked fine but my monitors SDI video input is broken. It’s a good monitor that would cost a lot of money to replace and the HDMI input works fine so I found a little SDI to HDMI converter. The converter though needs power too, 5V DC, and came with it’s own power cable that plugs into the wall. I plugged it in, fed the SDI video signal into the converter and then the HDMI out of the converter into the monitor. Plugged the monitor into the battery on the Steadicam and tested the signal. The converter worked great, no lag, good signal.
But obviously it’ll need to run off the steadicam battery too so I split the power cable coming from the battery to the monitor and put two DC plugs on it, one for the monitor and one for the SDI-HDMI converter and plugged them both in. I put the camera on the steadicam and plugged the video SDI into the converter and the HDMI from the converter into the monitor and before I could check for a signal smoke came out of the top of the monitor. I quickly unplugged everything.
I checked my monitor and it still works fine with the HDMI feed in but obviously I don’t want to plug everything back in as it was. What I was thinking was that there must be power coming down the HDMI and causing a short in the monitor. I checked all the cables again and they are all fine so I checked what was coming down the HDMI and it’s about 5V. I plugged the converter into the battery and the wall and checked both, they both have about 5V coming down the HDMI.
Do you think I’m right or have I missed something? I do need to put a boost buck on the power supply and I’m wondering if this would isolate the monitor/converter? Or will this set up never work without a separate battery for the converter. Or just biting the bullet for a new monitor. Any advice appreciated.
Electrics is not something I know too much about but I’ve tried to do some research and taught myself to solder. I installed all the wiring and sockets and made up all the cables for the power and the video feed from the camera to the monitor and everything worked fine but my monitors SDI video input is broken. It’s a good monitor that would cost a lot of money to replace and the HDMI input works fine so I found a little SDI to HDMI converter. The converter though needs power too, 5V DC, and came with it’s own power cable that plugs into the wall. I plugged it in, fed the SDI video signal into the converter and then the HDMI out of the converter into the monitor. Plugged the monitor into the battery on the Steadicam and tested the signal. The converter worked great, no lag, good signal.
But obviously it’ll need to run off the steadicam battery too so I split the power cable coming from the battery to the monitor and put two DC plugs on it, one for the monitor and one for the SDI-HDMI converter and plugged them both in. I put the camera on the steadicam and plugged the video SDI into the converter and the HDMI from the converter into the monitor and before I could check for a signal smoke came out of the top of the monitor. I quickly unplugged everything.
I checked my monitor and it still works fine with the HDMI feed in but obviously I don’t want to plug everything back in as it was. What I was thinking was that there must be power coming down the HDMI and causing a short in the monitor. I checked all the cables again and they are all fine so I checked what was coming down the HDMI and it’s about 5V. I plugged the converter into the battery and the wall and checked both, they both have about 5V coming down the HDMI.
Do you think I’m right or have I missed something? I do need to put a boost buck on the power supply and I’m wondering if this would isolate the monitor/converter? Or will this set up never work without a separate battery for the converter. Or just biting the bullet for a new monitor. Any advice appreciated.