Wed 3 Jan 2007
How to (MARGINALLY) improve the range of a very cheap RF mouse
Posted by nico under Electromagnetics , HOWTOWhile shopping at Microcenter, I found a “bargain” wireless mouse and keyboard combination on sale for $12.99. I wanted to add something like this to my media center and the price was really low so I decided to give it a try. The first attempt at using this proved that you really do get what you pay for. Both the mouse and keyboard work fine if they are only a foot or two from the receiver, however, the mouse stops working intermittently as the range is increased. I opened the receiver up and noticed that it was an inductively coupled system running at around 27MHz. The receiver has a pair of MC3361 (one to receive keyboard and one to receive mouse), low power FM IC and a single loop antenna. The mouse has a MA6221-S7K IC for a transmitter. The documentation for these chips has been very scarce, but what is available is at the bottom. The keyboard worked fine at large distances so I assumed it had a good antenna and didn’t bother taking it apart. It looks like the whole system is based on a reference design from Mosart, a Chinese company. Without having direct access to a network analyzer or standing wave ratio meter or lock-in amplifier, the two improvements that I could think of making were to “upgrade” the antenna and to change the squelch setting on the receiver ICs.
After playing with a few different designs, I settled on a 15-turn bundle of insulated wire to be attached in series with the single turn antenna on the board. Since I did not change the capacitors in the LC circuit, assuming the inductance was increased 16-fold, the resonant frequency of the circuit decreased to 1/4th. Again, without proper instrumentation, it is very hard to determine accurately what the actual resonant frequency is. My hypothesis was that even though the resonant frequency was lowered, the operating frequency was still a harmonic of the resonant frequency whose gain would be higher than what the original antenna circuit was. A better design here would be to replace the fixed capacitors with a variable 5-100pF cap and try to tune the antenna for better performance, but I didn’t have one laying around. The only thing that I could test was the effective range improvement which almost doubled making this device usable a few yards from the TV. This is acceptable for now, however, the next step is to try to determine if the squelch setting is hardwired for the device or if it can be made more sensitive by changing some biasing. Again, there are a-lot of ifs here, so your millage may vary.
( mc3361.pdf ) ( ma6221-s7k.pdf )
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January 5th, 2007 at 12:11 am
Interesting and very impressive! I wish I had study electronics when I was a kid.
January 22nd, 2007 at 7:57 pm
the link of the datahsheet ma6221-s7k.pdf does not point to a datasheet. If you have that datahseet I would very much like to have it since I’va had no luck finding it on google.
Interesting stuff there on your site.
January 22nd, 2007 at 9:12 pm
Dorit, I was unable to get that datasheet unfortunately. If I do come across it, I will post it for you.
March 4th, 2007 at 3:17 am
Awesome Idea! I just used it myself and I am very pleased with the results. I did it a little more ghetto but it’s still just what i needed. Thanks for the idea
March 4th, 2007 at 11:52 am
Stacey, I’m glad that it worked. You should post a link to some pictures.
April 29th, 2007 at 7:55 pm
Hi Nico!
I just received the “ma6221-s7k” from a friend for free (just the right price!), and I have no idea how to get it to work on my in-laws’ pc.
All she gave me was the mouse and the adapter, so I had one hell of a time taking it apart to find out what it was. Mosart?
Got any site for drivers? Or anything at all about this crazy thing? lol
I don’t read Chinese, so I’m screwed!
Much appreciated!
Amanda
April 29th, 2007 at 8:37 pm
Hi Amanda,
I don’t have any specific drivers either, the USB receiver should simply use an HID compatible driver on windows and a similar type of driver on other operating systems. If it is a windows system and you plug in the receiver, you should see a system message that it found new hardware and is eventually ready for use. If you don’t see that, try checking the hardware manager under control panel->system. Finally, to get the devices to sync up, you press the learn button on the receiver and then the small red button on the mouse or keyboard while they are very close to each other. Let me know if this is useful or if you need further information.
October 22nd, 2007 at 8:23 am
I didn’t have the pdf data of ma6221-s7k,but
I have the circle picture of ma6221-s7k,anyone need it may send me a email.谢谢。
November 11th, 2007 at 4:14 pm
Schematics located here http://www.avrw.com/bbs/ViewFile.asp?FileName=200762112425240.pdf
January 1st, 2008 at 10:27 pm
i have the exact same mouse as yours but different manufacturer. the receiver is also different from yours which it uses a ma6162-25 chip for receiving and interfacing to USB. i’d located the antenna part of the circuit and followed your idea. however, the range seems to be halfed instead of double. but when i only lead a wire out from the antenna and lower the position of the receiver, the range seems to be extended about half of the original. so any suggestion?
January 2nd, 2008 at 10:46 pm
Hi Haley,
It is tough to give a good answer without a picture of your setup or electric test equipment. The best guess that I could make is that the exact position of the new antenna changes the directionality of the antenna and thereby the coupling between your transmitter and receiver.