Thursday, October 4, 2012
Experiments •Design of DC Jones chopper with R and RL Loads and characteristics study of Commutation and chopper Technical Specification •Input voltage 30V DC •Output Voltage 0-30V DC •Current rating 1A Features •One potentiometer is provided to vary the duty cycle •Inbuilt Power supply for Converter and triggering pulse •Inbuilt resistive Load •Power ON indication Switch •Detailed mimic diagrams are drowned to facilitate the experiments
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5BKDQYZmdE&hl=en
Friday, August 3, 2012
UPDATE (9/12/11): When actually implementing the circuit in my laser project, I uncovered several problems. I was going to have the output connected to a voltage regulator inhibit pin. Because the datasheet was so vague, I thought that the regulator was off when that pin is high. I was wrong. I had to place a mosfet on the output to invert the signal. Doing that caused another problem. The opamp's output voltage was too high (~2.5v) in the off state causing the mosfet to stay on. I had to increase the resistance on the feedback which also required that I change the resistor for the zener diode. Note that different opamps can behave very differently based on their specifications. Be sure to use the same opamp in your final build as the one you used for testing. LTSpice schematic files can be found on my blog: patheticcomputing.com In this video, I explore several different circuits and solutions to the problem of low battery voltage cutoff. I also explain zener diodes, Schmitt triggers, and hysteresis. Near the end of the video, I show an actual breadboarded circuit and show how to find the correct resistor values through experimentation.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6Zkq9tV6Lw&hl=en
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Advent Calendar of Circuits 2011: Day 1: Regulated, Current Limiting Power Supply
0 comments Posted by shopping-team at 6:30 AMDay 1: Voltage Regulated, Current Limiting, Power Supply Regulator. Takes unregulated 15-25 volt supply and provides a regulated 2.7-13.8 volts with selectable current limiting. I suggest building it with a 20-30 mA limit, and a larger one, several hundred mA, or whatever your transistor can dissipate in the worst case.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMctZNINLYc&hl=en