Power Transistor / Mosfet Suggestion?
Hi all.
I am using a PIC16F767 to control some 12V light strips of LEDS. It will use the HPWM at the lowest available frequency at 4Mhz which is around 250Hz to control light dimming
The FULL 100% Duty Cycle load will be close to 15amps at 12V DC....
Can anyone suggest or guide me in the right direction for the right type of switching device?
I have quite a few Motorola TIP Series Power transistors around (TIP120,121,122)
I linked up only 1/4 of the lights so load would have been around 4amps. But I have successfully blown them up by overheating them, even on a massive fan cooled heatsink.
The TIP 121 datasheet says that it is a low speed medium power general purpose amplifier/switching transistor. Is 250Hz considered low speed for this type of transistor?
What are the forum members using to PWM high amperage loads?
Obviously I am doing something incorrectly or wrong part choice...
many smaller currents mor reliable than one big load
Your mileage may vary but I have come to grief several times when trying to switch high currents in LED star cloths (1000+ white LEDs for a theatre backdrop), heaters, and high brightness LED strings. Screw terminals get hot if not perfectly terminated, board currents give ground bounce, a single short takes out the entire display, etc, etc.
What I found is much more fault tolerant is to divide the load into several parallel strings each about 2 -3 amps. The Philips (NXP) PMV31XN will switch a whopping 5.9 amps in a tiny SOT-23 package so several handling smaller currrents means you don't end up with hot spots in connectors handling 15 amps. The inputs can be driven in parallel with a small series R to each gate and the source pins can be paralled into a very large all copper fill area on the PCB. Each output goes via its own fuse and screw terminal block. Multiple strings can be individually fused so most of the show goes on even if some clown has sliced one of your display lines.
HTH
Brian