That's a perfect situation to do a search and find some LDO regulator.
LP2957, LP2954, LP38690ADJ,ADP3367,... ,...
OR a simple silicon diode in serie to drop 0.6-0.7 volts could work.. not a fan of that method but in theory it works
That's a perfect situation to do a search and find some LDO regulator.
LP2957, LP2954, LP38690ADJ,ADP3367,... ,...
OR a simple silicon diode in serie to drop 0.6-0.7 volts could work.. not a fan of that method but in theory it works
Steve
It's not a bug, it's a random feature.
There's no problem, only learning opportunities.
??? about the capacitor before the regulator??? In theory 6VAC should gives you about 9 volts near stable depending of your capacitor size. Try increase capacitor value first. Forget the serie diode here.the input ripple at the 7805 is a sine between 6.6V and 8.8V peak to peak which breaks down every 80 ms to about 5 V
Reliability and stability of a numeric design sit on the PSU first...
Steve
It's not a bug, it's a random feature.
There's no problem, only learning opportunities.
hello dave and steve
thanks for your replys. i need a bit of time to answer because i must test all seriously.
i'm no a step further. the problem seems not to be in PSU... i made a mistake in the software which have updated the outputs too fast and this problem sourced. normally the output at the 7805 is stable at 4.9 V
now a new thing is coming up. all is working but i'm not sure why this can be :
the circuit needs 16 mA @ 5 V. when i turn on a reed relais it needs 20 mA more, so 36 mA. the next relais add also 20 mA, all is fine.
now, when i turn on the third relais and the current increase to 76 mA, the 5 V looks at in the attachment...?
the relays are connected at portb, which have beside the relays only two led's (r=330ohm). the datatsheet says a maximum output current sunk by a pin is 25 mA, maximum current sunk of porta and b is 200 mA. but the whole circuit only needs about 90 mA when all is turning on.
the trafo output is 6V 1.0 VA.
as i say it. the circuit works, but i ask myself what is that?
thanks for any comments again
Last edited by mischl; - 15th November 2005 at 08:51.
The problem is DEFINATELY in your PSU. The attachment shows the voltage dropping towards the end of the mains cycle due to Capacitor C5 in your PSU not being large enough to maintain the voltage above the 7805's minimum input requirement.Originally Posted by mischl
The fact that this only becomes apparent as you draw more current confirms this. More current discharges the reservoir more quickly.
Increase C5 to at least 1000uF, more if you have it available. I would probably go for 4700uF.
Regards
Keith
Keith
www.diyha.co.uk
www.kat5.tv
hi keith
you are right, a greater C5 helps. i have only a 1000 uF, and this smooth the ripple nearly
because the packaging is very great, are there other possibilities of the design held the size small? probaply a LDO or other trafo? or is there a basic failure on the schema ?
thanks a lot
you have many choice here.
- increase capacitor value (still good to place some in parrallel)
- change your regulator to an LDO
- change your transfo for an higher voltage model... but keep in mind that higher the voltage is... more heath the regulator will provide.
choice is yours.
Steve
It's not a bug, it's a random feature.
There's no problem, only learning opportunities.
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