P
Peter
I have a question:
Tonight for laughs I built a triangle wave generator (floating above
ground) to the input of a unity gain op-amp which is in a closed loop
system.
On the op-amps output, I have a 100ohm resistor connected to the base of a
2N3507, 9 volts on the collector and the emitter is fedback to the
inverting input (for the closed loop system). The emitter's output is also
connected to a minature fan that draws about 0.5 amps at full on.
My idea was to slow the fan and then speed it up with the triangle wave
generator (changing the ramp time by RC). But I ran into a problem: the
transistor gets as hot as a pistol.
The datasheet has an Ic of 3A and yet I'm only driving (let's even call it
1A) not even half the maximum rating.
Should this be connected to a heat sink and if yes, how would I have known
this by reading the datasheet?
Thanks in advance
Tonight for laughs I built a triangle wave generator (floating above
ground) to the input of a unity gain op-amp which is in a closed loop
system.
On the op-amps output, I have a 100ohm resistor connected to the base of a
2N3507, 9 volts on the collector and the emitter is fedback to the
inverting input (for the closed loop system). The emitter's output is also
connected to a minature fan that draws about 0.5 amps at full on.
My idea was to slow the fan and then speed it up with the triangle wave
generator (changing the ramp time by RC). But I ran into a problem: the
transistor gets as hot as a pistol.
The datasheet has an Ic of 3A and yet I'm only driving (let's even call it
1A) not even half the maximum rating.
Should this be connected to a heat sink and if yes, how would I have known
this by reading the datasheet?
Thanks in advance