T
Tim Hubberstey
Hi all,
I've got a problem that I've been wracking my brain over for a while
now. I need a small (under 5 parts) 2-terminal circuit to drop 0.2 V at
up to 100 uA.
The situation is that I have an old but high quality camera that used a
1.35 V mercury cell for the light meter. These cells are no longer
available due to a world-wide ban on mercury cells. I had a few extras
stashed away but those are now gone.
The closest thing I can find with similar discharge characteristics is a
silver oxide cell at 1.55 V. Compounding the problem is the fact that
the camera uses the metal body as the positive ground and getting access
to the on-off switch would require far more disassembly than I'm
comfortable with. Hence the need for a 2-terminal solution. The battery
check circuit in the camera considers a cell to be "good" when the
terminal voltage is between 1.27 and 1.35 V at 90 uA load.
A 3 V manganese dioxide lithium cell is also an option if paired with a
3-terminal positive-ground regulator with very low (<10 uA) quiescent
current.
The standard "solution" involves putting a low-current Schottky in
series with the cell, but reports are that this still causes significant
errors in the meter readings on this particular camera model.
The 5 parts limitation comes from the small amount of space available in
the base of the camera, in between various gears.
I don't usually do this type of design so I'm looking for some help.
Anyone got some ideas?
Thanks
I've got a problem that I've been wracking my brain over for a while
now. I need a small (under 5 parts) 2-terminal circuit to drop 0.2 V at
up to 100 uA.
The situation is that I have an old but high quality camera that used a
1.35 V mercury cell for the light meter. These cells are no longer
available due to a world-wide ban on mercury cells. I had a few extras
stashed away but those are now gone.
The closest thing I can find with similar discharge characteristics is a
silver oxide cell at 1.55 V. Compounding the problem is the fact that
the camera uses the metal body as the positive ground and getting access
to the on-off switch would require far more disassembly than I'm
comfortable with. Hence the need for a 2-terminal solution. The battery
check circuit in the camera considers a cell to be "good" when the
terminal voltage is between 1.27 and 1.35 V at 90 uA load.
A 3 V manganese dioxide lithium cell is also an option if paired with a
3-terminal positive-ground regulator with very low (<10 uA) quiescent
current.
The standard "solution" involves putting a low-current Schottky in
series with the cell, but reports are that this still causes significant
errors in the meter readings on this particular camera model.
The 5 parts limitation comes from the small amount of space available in
the base of the camera, in between various gears.
I don't usually do this type of design so I'm looking for some help.
Anyone got some ideas?
Thanks