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Request for Help with a Simple Circuit

C

Cyrus

I have a 24V power supply, and I want to use it to power several
devices (B1, B2, B3) which each require between 3 and 24 volts. When
the devices are unplugged, everything looks right -- I can measure the
voltage drop at B1, B2, B3 and I see the expected voltage. When I plug
in a device, however, the circuit goes dead. For testing, I'm using a
little 3V motor.

<ftp://matsonconsulting.com/Schematic-1.png>

Did I design the circuit wrong? It has been 20 years since I studied
electronics in high school, so I may have forgotten some of the
basics. It is also possible that I wired it wrong. In any case, I'd
appreciate some expert advice.


Thanks in advance.
-TC
 
J

Jon Kirwan

I have a 24V power supply, and I want to use it to power several
devices (B1, B2, B3) which each require between 3 and 24 volts. When
the devices are unplugged, everything looks right -- I can measure the
voltage drop at B1, B2, B3 and I see the expected voltage. When I plug
in a device, however, the circuit goes dead. For testing, I'm using a
little 3V motor.

<ftp://matsonconsulting.com/Schematic-1.png>

Did I design the circuit wrong? It has been 20 years since I studied
electronics in high school, so I may have forgotten some of the
basics. It is also possible that I wired it wrong. In any case, I'd
appreciate some expert advice.

Well, your 3V motor might require 100mA. Do you know what it requires
to run properly? At 100mA, all that would have to go through your
100k ohm pots to reach it. Assuming you measured 3V before hooking up
the motor, that would suggest a pot setting close to the maximum.
100mA through a 100k ohm resistance is about 10,000 volts drop. So it
just doesn't make sense. I don't know the actual current requirements
of your motor, but you can see that it doesn't require much current in
order to completely drop away all 24V at the pot and leave nothing for
the motor.

Jon
 
I have a 24V power supply, and I want to use it to power several
devices (B1, B2, B3) which each require between 3 and 24 volts. When
the devices are unplugged, everything looks right -- I can measure the
voltage drop at B1, B2, B3 and I see the expected voltage. When I plug
in a device, however, the circuit goes dead. For testing, I'm using a
little 3V motor.

<ftp://matsonconsulting.com/Schematic-1.png>

Did I design the circuit wrong? It has been 20 years since I studied
electronics in high school, so I may have forgotten some of the
basics. It is also possible that I wired it wrong. In any case, I'd
appreciate some expert advice.

Thanks in advance.
-TC

Well those pots are going to have a quite high resistance most of the
time, there's no way that circuit can power anything useful in this
context.
You can measure the voltage you want because a multimeter won't load
the circuit, ie it looks like an open circuit, it doesn't need much
current.
The moment you connect a load, it will look like a short circuit
compared to the pot and therefore all the voltage shows up across the
pot, none for the load.

You are looking for voltage regulators.
 
J

Jon Kirwan

Well, your 3V motor might require 100mA. Do you know what it requires
to run properly? At 100mA, all that would have to go through your
100k ohm pots to reach it. Assuming you measured 3V before hooking up
the motor, that would suggest a pot setting close to the maximum.
100mA through a 100k ohm resistance is about 10,000 volts drop. So it
just doesn't make sense. I don't know the actual current requirements
of your motor, but you can see that it doesn't require much current in
order to completely drop away all 24V at the pot and leave nothing for
the motor.

You might try using a simple BJT emitter follower, with a divider set
at the base of the BJT and actually measure the emitter voltage with
the motor load installed to adjust until it is 3V. Considering that
you already have some parts and might want to minimize the changes,
you could include your 14k as a parallel load like you already did
while adjusting to set the voltage before attaching the motor. If you
are stuck with the 100k pots, too, and given that you have 24V to work
with you might prefer a Darlington arrangement (use two BJTs) to
require a bit less base current and thus a bit less adjustment after
adding the motor. Do you follow? You won't be able to supply exactly
24V with this, but you should be able to get within a volt or two of
it, should you need that much.

One issue will be the voltage dropped by the BJT at some current
level. If the 3V motor really does require something like 100mA, then
the BJT (or Darlington arrangement) will need to drop away 21V. The
power at 21V times 100mA is 2.1 watts continuous. That's probably
going to really hurt with a small TO-92 package as seen for the
cheaper 2N3904 or PN2222. So you may need to pick something in a
larger package. (This is an area I'm not as familiar with, so I'll
leave high quality specific recommendations to others.)

There are other considerations too and since you haven't disclosed a
lot of detail about things, a proper design is 'difficult.' But given
where you are at, right now, the above might be okay.

Jon
 
L

linnix

One issue will be the voltage dropped by the BJT at some current
level. If the 3V motor really does require something like 100mA, then
the BJT (or Darlington arrangement) will need to drop away 21V. The
power at 21V times 100mA is 2.1 watts continuous.

No matter what the current is. It will drop 87% of power (24V - 3V /
24V). The following 3V DC motors need 300mA at no load and 1A max
load, for example.

http://webtronics.stores.yahoo.net/3vdcmotormot1.html
http://www.electronics123.com/s.nl/it.A/id.2708/.f

The OP should go with SMPS regulators.
 
J

Jon Kirwan

No matter what the current is. It will drop 87% of power (24V - 3V /
24V). The following 3V DC motors need 300mA at no load and 1A max
load, for example.

http://webtronics.stores.yahoo.net/3vdcmotormot1.html
http://www.electronics123.com/s.nl/it.A/id.2708/.f

The OP should go with SMPS regulators.

Yeah. It's not efficient. However, it's the "It has been 20 years
since I studied electronics in high school, so I may have forgotten
some of the basics," part that made me figure that incremental steps
are better for now.

Jon
 
C

Cyrus

Yeah.  It's not efficient.  However, it's the "It has been 20 years
since I studied electronics in high school, so I may have forgotten
some of the basics," part that made me figure that incremental steps
are better for now.

Jon

Thanks to everyone for the advice. I appreciate your effort to keep it
simple.

If I understand correctly, here is what you guys are telling me: My
design is wrong because the voltage at B1, B2, and B3 will change
depending on the current required by the devices I plug in there. I
might be able to get it to work with minor changes, but even in the
best case it will be very inefficient. In order to redesign the
circuit properly, I should research BJT emitter followers, Darlington
arrangements, and SMPS regulators. I'll do that when I have time and
see what I come up with.

Thanks again for the help.
-TC
 
N

Nobody

Thanks to everyone for the advice. I appreciate your effort to keep it
simple.

If I understand correctly, here is what you guys are telling me: My
design is wrong because the voltage at B1, B2, and B3 will change
depending on the current required by the devices I plug in there. I
might be able to get it to work with minor changes, but even in the
best case it will be very inefficient. In order to redesign the
circuit properly, I should research BJT emitter followers, Darlington
arrangements, and SMPS regulators. I'll do that when I have time and
see what I come up with.

If you're considering the SMPS route (significantly more efficient, but
also significantly more complex), the following datasheet should give you
a reasonable idea of what's involved in using a switching regulator:

http://www.onsemi.com/pub/Collateral/NCP3063-D.PDF

A linear regulator such as the LM317 is a lot simpler to use, but very
inefficient when the output is significantly lower than the input (e.g.
12.5% efficiency for a 24V->3V conversion). Apart from wasting energy,
getting rid of the heat could require a sizable heatsink and possibly a
fan.

There isn't much point in building a linear regulator from discrete
components.
 
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