Hi,
I am testing a simple circuit that I will ultimately drive from a Raspberry Pi. At the moment I am testing on a breadboard. But I cannot get my transistor to switch off, and so my LED is continuously lit. Here is my circuit, more details after the image...
There is 0.6 V between ground and the transistor base. The emitter and base are definitely tied to the same ground, albeit via 2 resistors for the base.
There is 9 volts across the LED
There is 5 volts across the colleco and emitter of the transistor.
The only possible issue I can see is that I am using an old 12 Volt adapter for the power; as you can see it is actually providing 14 volts. However, the emitter and base are tied to the same adapter ground point, so this should eliminate any issues there.
If I disconnect the base from ground, the LED stays lit, and at 0.6V across the base/emitter.
I have replaced the transistor - same result.
The ultimate aim is to feed the base from the 12 volt line, by tying it between the 2 resistors and giving a 6V signal.
Any help gratefully received!
Regards,
Steve.
I am testing a simple circuit that I will ultimately drive from a Raspberry Pi. At the moment I am testing on a breadboard. But I cannot get my transistor to switch off, and so my LED is continuously lit. Here is my circuit, more details after the image...
There is 0.6 V between ground and the transistor base. The emitter and base are definitely tied to the same ground, albeit via 2 resistors for the base.
There is 9 volts across the LED
There is 5 volts across the colleco and emitter of the transistor.
The only possible issue I can see is that I am using an old 12 Volt adapter for the power; as you can see it is actually providing 14 volts. However, the emitter and base are tied to the same adapter ground point, so this should eliminate any issues there.
If I disconnect the base from ground, the LED stays lit, and at 0.6V across the base/emitter.
I have replaced the transistor - same result.
The ultimate aim is to feed the base from the 12 volt line, by tying it between the 2 resistors and giving a 6V signal.
Any help gratefully received!
Regards,
Steve.
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