-
Categories
-
Platforms
-
Content
Oooh,. sorry, been a while since I read through this thread. (I guess I should've looked up that part number.)
No problem Mitch
A TVS diode, treat it almost like a zener. That guy should read as an open until you apply >= 15V to it. Then it will start to conduct. What kind of voltage are we talking about on those pins?
Edit: And hey, those joints don't look bad at all for a cheap iron!Nicely done.
That's whats weird the guys at Vishay were able to tell me that the part that burnt out was a smbj15A but I was a little hesitant to believe that because there was no polarity markings and the diode when still attached and somewhat functioning (even though it was puffed) had resistance in one direction and an unequal resistance in the other direction. Keep in mind the other three diodes on the board with identical markings had equal readings forward or reverse! I could only conclude that this part was a bidirectional diode.The closest thing I could get my hands on was a sa15ca
And it's not exactly two diodes in series, reverse of eachother... it's two zener diodes in series, reverse of eachother. While one is forward biased, and passes current normally, the other goes into avalanche mode at a certain voltage and passes current.
Thanks for the explanation, I was assuming that the circuitry inside the diode were both equal and that is why I couldn't understand how that would work. In this case with the diode being across the 12-13v power supply entrance to the board how would this diode protect the circuitry?
This protects the input by "absorbing" (shunting) the excess power when anything over 15V is applied... since the unit is designed to be run at 12V, anything higher will damage it. Spikes and such... a tranzorb is a good high-end TVS, very quick. Does it's job well, usually.
So in summary the diode is there, doing nothing, when all is well. When a spike or overvoltage comes along, he shunts the excess and limits the input voltage to 15V, keeping everything else safe.
It's possible that the SA15CA is a bidirectional device and the SMBJ15CA is unidirectional. Hmmm, the "C" indicates bidirectional in both cases.
It is possible that if power was applies in the reverse direction that *all* of the reverse biased parts could have gone short circuit, but it's not something I'd bet on.
Is it possible that the surface mount components don't have that "C" on them?
Good point, I was thinking somewhere remote like malaysia or the phillipines.