Hi folks,
I need 12v DC to run an LED. Is there any straightforward way to do this. I am using a Dynaco PA060 transformer which has secondary windings of 5v, 6.3v and 720v! Can I use these somehow with a bridge rectifier or would I be better off adding a small seperate 240 - 12 v transformer with a rectifier circuit? I am a little concerned that adding another transformer might contribute to noise?
Cheers,
Rob
I need 12v DC to run an LED. Is there any straightforward way to do this. I am using a Dynaco PA060 transformer which has secondary windings of 5v, 6.3v and 720v! Can I use these somehow with a bridge rectifier or would I be better off adding a small seperate 240 - 12 v transformer with a rectifier circuit? I am a little concerned that adding another transformer might contribute to noise?
Cheers,
Rob
ray_moth said:I once built a successful 555 delay circuit that used a 12v relay. I got the 12v it needed using a voltage doubler off the 6.3v heater winding. I used 2200uF caps in the doubler.
The voltage you get out of a doubler is a function of the storage capacity -- if you are just driving a string of LED's and need about 10mA -- the value of the caps can be much lower. About 100uF will work -- and these can be rated at 25V so they will be pretty small -- 2200uF is too "stiff" for a low current application and the output voltage will be closer to 15V. If you were driving a preamp chip the ripple with 100uF would be inadequate due to the ripple.
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12v
Hey thanks guys - I need it for a single LED in an illuminated switch which is a sealed unit and rated at 12v - it must have a resistor built in. The voltage doubler looks like a g great option. I presume 0.5w resistors will be OK. Thanks for the advice - great idea.
Rob
Hey thanks guys - I need it for a single LED in an illuminated switch which is a sealed unit and rated at 12v - it must have a resistor built in. The voltage doubler looks like a g great option. I presume 0.5w resistors will be OK. Thanks for the advice - great idea.
Rob
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