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74 chips hogging current

J

jza

Jan 1, 1970
0
I wired four 74 series TTL chips to a standard 7805 regulator circuit. I'm
having a problem where every chip takes huge amount of current (35 mA or so).
The 7805 starts of course to heat and the output voltage raises over time until
it's near the input voltage (strange, I thought 7805s could supply even 1 A
without problems like that?). What's going on, shouldn't a TTL chip normally
consume only something like 2 mA? :) I first thought it was cause of some kind
of short-circuit but it isn't.
 
Q

Quark Ng

Jan 1, 1970
0
I wired four 74 series TTL chips to a standard 7805 regulator circuit. I'm
having a problem where every chip takes huge amount of current (35 mA or so).
The 7805 starts of course to heat and the output voltage raises over time until
it's near the input voltage (strange, I thought 7805s could supply even 1 A
without problems like that?). What's going on, shouldn't a TTL chip normally
consume only something like 2 mA? :) I first thought it was cause of some kind
of short-circuit but it isn't.


I agree that 74 series chips should use very little current. I would
first do the following.

Take 3 AA batteries and wire them in series. That'll give you 1.5 * 3
= 4.5 volts.

Power up your TTL chips with the batteries. That is, by-pass your
7805 chip.

If the current is still high, then the problem is either bad logic
chips OR the power and ground pins were mis-wired OR you have two
outputs fighting each other. BE CAREFUL - do not let the batteries
heat up too much.

If the current is low, then you may have a bad 7805 chip. I think
this may be the case because normally over-current would cause the
output voltage to fall - not rise.

Anyways, please do the above experiment and tell us what you get.
Cheers!

-Quark
 
D

David Kinsell

Jan 1, 1970
0
jza said:
I wired four 74 series TTL chips to a standard 7805 regulator circuit. I'm
having a problem where every chip takes huge amount of current (35 mA or so).

35 mA a huge amount of current for TTL? Are you kidding? It takes 1.6 ma
just to pull one input low. Data sheet for a 74161 counter shows 60-100 ma
for the part, under conditions that aren't worst-case. What do the data sheets
for your chips say? Almost certainly can get them at ti.com.

The 7805 starts of course to heat and the output voltage raises over time until
it's near the input voltage (strange, I thought 7805s could supply even 1 A
without problems like that?). What's going on, shouldn't a TTL chip normally
consume only something like 2 mA? :) I first thought it was cause of some kind
of short-circuit but it isn't.

Depending on the voltage dropped across the 7805 and the heatsinking provided,
it can under some conditions supply 1A. Don't confuse best-case with guaranteed
numbers. I agree the 7805 may be damaged, since the voltage shouldn't rise like
that. Have you checked for oscillations due to inadequate bypassing?

Dave Kinsell
 
J

jza

Jan 1, 1970
0
Take 3 AA batteries and wire them in series. That'll give you 1.5 * 3
= 4.5 volts.
Power up your TTL chips with the batteries. That is, by-pass your
7805 chip.

Done. Well, I used a single 4.5V battery but I guess it does the same
thing.
If the current is still high, then the problem is either bad logic
chips OR the power and ground pins were mis-wired OR you have two

The current is still about 35 mA. By the way, the chip I'm testing
with is a 74154 (a 4-to-16 demux). I just connected Vcc and GND.
Before I also tried whether it was the floating inputs, but wiring
them didn't make any difference.
If the current is low, then you may have a bad 7805 chip. I think
this may be the case because normally over-current would cause the
output voltage to fall - not rise.

I've actually tried with two different 7805s - I guess the first one
burned already. :)

One thing to mention. The power transformer is a second hand 9V DC
supply which had strangely reverse plus and minus (white is actually
plus and red is minus). It is however supposed to be +9V, not -9V.

How sensitive is the regulator with the values of the condensers
around it? I used something like 0.1 uF and 0.3 uF.
 
D

David Kinsell

Jan 1, 1970
0
jza said:
Done. Well, I used a single 4.5V battery but I guess it does the same
thing.


The current is still about 35 mA. By the way, the chip I'm testing
with is a 74154 (a 4-to-16 demux). I just connected Vcc and GND.
Before I also tried whether it was the floating inputs, but wiring
them didn't make any difference.

If you would look at the data sheet, typical current draw is 34 ma with
a max of 56. Perhaps everything is working just like it's supposed to.
 
T

The Captain

Jan 1, 1970
0
I wired four 74 series TTL chips to a standard 7805 regulator circuit. I'm
having a problem where every chip takes huge amount of current (35 mA or so).
The 7805 starts of course to heat and the output voltage raises over time until
it's near the input voltage (strange, I thought 7805s could supply even 1 A
without problems like that?). What's going on, shouldn't a TTL chip normally
consume only something like 2 mA? :) I first thought it was cause of some kind
of short-circuit but it isn't.

74 TTL is a current eater. A simple solution would be to use either
CD4000 equivalents or CMOS 74 series chips.

One reason for the original development of CMOS logic chips was the
huge current drain of TTL.

Cap
 
J

jza

Jan 1, 1970
0
David Kinsell said:
If you would look at the data sheet, typical current draw is 34 ma with
a max of 56. Perhaps everything is working just like it's supposed to.

You are probably right. Well, I replaced the 7805 with a heavier version and
changed the power supply. Nothing burns now!
 
E

Externet

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hello.
Replace your 74xx chips with 74LSxx chips.
Miguel
 
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