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Looking for a simple circuit for power regulation and led indicator light

pityocamptes

Jul 26, 2012
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Power intake will be from solar and testing it yesterday showed power fluctuations from 5 volts dc .85 amps to 3.5 volts .4 amps. due to clouds or more important its a non tracking system. The charging circuit I am using uses a chip that is only good until 5.5 volts. Can someone suggest or post a simple circuit that limits voltage (with little waste) to 5.5 volts maximum and controls two leds (one red and one green) - the green led will stay lit if the voltage stays above 3 to 3.5 volts and switches red if the voltage drops below 3 or 3.5 volts (haven't decided on a ceiling or floor voltage). Thanks!! Looking for a low voltage circuit option as the solar panels and charging unit will basically be powering the circuit.
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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Jan 21, 2010
25,510
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25,510
A 5V 10W zener should do the trick for clamping the voltage (it's wasteful).

An alternative is one of the buck/boost regulators from eBay that would be able to take your 3.5 to 5.5 V input and turn it into a constant 5V (load dependant)

As for turning LEDs on and off at different voltages, there are a number of voltage detector devices (three terminal devices) that will do this with no additional components. However, note that they're generally not adjustable, you order them with the switching voltage you required.
 

pityocamptes

Jul 26, 2012
79
Joined
Jul 26, 2012
Messages
79
A 5V 10W zener should do the trick for clamping the voltage (it's wasteful).

An alternative is one of the buck/boost regulators from eBay that would be able to take your 3.5 to 5.5 V input and turn it into a constant 5V (load dependant)

As for turning LEDs on and off at different voltages, there are a number of voltage detector devices (three terminal devices) that will do this with no additional components. However, note that they're generally not adjustable, you order them with the switching voltage you required.

Thanks. I just ordered a cheap buck convertor from ebay. I guess what I am looking for now is a simple circuit that turns on a green led for input voltages lets say above 9 volts and if the source voltage drops below 9 volts the green led switches off and a red led switches on... any ideas?
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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Jan 21, 2010
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A buck regulator can only reduce the input voltage. Are you sure that's what you want?
 

pityocamptes

Jul 26, 2012
79
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A buck regulator can only reduce the input voltage. Are you sure that's what you want?

Actually yes. My original plan was to run buck/boost convertors directly from teg units run in series but after calculating loss from a small charging unit I figure now that I will run the units in series, reduce the voltage since I have more to work with and use the buck convertor to run the charging chip for super caps.

Any thought on the led lights? Thanks again!
 

CocaCola

Apr 7, 2012
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On a conservative mind the LEDs for simple status indication are horribly wasteful, unless necessary...
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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Jan 21, 2010
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I found this circuit.

I'm not sure I understand how that circuit can work.

edit: this makes more sense. You can do a similar trick with the output to get a red/green LED, but it's pretty wasteful of power. Also ressitors either side of the pot will make the adjustment less critical. If you use a 10k trimpot, then I would have 10k resistors at either end. That will allow adjustment from about 7.5V to 15V
 
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