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Nominal voltage or actual voltage for circuit calculations.

Mustwin351

Apr 10, 2013
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I'm designing a very simple circuit with a few leds, a transistor (2n2222a) as a switch, powered by a 12v 7 amp hour battery. When performing my calculations for resistor values should I use the battery's nominal voltage of 12v or it's actual voltage which when charged is probably around 13v?
 

Arouse1973

Adam
Dec 18, 2013
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Unless you use a regulator, say 5 or 9 Volts or constant current. The brightness will vary accordingly between the low and high voltage ranges.
Adam
 

Gryd3

Jun 25, 2014
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I'm designing a very simple circuit with a few leds, a transistor (2n2222a) as a switch, powered by a 12v 7 amp hour battery. When performing my calculations for resistor values should I use the battery's nominal voltage of 12v or it's actual voltage which when charged is probably around 13v?
Unless you use a regulator, say 5 or 9 Volts or constant current. The brightness will vary accordingly between the low and high voltage ranges.
Adam
Regulation would be ideal, but if you want to stick to the simple resistor route, it would be a good idea to do your calculations based on the higher voltage your circuit will see. I slapped together a cheap dome-light in a car and used 14.4 V in my calculation... it will die soon due to spikes in the electrical system, and it dims slightly when the engine is shut off and the battery droops back to 12V.
If you do your calculations on the lower voltage, you will be pushing your LED's harder than they are rated for until the battery voltage droops back down. This will greatly shorten the life of your LEDs.


Edit: Because your voltage will vary, it would be helpful to use maybe 1 or 2 less LEDs in series... This will cause the resistor to drop a larger voltage, but will result in the current through your LEDs changing much less than if it were only dropping 0.5 - 1V for example.
 

KrisBlueNZ

Sadly passed away in 2015
Nov 28, 2011
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Edit: Because your voltage will vary, it would be helpful to use maybe 1 or 2 less LEDs in series... This will cause the resistor to drop a larger voltage, but will result in the current through your LEDs changing much less than if it were only dropping 0.5 - 1V for example.
This is important advice. The more voltage you drop across the current limiting resistor, the less the current will vary with variations in the supply voltage (and LED characteristics).

The question of whether to use the nominal or the maximum voltage doesn't have a simple answer. You understand how the voltage will affect the LED current, and you know how to minimise this effect (make the voltage drop across the resistor a larger proportion of the supply voltage). You should also find out the maximum continuous current rating of the LED. And you know the application, so you know what requirements there are for the LED brightness.

If you're operating the LED near its maximum rated continuous current, or getting a stable current is very important, you should use a current regulating circuit instead of a simple series resistor. Have a look at my post here: https://www.electronicspoint.com/th...oltage-reading-resistors.270428/#post-1623700 and Steve's tutorial at https://www.electronicspoint.com/resources/got-a-question-about-driving-leds.5/
 
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