I’m new to electronics and would appreciate some guidance.
I’m trying to ‘hack’ a LED Fire-effect light bulb to work on a 9v battery to make it portable.
Using a multimeter I can see that the bulb converts mains voltage to 5v.
I’ve tried the following:
I’ve used a 5v LM7805 voltage regulator, this works well until the battery gets to around 6v which is below the regulator’s limit - causing the Circuit to stop with more than half the battery charge left.
I’ve used a MP1584EN buck converter, but have found that the voltage output doesn’t say a constant 5v as the battery drains - it looks like the converter fractions up the outgoing voltage (so if 5v is 55% of 9v, when the battery is at 6v the converter is delivering 3v)
Is there a way to get a constant 5v output from a 9v battery which uses up as much of the battery charge as possible? (I don’t want to be throwing away half-full batteries thinking they are empty)
Thanks for your help guys, and look forward to meeting you at your next open evening.
With linear regulators, you want to look at data sheets to find one with the smallest ‘dropout voltage’. Dropout voltage is the minimum voltage difference between the input and output. There are better performing, but less common, types than the LM7805. If you do a search on a component supplier like Farnell or RS you should find some.
A buck converter steps down voltage. You want a buck-boost converter if you want a constant output with the input voltage ranging above and below the output voltage. This module purports to do what you want it to, although I do not have any experience with it:
Go with the buck converter if you want to get more out of your batteries. What sort of battery are you using? The higher the internal resistance the lower the voltage you’ll get from them under load, particularly when they’re at the point of near depletion. 9v Zinc carbon batteries can have an internal resistance as high as 35 ohms, whereas 9V alkaline batteries as low as 1 ohm. I’d definitely try what Paul suggested and try two or even three in series in any case since that chip can take up to 28v.
Hi Guys
I’ve been doing some experimenting with a few difference regulators the S7V7F5, S9V11F5 & S7V8F5 and i come across the same issue.
When it’s a ‘fresh’ 9v battery the bulb works fine, however when the battery drops to around 7v (the output from the regulator remains at 5v) the bulb dims to more than half brightness.
What am I missing/should be looking out for?
Thanks for you help guys, what i hoped would be an easy starter ‘hack’ is still puzzling me.
So, did you try alkaline batteries in parallel? Also, are you measuring 5v from the regulator without a load on it? You should try taking a measurement with the batteries connected to the LEDs, what voltage do you get then? You should also find out how much current the strip needs when powering all those LEDS at the preferred brightness (use a bench power supply), I reckon it’ll be too much for any 9v battery.