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Old 27th June 2007, 10:29 PM   (permalink)
Default R2: 5 K ohm variable resistor (pot),

I am in need of a R2: 5 K ohm variable resistor (pot),

Radio shack no longer sells these.

I purchased an assortment of potientiometers and trim pots but do not know which one is the proper one to use for my application.

how can I tell which one to use?

Thanks
jim
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Old 27th June 2007, 10:42 PM   (permalink)
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Use a meter and measure them, or simply read the values off them - a 5K may well be 4.7K, which is a preferred value (but they are fairly poor tolerance anyway).
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Old 27th June 2007, 11:15 PM   (permalink)
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Please see this schematic and let me know if there is a better way for me to build this regulator for my Motorcycle.

Thank You
Jim

http://home.comcast.net/~rkekeis/ima...rschematic.doc
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Old 28th June 2007, 12:35 AM   (permalink)
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The circuit is wrong. With a 5k pot its voltage will try to go to 27V. If you use a 1k pot and replace the 240 ohm resistor with 120 ohms then its voltage will be 1.25V to 11.7V.

The LM317 will get hot and shut down if the load current and voltage across it are high.
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Old 28th June 2007, 03:19 AM   (permalink)
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Any Chance you could draw a schematic that an electronics dummy like me could read?

what I am trying to build is a 7 Volt regulator for my motorcycle guages.
Thanks
jim
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Old 28th June 2007, 03:45 AM   (permalink)
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Just use R1= 120 Ohms & R2 = 560 Ohms fixed resistors to get 7V.
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Old 28th June 2007, 03:59 AM   (permalink)
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Make it like this and you can adjust the voltage to 7V if the pot is set almost at half.
Attached Images
File Type: png LM317 7V regulator.PNG (6.5 KB, 10 views)
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Old 28th June 2007, 04:59 AM   (permalink)
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I am not very good at electronics, so here are some questions if you dont mind. I take it all of the "Dots" are connections?

Thank you
Jim


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Old 28th June 2007, 08:09 AM   (permalink)
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That is not necessary jumper, just show that they are connected.
The dots are connections.
0.22 uF is 0.22 micro Farad capacitor
The aero is the variable resistor
Refer to the datasheet of LM317 for the calculation of the output voltage and the dropout voltage.
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Old 28th June 2007, 01:16 PM   (permalink)
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Do you know how to solder?
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Old 28th June 2007, 06:00 PM   (permalink)
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That is one thing I am Good at, LOL
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Old 30th June 2007, 03:42 PM   (permalink)
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Correct me if I'm wrong but I take it you're a total electronics novice and you don't know what a resisistor, capacitor or integrated circuit is. If this is the case then you can read up on it a bit.

It's possible that the instruments might work from 6V but I don't know whether they will keep their accuracy. You could try buying a multivoltage car cigarette lighter adaptor and using it set to 6V or using the LM7806 regulator IC.
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Old 30th June 2007, 04:23 PM   (permalink)
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this is true, The only thing I can do as far as electronics goes is to follow a simple schematic that I can understand, lay out the components on a pcb, soldier them in and if the schematic is correct it will work, the main problem I have is that I dont know a 100 ohm resistor from a 200 by looking at it. same for pots and trimmers, the asst pack I purchased is not marked as I expected them to be.
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Old 30th June 2007, 05:18 PM   (permalink)
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The colour code for resistors is easy to learn.
Buy a $10.00 digital multimeter and measure the resistance of your unmarked pots. The multimeter will measure AC and DC voltages too. Don't measure current yet until you learn about how much damage too much current can do.
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