sorry, Electronic Civil Engineering --- i don't know the international name of my career...maybe you can omit the civil in between.
i first built it on a permanent board... but i omit the diodes (worked only for program but not for erase...can someone explain that to me ??!!)... and know i build it on a project board.
i checked all connections, all OK... the voltage at the output of the 7805 is 6,3.
no idea why... i tried a lot... and all the same thing...
No way. You can't get 6.5 out of a 5V regulator unless you would have wired 2 diodes in the common path. or accidentally used 7905 instead of 7805and wired it as per 7805 connections.... etc. Ofcourse the chip could have gone faulty.
Now please indicate
1. Did you wire 7812 with 2 diodes in the common lead.
2. Is the 7812 the first IC facing the INPUT power supply?
3. what is the INPUT power voltage as measured by you.
4. voltage at the output of 7812( this is the same as the input to 7805)
5. what is the measured voltage at the output of 7805.
if you can put a photograph of the schematic ( not the company version)what you have wired, it might help.
Welcome to the site. Try to open a new thread instead of landing on someones please.Try to read the sticky at the start of the micro-controllers section. most of your doubts will be clarified. then you can start discussion on any doubts if still persist. the link is here https://www.electro-tech-online.com/threads/pic-newcomers-please-read-upd-0xd1.15035/
You have got to be the most valuable poster from the Asian continent. Your country gets a lot of criticism on this board and you are the exception that disproves the rule.
Thanks Pommie for your kind observations. Let me tell you , I will be generally criticised for strait forwardness. I had good Gurus in my life and when others feel the hunger , i try to remember my old days I was encouraged and brought up in technical society.
Great Pommie, Let me consolidate and continue my effort.
No way. You can't get 6.5 out of a 5V regulator unless you would have wired 2 diodes in the common path. or accidentally used 7905 instead of 7805and wired it as per 7805 connections.... etc. Ofcourse the chip could have gone faulty.
Now please indicate
1. Did you wire 7812 with 2 diodes in the common lead.
2. Is the 7812 the first IC facing the INPUT power supply?
3. what is the INPUT power voltage as measured by you.
4. voltage at the output of 7812( this is the same as the input to 7805)
5. what is the measured voltage at the output of 7805.
if you can put a photograph of the schematic ( not the company version)what you have wired, it might help.
I must be a total idiot cos i cant seem to get this to work (does anyone know if this will work on a USB to serial?) I have traced and cheked everything to make shure that i get this correctly (all the way from the cable on the computer side and to the resistors and then from the resistors to the pin and checked with the datasheet to make sure i have the correct pin-out.
I will try to do it again with USB to serial (hoping that my old PC have a busted serial port)
You have got to be the most valuable poster from the Asian continent. Your country gets a lot of criticism on this board and you are the exception that disproves the rule.
The simple LVP type programmer only works on PICs with an LVP mode like the 16F877A. The 12F629 does not have LVP so you need a more sophisticated HVP programmer.
My mistake, I forgot the LVP mode was not available on small PICs. You don't need a clock of any sort on the target PIC when programming, the programmer generates the clock on the PGC line.