1.5 VDC Pseudocell...

D

Don

Guest
This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

--
Don, KB7RPU, https://www.qsl.net/kb7rpu
There was a young lady named Bright Whose speed was far faster than light;
She set out one day In a relative way And returned on the previous night.
 
On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

The 317 may not be stable without an output capacitor, aluminum or
tantalum.

Does the clock stepper motor use big current spikes every tick?

Really, can\'t you solder the wires?





--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

Science teaches us to doubt.

Claude Bernard
 
søndag den 8. november 2020 kl. 22.19.57 UTC+1 skrev jla...@highlandsniptechnology.com:
On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

The 317 may not be stable without an output capacitor, aluminum or
tantalum.

the 317 is not an LDO, and there are several datasheets the say than an
output capacitor improves transient response but it not required for stability
 
On 08.11.20 22:08, Don wrote:
This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,
I think your clock would have been quite satisfied with
1.25 volts, that is about a halve empty battery.
A 20 uf elco at the output would be nice tnough.
 
jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:

On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers
the greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use
LM317 adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5
VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

The 317 may not be stable without an output capacitor, aluminum or
tantalum.

Does the clock stepper motor use big current spikes every tick?

Really, can\'t you solder the wires?

The clock will drift. Eventually it will be so far off the correct time
to be useless.

Don lives in Casper, WY. He should have no problems picking up WWVB:

https://tf.nist.gov/stations/wwvbcoverage.htm

There are a large number of inexpensive WWVB wall clocks that are large
enough to read from a distance. These will keep time to better than a
second.

You can even get a kit to convert an ordinary clock to WWVB. Search
Amazon.

I use a HTAWI WWVB clock that is 16 inches in diameter. It is easy to
read from many feet away. It has 3 batteries and will switch
automatically when a cell runs down. I expect it to last 3 years or more
and keep perfect time.

--
Science teaches us to trust. - sw
 
Steve Wilson <spam@me.com> wrote:

jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:

On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers
the greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use
LM317 adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5
VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

The 317 may not be stable without an output capacitor, aluminum or
tantalum.

Does the clock stepper motor use big current spikes every tick?

Really, can\'t you solder the wires?

The clock will drift. Eventually it will be so far off the correct time
to be useless.

Don lives in Casper, WY. He should have no problems picking up WWVB:

https://tf.nist.gov/stations/wwvbcoverage.htm

There are a large number of inexpensive WWVB wall clocks that are large
enough to read from a distance. These will keep time to better than a
second.

You can even get a kit to convert an ordinary clock to WWVB. Search
Amazon.

I use a HTAWI WWVB clock that is 16 inches in diameter. It is easy to
read from many feet away. It has 3 batteries and will switch
automatically when a cell runs down. I expect it to last 3 years or
more
and keep perfect time.

Here is a 20 inch La Crosse WWVB clock for $59.99

<https://www.amazon.com/Crosse-Technology-404-1220-Extra-
Atomic/dp/B006MOVP8E/>

--
Science teaches us to trust. - sw
 
On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

AA Dummy Cell:
<https://www.google.com/search?q=aa+dummy+cell&tbm=isch>
<https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=AA+dummy+battery>
Add wires and you\'re done.

Or, buy one that does exactly what you\'re suggesting:
<https://www.clockparts.com/aa-cell-uninterruptible-power-supply/>

I\'m wondering about your \"And its electromechanical action
drains batteries far too quickly\". How quickly is far too quickly? Do
you have any current drain measurements? If not, a pointer to the
spec sheet on the clock mechanism would suffice. One of these AA high
torque motors?
<https://www.clockparts.com/aa-high-torque-movement/>
<https://www.esslinger.com/mini-quartz-high-torque-clock-movement-aa-with-hardware/>
Oh swell. No data sheets.

Notice that they have high torque movements that run on C cells. This
one claims to run 3 years on one C cell:
<https://www.esslinger.com/clock-movement-c-long-life-quartz-movement-high-torque/>

I\'m thinking either something is wrong with the mechanism (friction,
wrong lube, insects in the gears, dirt, dust, etc). Perhaps your
expectations might be a bit much for the clock runtime from a AA cell,
maybe you\'re using cheap batteries, the clock may have a phantom load
draing the battery, or the clock motor drops out at too high a battery
voltage. Lots of things that might go wrong that a few measurements
might highlight.

It might be fun to try running it from a super-cap. Lots of peak
current and no self-discharge.

Good luck with the project.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
 
Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:

On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers
the greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use
LM317 adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5
VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

AA Dummy Cell:
https://www.google.com/search?q=aa+dummy+cell&tbm=isch
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=AA+dummy+battery
Add wires and you\'re done.

Or, buy one that does exactly what you\'re suggesting:
https://www.clockparts.com/aa-cell-uninterruptible-power-supply/

I\'m wondering about your \"And its electromechanical action
drains batteries far too quickly\". How quickly is far too quickly? Do
you have any current drain measurements? If not, a pointer to the
spec sheet on the clock mechanism would suffice. One of these AA high
torque motors?
https://www.clockparts.com/aa-high-torque-movement/
https://www.esslinger.com/mini-quartz-high-torque-clock-movement-aa-wi
th-hardware/> Oh swell. No data sheets.

Notice that they have high torque movements that run on C cells. This
one claims to run 3 years on one C cell:
https://www.esslinger.com/clock-movement-c-long-life-quartz-movement-h
igh-torque/

I\'m thinking either something is wrong with the mechanism (friction,
wrong lube, insects in the gears, dirt, dust, etc). Perhaps your
expectations might be a bit much for the clock runtime from a AA cell,
maybe you\'re using cheap batteries, the clock may have a phantom load
draing the battery, or the clock motor drops out at too high a battery
voltage. Lots of things that might go wrong that a few measurements
might highlight.

It might be fun to try running it from a super-cap. Lots of peak
current and no self-discharge.

Good luck with the project.

The clock will drift. He needs WWVB. See my earlier post.


--
Science teaches us to trust. - sw
 
On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

Why not hang a D-cell on the other side of the wall? That would give
you battery backup!





--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

Science teaches us to doubt.

Claude Bernard
 
jlarkin@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:

On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers
the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use
LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

Why not hang a D-cell on the other side of the wall? That would give
you battery backup

The clock will drift and pretty soon be useless. He needs WWVB to keep
time. The batteries can last up to 3 years. See my pervious post.



--
Science teaches us to trust. - sw
 
jla...@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:

====================================

Why not hang a D-cell on the other side of the wall? That would give
you battery backup!

** Yes - an alkaline D cell would last for years - far longer that such
clocks keep good time.

The whole idea is overkill PLUS will fail hopelessly if the AC power ever goes down for any reason.

Forgetski.


...... Phil
 
On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 16:18:22 -0800 (PST), Phil Allison
<pallison49@gmail.com> wrote:

jla...@highlandsniptechnology.com wrote:

====================================


Why not hang a D-cell on the other side of the wall? That would give
you battery backup!


** Yes - an alkaline D cell would last for years - far longer that such
clocks keep good time.

The whole idea is overkill PLUS will fail hopelessly if the AC power ever goes down for any reason.

Forgetski.


..... Phil

This is the clock in my office.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/pcajb287x0yhwf5/Clock_2.JPG?raw=1

It\'s a Westclox Moonbeam in butterscotch bakelite.

It has a light inside (well, burned out now) that blinks a few minutes
before the alarm goes off, to wake people gently or something. It
keeps perfect time and logs power failures for us.



--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc

Science teaches us to doubt.

Claude Bernard
 
In sci.electronics.design Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:
On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 21:08:18 -0000 (UTC), \"Don\" <g@crcomp.net> wrote:

This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

AA Dummy Cell:
https://www.google.com/search?q=aa+dummy+cell&tbm=isch
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=AA+dummy+battery
Add wires and you\'re done.

Or, buy one that does exactly what you\'re suggesting:
https://www.clockparts.com/aa-cell-uninterruptible-power-supply/

I\'m wondering about your \"And its electromechanical action
drains batteries far too quickly\". How quickly is far too quickly? Do
you have any current drain measurements? If not, a pointer to the
spec sheet on the clock mechanism would suffice. One of these AA high
torque motors?
https://www.clockparts.com/aa-high-torque-movement/
https://www.esslinger.com/mini-quartz-high-torque-clock-movement-aa-with-hardware/
Oh swell. No data sheets.

Notice that they have high torque movements that run on C cells. This
one claims to run 3 years on one C cell:
https://www.esslinger.com/clock-movement-c-long-life-quartz-movement-high-torque/

I\'m thinking either something is wrong with the mechanism (friction,
wrong lube, insects in the gears, dirt, dust, etc). Perhaps your
expectations might be a bit much for the clock runtime from a AA cell,
maybe you\'re using cheap batteries, the clock may have a phantom load
draing the battery, or the clock motor drops out at too high a battery
voltage. Lots of things that might go wrong that a few measurements
might highlight.

It might be fun to try running it from a super-cap. Lots of peak
current and no self-discharge.

Good luck with the project.

The project\'s complete and has been up running for a day now. The clock
itself is primarily aesthetic rather than scientific. In other words,
replacing it is not an option. As it drifts, it\'ll be easy enough to
adjust its hands with a long pole while standing on the floor without
dragging out the ten foot ladder.
Your followup makes me feel my solution is optimal. Those dummy
batteries you mention apparently allow higher voltage batteries to be
retro-fitted in a bank of batteries? But the wall clock only
accommodates a single 1.5 VDC AA battery.
The premade pseudo battery won\'t work because there\'s no nearby
outlet to plug it into. Besides, it also requires a larger, unsightly
hole, to pass either the wall wart or the AA pseudocell through.

Danke,

--
Don, KB7RPU, https://www.qsl.net/kb7rpu
There was a young lady named Bright Whose speed was far faster than light;
She set out one day In a relative way And returned on the previous night.
 
On Sun, 08 Nov 2020 22:04:54 GMT, Steve Wilson <spam@me.com> wrote:

The clock will drift. Eventually it will be so far off the correct time
to be useless.

Don lives in Casper, WY. He should have no problems picking up WWVB:

https://tf.nist.gov/stations/wwvbcoverage.htm

There are a large number of inexpensive WWVB wall clocks that are large
enough to read from a distance. These will keep time to better than a
second.

If Don wanted a clock that ran forever, he should have so stated.
Although the project notes at:
<https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php>
lack any statement as to what he\'s trying to accomplish, I would
deduce that not replacing the AA battery at unspecified intervals is
the main problem. You just expanded the project by adding an accuracy
problem. Whether this is a problem worth solving is up to Don and his
client.

I didn\'t see any mention of replacing an LR44 batteries, so I\'ll
assume that the clock does NOT have an automagic DST (daylight savings
time) feature. There\'s also something called \"auto-set\" which is
intended for areas with WWVB interference or reception problems:
<https://www.clockparts.com/blog/atomic-clock-movement-versus-the-auto-set-movement/>
Unfortunately, it looks like the DST feature is run by a tiny LR44
battery, which will probably also need replacement. Therefore if the
clock requires resetting the time twice per year, I would assume that
accuracy is sufficient between DST resettings to not require a daily
WWVB resetting.

The hands on the clock seem to be a little longer than the top of the
ladder, or about 14 inches long. Such long hands on the clock might
require a high torque drive mechanism. Hard to tell without a size
measurement. I couldn\'t find one that does both WWVB and has high
torque. I\'m sure they exist, but I can\'t seem to find one.

You can even get a kit to convert an ordinary clock to WWVB. Search
Amazon.

Are you suggesting a kit that replaces the existing movement with one
that has a WWVB receiver, or some kind of retrofit kit? I found quite
a few WWVB clock movements on Amazon. The only retrofit kits I could
find were complete replacements of the clock movement.

I use a HTAWI WWVB clock that is 16 inches in diameter. It is easy to
read from many feet away. It has 3 batteries and will switch
automatically when a cell runs down. I expect it to last 3 years or more
and keep perfect time.

Nice. I had a cheap ordinary wall clock in my office that ran on a
single AA cell for about 15 months. After about 2 years of use, it
started to slow down and drain the battery in as little as 4 months.
So, I tore it apart, cleaned out the accumulated dirt, re-assembled,
and it again ran for about 15 months per AA cell. The bushings that
ran the hands don\'t like dust. I gave it away when I retired last
month.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
 
In sci.electronics.design Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:
On Sun, 08 Nov 2020 22:04:54 GMT, Steve Wilson <spam@me.com> wrote:

The clock will drift. Eventually it will be so far off the correct time
to be useless.

Don lives in Casper, WY. He should have no problems picking up WWVB:

https://tf.nist.gov/stations/wwvbcoverage.htm

There are a large number of inexpensive WWVB wall clocks that are large
enough to read from a distance. These will keep time to better than a
second.

If Don wanted a clock that ran forever, he should have so stated.
Although the project notes at:
https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php
lack any statement as to what he\'s trying to accomplish, I would
deduce that not replacing the AA battery at unspecified intervals is
the main problem.

You are absolutely correct. The webpage needs to make the main problem
and its solution more explicit.

Danke,

--
Don, KB7RPU, https://www.qsl.net/kb7rpu
There was a young lady named Bright Whose speed was far faster than light;
She set out one day In a relative way And returned on the previous night.
 
Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:

On Sun, 08 Nov 2020 22:04:54 GMT, Steve Wilson <spam@me.com> wrote:

The clock will drift. Eventually it will be so far off the correct
time to be useless.

Don lives in Casper, WY. He should have no problems picking up WWVB:

https://tf.nist.gov/stations/wwvbcoverage.htm

There are a large number of inexpensive WWVB wall clocks that are
large enough to read from a distance. These will keep time to better
than a second.

If Don wanted a clock that ran forever, he should have so stated.

He implied so by generating a battery replacement and running wires in
the wall.

Although the project notes at:
https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php
lack any statement as to what he\'s trying to accomplish, I would
deduce that not replacing the AA battery at unspecified intervals is
the main problem. You just expanded the project by adding an accuracy
problem. Whether this is a problem worth solving is up to Don and his
client.

He is doing this for himself.

WWVB clocks solve the accuracy problem.

I didn\'t see any mention of replacing an LR44 batteries, so I\'ll
assume that the clock does NOT have an automagic DST (daylight savings
time) feature. There\'s also something called \"auto-set\" which is
intended for areas with WWVB interference or reception problems:
https://www.clockparts.com/blog/atomic-clock-movement-versus-the-auto-
set-movement/> Unfortunately, it looks like the DST feature is run by
a tiny LR44 battery, which will probably also need replacement.
Therefore if the clock requires resetting the time twice per year, I
would assume that accuracy is sufficient between DST resettings to not
require a daily WWVB resetting.

The drift is temperature sensitive and usually runs about 15 seconds per
month. Eventually it will get so bad the time reading is worthless.

WWVB solves this problem.

You can even get a kit to convert an ordinary clock to WWVB. Search
Amazon.

Are you suggesting a kit that replaces the existing movement with one
that has a WWVB receiver, or some kind of retrofit kit? I found quite
a few WWVB clock movements on Amazon. The only retrofit kits I could
find were complete replacements of the clock movement.

Yes, that\'s how they work.

I use a HTAWI WWVB clock that is 16 inches in diameter. It is easy to
read from many feet away. It has 3 batteries and will switch
automatically when a cell runs down. I expect it to last 3 years or
more and keep perfect time.

I used to use a HTAWI, but now I notice I have changed to La Crosse.

They all keep perfect time, even up here near Toronto. You should have no
problem in California.

Nice. I had a cheap ordinary wall clock in my office that ran on a
single AA cell for about 15 months. After about 2 years of use, it
started to slow down and drain the battery in as little as 4 months.
So, I tore it apart, cleaned out the accumulated dirt, re-assembled,
and it again ran for about 15 months per AA cell. The bushings that
ran the hands don\'t like dust. I gave it away when I retired last
month.

I have been using WWVB clocks for many years. They still work perfectly.

The WWVB clock movement is pretty tightly sealed. I have never had one
damaged by dust. Taking the movement apart will destroy it.

Congratulations on your retirement.

I retired about 8 years ago. It is a completely different world. No tight
schedules to meet, no customers to argue with, much more relaxing. You
can do your own thing, at your own pace.

I never could understand people who retire, then die. I guess they didn\'t
have any hobbies that could keep them busy.


--
Science teaches us to trust. - sw
 
On 08/11/2020 9:08 pm, Don wrote:
This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,

Your circuit design description states that R3 provides the minimum 10mA
load current. Yet the value of R3 is 15k which only draws 0.1mA which
when added to the R1/R2 divider current of 1.13mA means the minimum load
on the LM317 is only 1.2mA far short of the stated 10mA

You don\'t even need R3 - just change R1 to 120R and R2 to 24R.

piglet
 
In sci.electronics.design piglet <erichpwagner@hotmail.com> wrote:
On 08/11/2020 9:08 pm, Don wrote:
This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,


Your circuit design description states that R3 provides the minimum 10mA
load current. Yet the value of R3 is 15k which only draws 0.1mA which
when added to the R1/R2 divider current of 1.13mA means the minimum load
on the LM317 is only 1.2mA far short of the stated 10mA

You don\'t even need R3 - just change R1 to 120R and R2 to 24R.

Excellent! (As always, BTW.)
Looks like my worst fear was realized as sloppy discipline allowed
a decimal point to slip down from mils to micros. Your hint about how
to eliminate R3 is much appreciated too.
My approach to technology previously untapped by me is to approach
it with caution. And a R2 of hundreds of ohms somehow seemed safe, until
you helped me see things clearly in my mind\'s eye.
Anyhow, the perfboard will be quickly rebuilt with correct
components. It\'s mounted on an easily accessed backboard and plugged
into a strip connected to the UPS used for the phone system. The last
bit doesn\'t matter much, given how a long pole will be used to correct
the clock\'s drift.

Danke,

--
Don, KB7RPU, https://www.qsl.net/kb7rpu
There was a young lady named Bright Whose speed was far faster than light;
She set out one day In a relative way And returned on the previous night.
 
On 09/11/2020 2:06 pm, Don wrote:
In sci.electronics.design piglet <erichpwagner@hotmail.com> wrote:
On 08/11/2020 9:08 pm, Don wrote:
This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the place
of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project offers the
greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an easy to use LM317
adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and whatnot.)

Danke,


Your circuit design description states that R3 provides the minimum 10mA
load current. Yet the value of R3 is 15k which only draws 0.1mA which
when added to the R1/R2 divider current of 1.13mA means the minimum load
on the LM317 is only 1.2mA far short of the stated 10mA

You don\'t even need R3 - just change R1 to 120R and R2 to 24R.

Excellent! (As always, BTW.)
Looks like my worst fear was realized as sloppy discipline allowed
a decimal point to slip down from mils to micros. Your hint about how
to eliminate R3 is much appreciated too.
My approach to technology previously untapped by me is to approach
it with caution. And a R2 of hundreds of ohms somehow seemed safe, until
you helped me see things clearly in my mind\'s eye.
Anyhow, the perfboard will be quickly rebuilt with correct
components. It\'s mounted on an easily accessed backboard and plugged
into a strip connected to the UPS used for the phone system. The last
bit doesn\'t matter much, given how a long pole will be used to correct
the clock\'s drift.

Danke,

Thanks Don, you are very welcome.

piglet

Science teaches us to verify.
 
piglet <erichpwagner@hotmail.com> wrote:

On 09/11/2020 2:06 pm, Don wrote:
In sci.electronics.design piglet <erichpwagner@hotmail.com> wrote:
On 08/11/2020 9:08 pm, Don wrote:
This project shows how to build a 1.5 VDC pseudocell to take the
place of an AA sized battery. The mechanical aspect of this project
offers the greatest challenge. The electronic portion utilizes an
easy to use LM317 adjustable voltage regulator to convert a 5 VDC
source to 1.5 VDC.

(excerpt)

https://crcomp.net/pseudocell/index.php

(Thank you In Advance to readers who alert me to typos and
whatnot.)

Danke,


Your circuit design description states that R3 provides the minimum
10mA load current. Yet the value of R3 is 15k which only draws 0.1mA
which when added to the R1/R2 divider current of 1.13mA means the
minimum load on the LM317 is only 1.2mA far short of the stated 10mA

You don\'t even need R3 - just change R1 to 120R and R2 to 24R.

Excellent! (As always, BTW.)
Looks like my worst fear was realized as sloppy discipline
allowed
a decimal point to slip down from mils to micros. Your hint about how
to eliminate R3 is much appreciated too.
My approach to technology previously untapped by me is to
approach
it with caution. And a R2 of hundreds of ohms somehow seemed safe,
until you helped me see things clearly in my mind\'s eye.
Anyhow, the perfboard will be quickly rebuilt with correct
components. It\'s mounted on an easily accessed backboard and plugged
into a strip connected to the UPS used for the phone system. The last
bit doesn\'t matter much, given how a long pole will be used to
correct the clock\'s drift.

A long pole risks damaging the clock hands.

A WWVB clock will correct the drift and automatically switch for daylight
savings. Batteries can last 3 years.

Danke,


Thanks Don, you are very welcome.

piglet

Science teaches us to verify.

I like your sig. Much better than doubting.

Claude Bernard is an interesting figure and is held as the first
scientist.

Actually I think that title should go to Michael Faraday and others from
his era.

Quote

\"Michael Faraday (born Sept. 22, 1791) was a British physicist and
chemist who is best known for his discoveries of electromagnetic
induction and of the laws of electrolysis. His biggest breakthrough in
electricity was his invention of the electric motor.\"

https://www.thoughtco.com/michael-faraday-inventor-4059933

https://www.sciencehistory.org/historical-profile/michael-faraday

Tesla was credited with invention of the electric motor, but he was a
century too late.

--
Science teaches us to trust. - sw
 

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