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There are electronics groups better suited to discuss your need.
But here's a thought, any way. A current sense is often provided by a low value series resistor on the + rail across the base/emitter junction of a transistor which turns on when the voltage drop exceeds about 0.6 volts A collector resistor limits the output current to about 10 milliamps and activates a LED connected to the - rail when active. This is a low count solution, but probably not best suited to your purpose, because it drops a volt and wastes some power. You might consider a VERY low value series resistor - i.e. the voltage drop across a length of the positive rail cable feeding the two inputs of an op amp, whose output feeds a dropper resistor of 1.2Kohms say, to a LED on the negative rail. The adjustability is provided by a 25Kohm pot connected to the op amp output at one end, whose wiper connects to the + op amp input though a 200 ohm resistor, and the other end of the pot connects to the most positive end of the + rail . The - input of the op amp connects to the least positive end of the positive rail through a 200 ohm resistor. Not just any op amp will do for this: the key is an op amp type that does NOT latch on an input as high as the + rail. Brian Whatcott Altus OK On 24 Feb 2004 11:48:17 -0800, (Norm Freedman) wrote: Any electronics experts out there? Would appreciate help with a simple circuit: to light an LED when current in a 12vdc circuit goes above approximately 10 amps (adjustable from about 8 - 13 amps would be nice) and drop out when current goes below that set point. Maximum current is about 20 amps. Any ideas? Thanks for the help |
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