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  1. #1

    Default Voltage Regulator or other device

    Is there something like a Voltage Regulator that will Limit the Voltage so you don't go over a certain Voltage?

    The Voltage regulators I've been looking at seem to only work correctly if you put a certain range of voltage into them to get the regulated voltage out.

    EX a 12V regulator needs like 13-15 volts in to keep the voltage out at 12v consistently.

    I just want something to limit the voltage to no more then 12v max.

    EX if I have 3x 3.7 V batterys in series and get an average of 11.1v but they can peak when charged I've read to like 3x 4.2 or more and I don't want to go to high.

    I'm guessing there is something out there like this but I don't know what it's called and without the name of it my google searches haven't been very fruitful.

    could someone help me out?

  2. #2

    Default

    I believe you are looking for a buck-puck, or driver board.
    http://www.thecustomsabershop.com/Hi...onics-C17.aspx
    "You don't stop playing because you grow old, you grow old because you stop playing."
    -Benjamin Franklin

  3. #3

    Default

    nope but thanks.

    I want something to cap out the voltage on a battery back before it goes to a driver board...

    for example 15v outta a battery pack would fry a ultra sound board so I want something to put in between them to only let 12v pass through to the driver.

    I'm still a newb so maybe I'm just not explaining this well enough...

    A voltage limiter....

  4. #4

    Default

    Oh.
    I see what you're after now.

    Why are you using 15V?

    12V is the maximum for US 2.0, that means as long as you have enough voltage for your LED, you don't need to max out at 12V.
    Two 3.7V trustfires should be sufficient for any application you've got in mind.
    "You don't stop playing because you grow old, you grow old because you stop playing."
    -Benjamin Franklin

  5. #5

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    Not if he wants to run a tri-rebel wired in series with the Ultrasound in which case a 2 AA holder with Trustfires isn't enough and a 4 AA holder with Trustfires is too much and a 4 AA holder with 3 Trustfires and a dummy AA is fine if delivering the nominal voltage but can peak over the Ultrasounds 12V max when just charged...I'm guessing that that is why he might want a "voltage regulator"/"voltage limiter" that prevents voltage over 12V but still allow voltages under 12V through?

  6. #6
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    Default

    So the goal is to not regulate under 12V and regulate above that?
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