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oman00339 #1 09/12/2007 - 03h55

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Hi, I have a quick question...

Does anyone know a good ONLINE shop to get an E24 91 Ohm 5% resistor?

Here is a picture:

Posted Image
tristan68 #2 09/12/2007 - 14h14

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Hello oman00339


Resistors are the most common components. You can find them almost everywhere.
If you only search for resistors, there's no need to order them on internet, just try to find an electronics shop near your home, they must have them.

If you cant find exactly the value you seek, ask for the next value in the series (ie, if you can't find a 100ohms , ask for a 120 ohms).

This way , you always go towards safety.

cya
Edited by tristan68 on 09/12/2007 at 14h17.
Olli #3 09/12/2007 - 17h27

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I have another questions about the resistors:

I want to build the 3 Point Clip, with the SFH485P LEDs.
I have a 4.5V power supply, so in theory i would not need a resistor ('cause the Voltage Drop Accros the three leds is 4.5V)

To limit the current of the LEDs, is a 0,1 W 1R Resistor enough?
Edited by Olli on 09/12/2007 at 17h56.
Deimos #4 09/12/2007 - 22h29

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that's not exactly true - the LEDs won't simply work in this setup, since the voltage drop across leds equal or greater than to supply voltage means that that the voltage measured across the leds will be zero -> no curent will flow trough them, so there'll be nothing left to limit and the LEDs will not glow, of course. If you use such low supply voltage, you'll probably need to connect the LEDs in paralell, not in serial.
tristan68 #5 09/12/2007 - 22h32

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Hello Olli

You can't use this setup, because if you don't have enough voltage at your resistor, it can't be used as a good current limiter.

With a low resistor value, you can experience big current variations for small voltage variations.

With the infos you gave, the following setup works fine , and is more battery life friendly than a simple parallel setup :

Posted Image


using a 43 ohms resistor as R1 and a 22ohms resistor as R2, you'll get about 70mA in each led.

cya

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