mrkenneth
Electrical
- Aug 26, 2004
- 79
I know this may be a very rudimentary question, but please bear with me.
Can the amount of current going into a microcontroller (more specifically, a Microchip PIC16) be different than the amount of current leaving it?
I would like to connect the common anode of a LED display to the positive rail, and connect the cathodes to different pins of the PIC (through resistors). The LEDs are directly connected to around 2V, while the PIC is powered by 5V (stepped up by a DC/DC converter). So, the PIC is sinking a maximum of 200 mA (within the limits) when the LEDs are powered on (pins low).
Is this possible? The reason is that so that I can avoid requiring a high-current step-up DC/DC converter to power the LEDs.
Thank you in advance for any insight!
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Operation Radiation:
Can the amount of current going into a microcontroller (more specifically, a Microchip PIC16) be different than the amount of current leaving it?
I would like to connect the common anode of a LED display to the positive rail, and connect the cathodes to different pins of the PIC (through resistors). The LEDs are directly connected to around 2V, while the PIC is powered by 5V (stepped up by a DC/DC converter). So, the PIC is sinking a maximum of 200 mA (within the limits) when the LEDs are powered on (pins low).
Is this possible? The reason is that so that I can avoid requiring a high-current step-up DC/DC converter to power the LEDs.
Thank you in advance for any insight!
---------------------------------------------------------
Operation Radiation: