Chancy99
Computer
- May 13, 2002
- 104
I'm missing something fundamental here ... I have a typical voltage divider circuit, consisting of two resistors, a 39k and a 22k, plus a 10k pot to adjust things. The 39k is the top leg for input, the 22k and 10k pot are the bottom leg to GND. When adjusted for about 25k, it will divide 12V in at the top of the 39k to about 5V at the junction of the 39k/22k.
Works fine. Stick in 12V, get 5V out.
Now I add a 1N4625 5.1V zener, to make sure that the input voltage can't surge up and burn things out. As I understand it, the zener shouldn't conduct at all until 5.1V.
But it seems to be acting as another resistor to GND. WIthout the zener, I adjust it to show a clean exact 5.00V. Add the zener in, and the output drops to 4.61V. I can increase the input voltage to get 5.00V out of the divider - I have to go to 16.4V.
With 16.V input, if I remove the zener, the output jumps from 5.00V up to 6.2V.
I know this is going to be a DOH type slap the forehead deal ...
D.
Works fine. Stick in 12V, get 5V out.
Now I add a 1N4625 5.1V zener, to make sure that the input voltage can't surge up and burn things out. As I understand it, the zener shouldn't conduct at all until 5.1V.
But it seems to be acting as another resistor to GND. WIthout the zener, I adjust it to show a clean exact 5.00V. Add the zener in, and the output drops to 4.61V. I can increase the input voltage to get 5.00V out of the divider - I have to go to 16.4V.
With 16.V input, if I remove the zener, the output jumps from 5.00V up to 6.2V.
I know this is going to be a DOH type slap the forehead deal ...
D.