Over-voltage protection


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  1. #1
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    Default Over-voltage protection

    A little something I thought up in case a user doesn't use the proper power source (like use the Lab-X1 12V wall-adapter instead of the 5V model supplied with the unit).

    This serves as both a POWER light, and a MAGIC-SMOKE-INCOMING light.

    Code:
    IF Zener receives under 5.6V THEN
      PNP transistor turns ON green light
    ELSE
      NPN transistor turns ON red light
    END-IF
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    Does it make sense? Am I forgetting something?

    I've never touched a Zener before, and rarely have used a Transistor. So this also serves as a training exercise for me.

    Robert
    Last edited by Demon; - 6th May 2023 at 02:34. Reason: Version 2, adapted NPN layout, added blue to VSS
    My Creality Ender 3 S1 Plus is a giant paperweight that can't even be used as a boat anchor, cause I'd be fined for polluting our waterways with electronic devices.

    Not as dumb as yesterday, but stupider than tomorrow!

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    the red led will never fly with base of tr shorted to gnd

    try
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    red should light at 5.5v
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    the red led will never fly with base of tr shorted to gnd

    try
    Attachment 9386

    red should light at 5.5v


    But why reduce Zener to 4.7V? Out of all the PICs I'm looking at, the one with the lowest max VDD was 6.0V; hence why I chose 5.6V Zener as "fuse".

    Is this because of influence of 1K resistor below it?

    And how did you arrive at 4.7V? Math? or a spec in some doc?

    In this particular case, I was doing this for the 18F14K22 which has absolute max VDD rated at 6.0V.


    EDIT: I ask how, because I will have the same over-voltage circuit at other voltage levels(for other purposes).


    EDIT SOME MORE: These are the specs for the 1N5232BTR that I was planning on using.

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    Last edited by Demon; - 6th May 2023 at 21:13.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    But why reduce Zener to 4.7V?


    i saw
    the 5V model supplied with the unit
    and assumed an over 5v alarm was indicated




    Out of all the PICs I'm looking at, the one with the lowest max VDD was 6.0V; hence why I chose 5.6V Zener as "fuse".
    if you use a 5.6v zenner in my cct then the red alarm led will be lit at 6.5 v

    if you want the zenner to be a crowbar and blow a fuse, there are better ways.

    https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/203643422252

    i use these things , 3-15 v in adj to 3.3 or 5v out or whatever @up to 5w , cheap with no problems
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    ... if you want the zenner to be a crowbar and blow a fuse, there are better ways.

    I'm seeing this design a lot.

    https://theorycircuit.com/crowbar-ov...ection-module/

    It pops that fuse and puts an end to the shenanigans until the user corrects the situation.



    I'd like to stay away from 3rd-party components as much as possible, and come up with a design as simple as possible.

    Robert

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    ... if you want the zenner to be a crowbar and blow a fuse, there are better ways.

    How about this modification to that link I posted above?

    - Green LED remains ON while voltage remains under 5.6V.

    - Red LED turns ON when voltage reaches 5.6V, and Green LED turns OFF.

    - SCR shorts out Fuse and protects everything to the right of this circuit.


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    This way I get a light on the unit that gives an indication as to what went wrong.

    I absolutely hate products that DIE, and you're left clueless what went wrong.

    Robert


    EDIT: I'm just not sure about the need for that 1N4007 for my application. It will cost me a voltage drop to add that in.
    Last edited by Demon; - 6th May 2023 at 23:40.

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    - Green LED remains ON while voltage remains under 5.6V.
    Green LED remains ON , it will not extinguish
    - Red LED turns ON when voltage reaches 5.6V, and Green LED turns OFF.
    Red LED turns ON when voltage reaches 5.6V + at least 0.6 v , so more like
    when voltage exceeds 6.3v Red LED turns ON and Green LED remains on.




    - SCR shorts out Fuse and protects everything to the right of this circuit.
    in practice :- just after every semiconductor device is destroyed SCR shorts out Fuse
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Green LED is driven by a PNP. Won't that shut off once the Zener breaks?

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    no, there is no mechanism there to make vbe for the pnp tr ever be below the 0.6 v required to switch the tr on
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  10. #10
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    I absolutely hate products that DIE, and you're left clueless what went wrong.
    me too, that's why i use modern switch mode power modules with wide input supply ranges and generally fail safe outputs
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  11. #11


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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    A simpler circuit as 'crowbar' type circuit. Use 2 or 3 -5.6 volt zener diodes, if/when it trips, probably will short/ruin one z-diode. Has your .6 amp fuse and you can add one or more 1n4004 type diodes in series to raise the trip-out voltage by about .6 volt for each diode. Also add a, maybe a
    1 or 10 microfarad cap across z-d's to absorb any high surge if over 5v


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  12. #12
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    ... in practice :- just after every semiconductor device is destroyed SCR shorts out Fuse

    What destroys ICs downstream after the SCR shorts to VSS?

    Is it a current surge?

    Or reverse voltage?


    Robert



    EDIT: Added NTC for current surge protection at output, and extra TVS up front (we get a lot of power surges here, hydro lines are not the most stable with so many trees).

    EDIT SOME MORE: In keeping with Tim The Toolman's philosophy of "cause we can", I added a Varistor on output.

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    Last edited by Demon; - 7th May 2023 at 21:51.

  13. #13
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Crowbar protection can be ineffective due to the time taken for it to activate. Everything of value is damaged in the milliseconds before comes in.
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  14. #14
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    What about Zener/Mosfet design?

    https://theorycircuit.com/over-volta...ction-circuit/

    Darn, not that one either. It protects against reverse polarity.

    I saw some earlier, but can't find them now.
    Last edited by Demon; - 8th May 2023 at 01:19.
    My Creality Ender 3 S1 Plus is a giant paperweight that can't even be used as a boat anchor, cause I'd be fined for polluting our waterways with electronic devices.

    Not as dumb as yesterday, but stupider than tomorrow!

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    you could try
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    but i feel its a no gain process, a good switch-mode supply is cheaper and smaller
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  16. #16
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    you could try ... but i feel its a no gain process ...
    I'd really like to learn "something" in this exercise.


    The majority of the over-voltage links on the web either point to the naked zener, or zener-SCR and zener-FET. And a LOT of those threads get taken apart in the comments. It's like amateurs acting like they're gurus now.


    So I resorted to looking at the corporate sites; they usually know what they're doing, but I ignore them in the past cause it's often so much more complicated than my skill level.


    And then I fall on this one from TI:

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    Technical specs here:
    https://www.ti.com/lit/an/snoaa20/sn...FCIRCUIT060079

    - 1 IC
    - 4 Resistors
    - 2 Zeners
    - 1 MOSFET

    And it includes all the math to convert for 5V (I think).


    But I'm faced with the same question, will this design have a delay that won't really save anything sensitive downstream?


    Richard, that circuit you buy, doesn't that also have some delay to a certain degree?


    I'd be very interested in this IC, only downside, requires 7V in (without knowing more about it yet).
    https://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/tl714.pdf
    NEVER MIND, 7-12mA.

    Robert
    Last edited by Demon; - 8th May 2023 at 03:12.
    My Creality Ender 3 S1 Plus is a giant paperweight that can't even be used as a boat anchor, cause I'd be fined for polluting our waterways with electronic devices.

    Not as dumb as yesterday, but stupider than tomorrow!

  17. #17
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    Wink Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    ... if you want the zenner to be a crowbar and blow a fuse, there are better ways.

    https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/203643422252

    Ok, so I found Alice on ebay Canada. Turns out to be $1.79 each when I buy 10.
    https://www.ebay.ca/itm/313748820419


    I guess nothing stops me from adding a zener/crowbar/fuse setup in front to make me feel like I'm doing something.


    I can even afford a one-way diode in case someone uses a wall-adapter with a negative center (I think all the ones I have are positive center).


    I hope you get a freebie for making her a sale.

    Robert
    My Creality Ender 3 S1 Plus is a giant paperweight that can't even be used as a boat anchor, cause I'd be fined for polluting our waterways with electronic devices.

    Not as dumb as yesterday, but stupider than tomorrow!

  18. #18
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    So I started looking closer at Alice, she's using a B6289C IC; I can't even find a datasheet for that.

    But I did find a relatively similar circuit using a LM2596 for $.99:
    https://www.ebay.ca/itm/333463165949


    Is this as good as Alice?


    I can even order a batch from Amazon and avoid import/duty fees, $2 each:
    https://www.amazon.ca/Yizhet-Convert...dp/B0B5GQTS64/


    Robert


    EDIT: just the LM2596 costs over $4 here:

    https://www.digikey.ca/en/products/d...TVADJG/2003293
    Last edited by Demon; - 8th May 2023 at 04:04.
    My Creality Ender 3 S1 Plus is a giant paperweight that can't even be used as a boat anchor, cause I'd be fined for polluting our waterways with electronic devices.

    Not as dumb as yesterday, but stupider than tomorrow!

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    i very much doubt "Alice" is an individual.
    the sm ps units i linked are good, o/p v adjustment is fiddly. i cannot vouch for every-thing else
    there are multitudes of cheap sm power modules on ebay,amazon,aliexpreess,....
    i pick ones to suit project re i/p o/p power.
    if the price is too good to be true , it probably is.
    i use
    R-78E-0.5 for pic mcu mission critical jobs , not cheap but super reliable and tough
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  20. #20
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Is this as good as Alice?
    its a different animal , the ones i linked are buck boost in 3 to 15 , out 1 to 15

    ie 3v-15v in 5v out those others are buck only ie 7.2v-35v in 5v out
    Warning I'm not a teacher

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by richard View Post
    its a different animal , ... those others are buck only ie 7.2v-35v in 5v out

    That's ok. I haven't used weaker wall-adapters than required at output yet. I'm always using exact ratings, like a 5V wall-adapter for a 5V circuit, or a stronger wall-adapter and using voltage regulators to bring it down.

    I ordered 10 and I'll see what the railure rate is. Some comments say they suck, but you never know how they treated the units.

    Found the Alice design is on Amazon (same IC), but they're advertising it as boost only:
    https://www.amazon.com/Eiechip-Volta.../dp/B07RNBJK5F
    Last edited by Demon; - 8th May 2023 at 18:00.

  22. #22
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Just a note to the next guy, you don't absolutely have to have 5V to operate a lot of these PICs.

    For example, on a 16F628, check the DC Characteristics in section 17.1 of the datasheet and look at VDD supply voltage.
    - it runs fine from 3.0 - 5.5 V, just keep an eye out on Brown-out Detect Voltage if you're using that feature.

    Just don't fixate on the Absolute Maximum Ratings in section 17.0 (like I was doing).
    - 6.5 V max on VDD.
    - 14V max on MCLR.

    If you run a bit lower than the "normal" 5 volts, you might have to adjust the resistors a bit for things like LEDs.

    Robert
    My Creality Ender 3 S1 Plus is a giant paperweight that can't even be used as a boat anchor, cause I'd be fined for polluting our waterways with electronic devices.

    Not as dumb as yesterday, but stupider than tomorrow!

  23. #23


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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    why aren't you just using a simple LM7805 regulator which will take any input of say 6 to 32 volts and protect the micro ? That could take the place of all the other circuitry, plus input voltage fluxuation.
    Last edited by amgen; - 8th May 2023 at 21:52.

  24. #24
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by amgen View Post
    why aren't you just using a simple LM7805 regulator which will take any input of say 6 to 32 volts and protect the micro ? That could take the place of all the other circuitry, plus input voltage fluxuation.

    That was my first idea, but I don't know just how far a 7805 can take abuse, compared to the TVS, NTC and MOV?

    And then I'd still like to pop a fuse if things get out of hand. Been playing some more with it, added some caps up front, took off the red LED (fuse will tell me something went wrong), added direction diode and simplified the green LED.

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    What happens with a 7805 if a user plugs in the wrong wall adapter? I have dozens myself of all powers, accumulated over the ages.

    Robert

  25. #25


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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    well, the 7805 takes up to I think 32 volts at the input so you could use any adapter that is under that voltage with only exception that the input has a minimum of about 1 volt over the regulated 5 volts. Those TVS and MOV's are generally used for possible heavy surges of power and lightening type events, and even then, the electronics can be damaged due to "instantaneous power/voltages" that strike. The NTC, when used in power circuits, are also called "inrush current limiters" are generally used for limiting "initial" current inrush if there are large capacitors to charge or motor or transformer windings that may take large startup current. The resistance for NTC's goes down as the device heats up reaching the 'steady-state' current. Lastly, there are 3 terminal linear voltage regulators with a higher input voltage ratings, if that is a worry.
    ps: that is a pretty circuit you drew !
    Last edited by amgen; - 9th May 2023 at 02:46.

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    That was my first idea, but I don't know just how far a 7805 can take abuse, compared to the TVS, NTC and MOV?
    they are pretty tough, i don't go much for linear regs due to their low efficiency and heatsink requirements [ for batt powered stuff].
    for low power mains powered roles they served well for years and still can

    absolute vin max is 35v but dropping 20v or so across the reg @250mA makes a lot of heat whereas for a switching reg , no heat
    Warning I'm not a teacher

  27. #27
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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Maybe I missed the scope but, why are you so worried?

    If you have a low current circuit, a 7805 is just fine for up to 35 or so voiltages.

    If you have higher currents, then a smps like the expensive Recom that Richard uses or the cheaper https://gr.mouser.com/ProductDetail/490-VXO7805-1000 I use is good enough.

    And last but not least, the circuit that you posted for reverse polarity protection with the p-mosfet in post #14 is the best protection with no voltage drop.

    Ioannis

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    Default Re: Over-voltage protection

    Quote Originally Posted by Ioannis View Post
    Maybe I missed the scope but, why are you so worried?

    If you have a low current circuit, a 7805 is just fine for up to 35 or so voiltages.

    If you have higher currents, then a smps like the expensive Recom that Richard uses or the cheaper https://gr.mouser.com/ProductDetail/490-VXO7805-1000 I use is good enough.

    And last but not least, the circuit that you posted for reverse polarity protection with the p-mosfet in post #14 is the best protection with no voltage drop.

    Ioannis
    I get crazy power surges and spikes here in thunderstorms, lots of trees messing with lines and transformers.

    I might end up using a combination of devices.

    Yeah, that diode was costing me .7V and was bugging me like crazy, but with that boost circuit, that's not really a problem. That boost circuit also gives me the choice of splitting my power source: 5V for PIC and other ICs, and what ever I need for more power-hungry circuits.

    I have only one major concern, whatever I chose, I have to be able to provide at least 100 within a year, hopefully 1000 over the next few years (gotta have goals in life ).

    Robert

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