L
Lostgallifreyan
Guest
An LM317 uses 1.25V as reference, which in a current regulator circuit puts
that voltage plus the pass transistor's own voltage drop as the total drop,
which is quite large. I looked up low dropout regulators (Wikipedia), and saw
that the same 1.25V bandgap reference was generally used. If that could also
be lowered, perhaps to a tenth or even to as low as 50 mV via a resistor
divider onboard, as well as using a FET as pass transistor, total drop in
current regulators could be lowered further than usual. 50 mV seems small,
but I think many newer PSU and LED driver circuits with small sense
resistances imply that accuracy can still be had with low sense voltages.
Is a very low reference voltage used in 3-pin variable voltage regulators? If
so, any specific devices I should look at, and if not, why not?
that voltage plus the pass transistor's own voltage drop as the total drop,
which is quite large. I looked up low dropout regulators (Wikipedia), and saw
that the same 1.25V bandgap reference was generally used. If that could also
be lowered, perhaps to a tenth or even to as low as 50 mV via a resistor
divider onboard, as well as using a FET as pass transistor, total drop in
current regulators could be lowered further than usual. 50 mV seems small,
but I think many newer PSU and LED driver circuits with small sense
resistances imply that accuracy can still be had with low sense voltages.
Is a very low reference voltage used in 3-pin variable voltage regulators? If
so, any specific devices I should look at, and if not, why not?