Firefox6502 wrote:
Quote:
A charger probably isn't appropriate -- its function is specific for use with a battery. But a 5V "wall wart" power supply intended for powering electronics (router, cordless phone base unit, electronic picture frame etc) will be fine.
Thanks for pointing this out! I had never really thought about the difference between an adapter and charger.
Reading up, apparently there are differences such as a charger may not have noise filtering or regulation, where the adapter is designed to provide clean DC voltage to power devices.
The terminology around power supply units (PSUs)/ chargers / wall warts / power adapters etc is all both confusing and vague. Manufacturers of consumer products are especially bad at being vague and misleading.
There are actually more than six types of mains voltage to low voltage output power supply units / chargers / wall warts / power adapters etc...
Some even output AC rather than DC.
And don’t be fooled by a PSU having a USB socket on it. That means nothing.
I won’t describe them all here, but basically your circuit needs a nice smooth regulated DC voltage that stays noise free and within a few percent of it’s stated value. These are known as “regulated” types. The older terminology is “stabilised”. If the unit does not say it’s regulated, assume that it’s not.
Unregulated types are the equivalent of a sea with the wind behind it, lots of high waves and the height varies all the time. Whereas a regulated type is like a carefully controlled indoor fish tank, the surface is totally smooth and flat and someone maintains the water level to the correct height.
Microprocessors don’t like DC power that is choppy. The ripple messes up their operation, especially if the voltage dips too low, as then everything resets...
And with light loads, chargers and unregulated PSUs can output much higher voltages than the labelling suggests. For example a 9V nominal unregulated DC PSU can produce up to about 16V with no load or a light load.
Mark