<font color='black' size='4' face='Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif'><font size="4">Polyfuses are cheap. As I said, not as simple as a single polarity regulator but it can be done. I just had a thought of how to do it with only one zener and using the spare opamp gate as a conditional inverter but that adds still more complication. The rest is left to the student - as my textbooks used to say.</font>
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<div style="clear:both"><font size="4">Dave Massey</font><br>
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<div style="font-family:arial,helvetica;font-size:10pt;color:black">-----Original Message-----<br>
From: Randall <TR3driver@ca.rr.com><br>
To: triumphs <triumphs@autox.team.net><br>
Sent: Sat, Jul 4, 2015 3:03 pm<br>
Subject: Re: [TR] gas gauge and voltage regulators<br>
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<pre style="font-size: 9pt;"><tt>> Here you go. This will work with either polarity equally
> well (or poorly
but then how accurate are the instruments
> anyway).
Very clever. But I
would still call that two separate regulators (ZR1 and ZR2), you've just added a
voltage follower to the output.
:)
No over-current protection either.
--
Randall
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