Ah, I understand now. That's a fair question, but I suspect the answer is still the same. Having said that, I have relatively little experience with automotive wiring issues, and could easily be wrong.ebeowulf - what I meant was tapping directly to the battery instead of going through an existing +12V VCC that is probably ran through all sorts of relays and other electronic components in the car.
The TVS doesn't go in series with the 12V supply, it goes between the supply and ground.Hmm, this TVS diode won't pass voltage. I have it between the +vcc and the rail on the board right? I'm not sure where it's supposed to go based on the diagram.
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I'm embarrassed to say that I hadn't really realized what R9 was doing until you brought it up just now. Think I get it now. I'm learning new stuff all the time. Apologies if I ever jump in with explanations prematurely (like describing a way to hook up TVS without its related components.) I'm learning lots from this thread. Thanks!Unless you connect it as shown in the schematic, with one leg going to the cathode of D6 and the other leg going to ground, it won't achieve its intended function (which is to short-circuit voltage spikes above ~15V). I doubt you can safely test its function in your breadboard layout. It will only survive if voltage spikes are brief. If you don't have R9 and D6 in place there is no point using the TVS on the breadboard.
I don't understand most of that article, but one thing that I thought I grasped but didn't make sense was the jump starting causing a 24V spike. When you jump a car, the wires are in a parallel configuration, so this wouldn't double the output, right? You don't hook positive to negative like in series.You obviously didn't follow the link in post #98.
It's not about alternator failure; it's load dump effects. If an alternator's inductive load is suddenly removed (think of switching off an engine fan) the voltage will suddenly shoot up. The spike may be 50V or more!
Be aware that MOSFETS are static sensitive. If your finger is touching the wire that you're tapping the gate with you could inadvertently be applying 1000V or more from your body. The FET won't like that!I'm able to get the light to flash twice out of nowhere by directly tapping the gate
Again, it could be due to inductive energy being dissipated at the instant when the jump starter is disconnected.one thing that I thought I grasped but didn't make sense was the jump starting causing a 24V spike
Your explanation is reasonable, ebeowulf.Hopefully Alec can tell me if I'm on the right track or not.
You probably aren't giving capacitor C7 time to discharge fully via R8, so the FET may stay turned on between taps.It seems to happen more frequently if I tap an area twice quickly then let go, as opposed to deliberate 2 second breaks.
That shorts it out. Use a new row (you've got plentycan D2 go inline in a row or does that short it out?