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how to calculate the base resistor

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fynn...@yahoo.com

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Oct 8, 2017, 2:53:50 PM10/8/17
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please can anyone show me how to calculate the base resistor for an NPN transistor used as a switch. the supply voltage is 12 volts, the load is a 12 volts relay with a resistance of 300 Ohms.
thank you.

natp

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Oct 8, 2017, 4:12:35 PM10/8/17
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"fynn...@yahoo.com" <fynn...@yahoo.com> wrote:

>please can anyone show me how to calculate the base resistor for an NPN transistor used as a switch. the supply voltage is 12 volts, the load is a 12 volts relay with a resistance of 300 Ohms.
>thank you.

When the NPN transistor is saturated (fully on), the emitter-collector
voltage will be about 0.2-0.3 volts. Using the other values you have,
you can calculate Ic; the current flowing through the collector
(and the relay).

To saturate the transistor, the base current must be greater than
Ic / beta
where "beta" is the minimum current gain of the transistor.

The last piece of information you need is that the base-emitter
voltage is one "diode-drop"; about 0.7 volts.

mike

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Oct 8, 2017, 4:34:16 PM10/8/17
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It's customary to overdrive the base. I normally use a factor of
10.
It's also customary to put a reverse diode across the coil
so that the turn-off transient doesn't overvoltage the collector.

tabb...@gmail.com

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Oct 8, 2017, 5:00:04 PM10/8/17
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On Sunday, 8 October 2017 19:53:50 UTC+1, fynn...@yahoo.com wrote:

> please can anyone show me how to calculate the base resistor for an NPN transistor used as a switch. the supply voltage is 12 volts, the load is a 12 volts relay with a resistance of 300 Ohms.
> thank you.

12v 300ohms is 40mA.
Assume beta of at least 30, so we need 40/30mA into the base = 1.3mA
V across base R is 12v - 0.7v = 11.3v
R=V/I so R = 11.3/1.3m = 8.5k. Preferred values below that to give a bit more i are 8k2 or 6k8 or 4k7.


NT

fynn...@yahoo.com

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Oct 8, 2017, 5:03:37 PM10/8/17
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On Sunday, October 8, 2017 at 6:53:50 PM UTC, fynn...@yahoo.com wrote:
> please can anyone show me how to calculate the base resistor for an NPN transistor used as a switch. the supply voltage is 12 volts, the load is a 12 volts relay with a resistance of 300 Ohms.
> thank you.

Thanks all your suggestion are well taken

Clifford Heath

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Oct 8, 2017, 8:52:38 PM10/8/17
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On 09/10/17 07:33, mike wrote:
> On 10/8/2017 1:12 PM, natp wrote:
>> "fynn...@yahoo.com" <fynn...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>> please can anyone show me how to calculate the base resistor for an
>>> NPN transistor used as a switch. the supply voltage is 12 volts, the
>>> load is a 12 volts relay with a resistance of 300 Ohms.
>>> thank you.
>>
>> When the NPN transistor is saturated (fully on), the emitter-collector
>> voltage will be about 0.2-0.3 volts. Using the other values you have,
>> you can calculate Ic; the current flowing through the collector
>> (and the relay).
>>
>> To saturate the transistor, the base current must be greater than
>>     Ic / beta
>> where "beta" is the minimum current gain of the transistor.
>>
>> The last piece of information you need is that the base-emitter
>> voltage is one "diode-drop"; about 0.7 volts.
>>
> It's customary to overdrive the base.  I normally use a factor of
> 10.

Beta is reduced near saturation. 10x is an attempt to compensate.
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