TTL chips like this really want to run from a regulated power supply, instead of adjusting a resistor to produce about the right voltage drop. TTL can draw widely varying amounts of current as it operates, so even if you dialed in the resistor to produce the correct voltage at one time, it could still be wrong other times.
> So what can I do now? Is it possible to fry a demux in such way, or is
> there still hope for these babies?
It is quite possible to cook these chips, but it's also a random thing. I've massively abused some chips (melted one into the shape of a banana) and had them continue to work properly. Others I've abused would stop working, then work again a few minutes or days later. And some, with just mild abuse, stopped working and stayed that way.
These K155ID1 chips are fairly robust, but either their quality control was iffy, or there are a lot of damaged chips on the market, as I've had several that weren't right when I got them, and I've had a few more fail with just a little use. One of these apparently repaired itself after about a week, and has been working fine for years now.
> I'll never forgive myself for doing such a dumb thing..
It's worth picking up an ordinary 7805 style integrated voltage regulator and a few filter capacitors to build a nice stiffly regulated power supply with overcurrent and thermal protection. I generally use a large (2200-4700µf) filter capacitor, another 1µf capacitor right at the input terminal, a second 1µf unit right at the output terminal and a 0µ1f capacitor at the power supply pin on each chip I'm powering. It's kind of a shotgun approach, but it's not difficult or expensive, and my chips seem happy (from that standpoint at least - I always seem to find some other way to make their lives difficult).
Alternatively, if you can find a 5 volt regulated power supply (like a phone charger or USB hub supply or similar), those are dandy for powering logic. I'd still suggest a small capacitor for each chip - especially necessary since the regulator is now at the end of a long cord.
- John
eric
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