Originally posted by ivconic
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Regulators in White's
Collapse
X
-
-
people, why in 21st century whites uses step-down voltage regulator? LM2574-5.0. xlt is pretty heavy with 8*AA batts! it is absurd situation that absoliute best electronic device seems as MONSTER for any hands!
we must change IC on step-up one!
Comment
-
Originally posted by kt315 View Postpeople, why in 21st century whites uses step-down voltage regulator? LM2574-5.0. xlt is pretty heavy with 8*AA batts! it is absurd situation that absoliute best electronic device seems as MONSTER for any hands!
we must change IC on step-up one!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Carl-NC View Post??? XLT was designed in the early 90's, so it's a 20th century design.
Comment
-
Depends on the current consumption of the detector, and how long you want it to last on a battery. Theoretically, you can design any detector to run on a single AA battery, but if it runs only 15 minutes then that's no good.
Most detectors try to get 8 hours on a battery pack, and for the XLT that may mean 8-AA's and a step-down regulator. Had it been designed for 4-AA's and a step-up then it would have run for less than half the time.
- Carl
Comment
-
Comparison "Spectrum" and "XLT"?
Hey, people! Please expression so that even we mortals can understand what you mean.
I tried to read in the Whites' site, what is the difference between model "Spectrum" and model "XLT". It appears that there is no difference. Just "Spectrum" and "XLT"are two words that form the name of the model "Spectrum XLT". Explain to me, please, which two detectors you compare in this thread?
Mike BG
Comment
Comment