Just spotted this new Buck-Boost 3A driver at FastTech. Does it seem good? Wish we had more specs on output from single AA, 2 AA, single Li-Ion, and two Li-Ions. Not understanding the adjustable output voltage - why would you need to adjust output voltage? It is a 5 mode though.
This is adjustable voltage driver. You need to calibrate first what fixed V you want (e.g 4V), then this driver will buck/boost to that voltage. Current will depend on that voltage, minus your emitter Vf and over total circuit resistance, but will be maxed at 3A.
The modes simply will run PWM depending on your initial settings - 100, 30, 5%.
The Fasttech one would be good if it takes 8.4V. As is (7V), it’s just another driver with identity disorder. 7V limit means it’s not suitable for 2x li-ion, no low-voltage protection means single unprotected li-ion will be drained to death, 17mm size is a little too big for AA host (plus there are cheaper options).
It actually has adjustable output voltage.
Maybe this would make a good addition to a driver like the nanjg 105c flashed with lupodrv .
Just use this one to buck/boost to like 4V and let the 105c take care of the current output management.
For me, the 7V upper limit is ok, as i am more interested in single-18650 lights that can also deal with 2xCR123 primaries (for their better performance in the cold) or AAs (for their availability).
When i hook up another driver at the output of this one, i probably should disable the mode-selection on the buck/boost so i don’t feed a PWM signal into the 105c, which means reprogramming/replacing the microcontroller.
From the pictures i can only guess whan kind of MCU is used, seems to start with “12…”, so could be PIC12F629?
Can anyone provide more info on this?
Well I have a set I had from KaiDomain a few years back. Now, this isn’t a buck driver. It is just a boost driver with adjustable output, so that you can use it to power up 6V Luxeon LEDs or newer EZWhite XML’s if you can find. I tried this one with 2xAa and an XML led, and burnt the driver instantly. Ok, I should have checked the output voltage better, but it is a fragile driver if you are close to VF at your power source. Now I use one with an XPE and 2Xaa light. It is ok this way. But nothing great.