I agree with everything you’ve said. The thing is, I do this stuff for a living, and I take it home, where I’m a hobbyist and and electronics enthusiast. I’ve probably powered an LED every possible way. At work I needed a blinking panel light indicator. I could have simply bought one and that would have been that. Way to easy. I wanted the blink of the LED to look like the blink of aircraft warning lamps on transmission towers. I ended up programming an ATmega 283 processor to output PWM to get this panel indicator blinking old-school. It was fun doing it, the panel indicator looks great, and technically it was productive work.

I take that mindset home where I play with electronics for fun. I’m thrilled when I can have a 3 watt low drop-out regulator in a SOT-23 package. Tiny, efficient and big-time fun. So yes, a dropping resistor is the easy way out, but it’s not fun to do.

There’s another problem with dropping resistors. What happens when the battery starts crapping out (even with the flat discharge curve of LiIon)? When the battery voltage drops a dropping resistor is a hindrance. A low dropout regulator would squeeze every ounce of useful energy from a battery. This becomes meaningful for anyone (myself included) who backs off the tailcap to avoid parasitic drain, regardless of what the parasitic drain actually is. I back off the heads of my Thrunites, even though the parasitic drain of my TC20 and Catapult V6 are around 40uA. It shouldn’t bug me, but it does.

My wall clock runs a year on a single AA cell. 15 years ago I bought a G-Shock watch. Moving hands and digital display. The darn thing is still running. I have a lab timer that I’ve had since I worked at Bio-Tek, 22 years ago. There are a pair of AA’s in there, and the darn thing is still working with 22 year old batteries. The LCD is barely visible, but it is still there ,I’ve been blinking an LED (LM3909. obsolete, but an awesome chip) once a second for over four years, running off a depleted C alkaline I rescued from the recycle bin. . And I should worry about .000045 A of parasitic loss? I shouldn’t, but I do. It’s not rational, but it is what it is :slight_smile:

OOps… Sorry… Steps off soapbox now…

Cheers