cool. thanks everybody.
it's not a big secret... the reason you probably don't see it often, is most people recognize the safety hazard and avoid doing this, as well as understanding that it's a bit wasteful to dissipate almost a watt in a resistor.question 2)
why is this a big secret on the internet and nobody in a google search, or instructables.com mentions that I can do this?
i'm guessing the device you bought at the dollar store bypassed UL cert? usually something like that wouldn't pass UL, but i suppose if it's fully enclosed and insulated, it might.
Another option for powering LEDs is called a capacitive dropper. The resistor is replaced with a capacitor and the reactance drops the voltage. The capacitor on this situation must be rated cor greater than the peak line voltage (i.e., 1.414×line voltage).
Use caution with either type circuit - they are live at line voltage. This type of power supply can be used to power a microcontroller circuit but if this is done, the entire circuit and anything connected to it is live at line voltage. The entire circuit must be isolated from any chance of contact to a person.
An incandescent light bulb is simply a resistor that gets white hot. The oxygen is removed from inside its glass globe to prevent it from burning out too soon. 4W at 120VAC is 600 ohms when it is white hot. A 100W incandescent bulb at 120VAC is 144 ohms when it is white hot. A 1500W toaster at 120VAC is 9.6 ohms when it is red hot.Maybe you can take a few minutes and explain to the rest of us how incandescent 4W 120v night lights pass UL testing?
Agreed. For some reason, many people on this forum and allaboutcircuits.com think some special over-unity dark-matter special-relativity danger is invoked as soon as 120vac and LEDs are in the same circuit. HaAn incandescent light bulb is simply a resistor that gets white hot. The oxygen is removed from inside its glass globe to prevent it from burning out too soon. 4W at 120VAC is 600 ohms when it is white hot. A 100W incandescent bulb at 120VAC is 144 ohms when it is white hot. A 1500W toaster at 120VAC is 9.6 ohms when it is red hot.
Uh, they study hard to pass the test?Maybe you can take a few minutes and explain to the rest of us how incandescent 4W 120v night lights pass UL testing?
Agreed. For some reason, many people on this forum and allaboutcircuits.com think some special over-unity dark-matter special-relativity danger is invoked as soon as 120vac and LEDs are in the same circuit. Ha
I was looking for the smallest simplest way to power an LED from USA household current which is 120 volts AC. At the dollar store I found an LED night light and opened it up expecting to see a tiny transformer or something to power the led but instead I found this: <see attached picture>.
I am dumb founded how to explain how this works, and when I checked online for led's powered by 120v ac nothing comes close to this circuit I found. Mean while, it works perfectly. What is going on here?
View attachment 116216
Apparently, Microchip believes in the same special over-unity dark-matter special-relativity bull-feces danger as I do. Transformerless Power Supplies - Resistive and Capacitive.
View attachment 116286
Perhaps other readers of this forum, without gophert's supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, more-than-any-other-human-being's vast experience, may think a capacitive dropper will be a great way to run a microcontroller circuit circuit, completely unaware that touching one of pins may result in a low-voltage shock. These circuits have their place, but not where people may come into contact with them.
You must be stunned that people manage not to stick their fingers in light sockets and probe around when they change lightbulbs. Who the hell looks at device plugged into a wall and is UNAWARE they shouldn't probe around or drop it into a bathtub?
Re-read the Microchip app note again, it doesn't say, "don't use transformerless power supplies", it says, paraphrasing, "if you are going to do it, do it right". I agree whole-heartedly with the right time, right place. I am just against the stupidity of "don't do it, don't talk about it, pretend-it-doesn't-exist" mentality of some members and some forums.
Also, Thanks for putting words in my mouth. "Great way to run a microcontroller"? I was talking about LEDs and I only think it is one way to power LEDs. A great way in some cases, not others.
Keep your chin up, my friend. You may write a reasonable post some day in the future.
I'm sorry, I don't remember this post. Even the search tool couldn't help me find it. Please post a link.There was a recent thread here where a guy did exactly this, ignoring numerous warnings. Finally, he decided to prove everybody wrong, and was shocked to see (no pun intended) 120v on his microcontroller pins.
Do you really want to get into name calling based on age in this forum? Remember, it's been us old guys that paid for all of the child locks, car seats and participation trophies that kept you safe - physically and emotionally.Perhaps gophert and others need to remember that not everyone here is of the Geritol generation, and indeed, that it would be a good step to encourage new members and to reduce the average age here by 20 or 30 years.
Don't stick a fork in the toaster!A 1500W toaster at 120VAC is 9.6 ohms when it is red hot.
Gophert,
Here is a link to my alleged post. Nigel and a number of others made repeated posts about the safety of transformwrless power supplies, especially in the hands of somebody who doesn't know what they are doing...which is pretty common here.
Think this can't happen? There was a recent thread here where a guy did exactly this, ignoring numerous warnings. Finally, he decided to prove everybody wrong, and was shocked to see (no pun intended) 120v on his microcontroller pins.
You have no clue about my age, so anything you say is baseless.
Perhaps I need to connect the dots for you esteemed (that word may not mean what I think it does) gentlemen.
"Joe New Guy" has played with an Arduino a little bit. He knows that he's not going to get a shock from the 5 volt power supply no matter what he does.
Joe sees some info on transformerless power supplies and decides he can adapt a capacitive dropper from an LED bulb to power his next project. It's only about 5 volts, so what possible harm could there be? He can save a couple bucks and power his project.
All goes well until the circuit board starts to fall so he grabs it and suddenly receives a line-voltage shock.
Think this can't happen? There was a recent thread here where a guy did exactly this, ignoring numerous warnings. Finally, he decided to prove everybody wrong, and was shocked to see (no pun intended) 120v on his microcontroller pins.
Perhaps gophert and others need to remember that not everyone here is of the Geritol generation, and indeed, that it would be a good step to encourage new members and to reduce the average age here by 20 or 30 years.
View attachment 116288
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