Glossary:3-Terminal Regulator: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "A 3-terminal regulator is a device which takes an unregulated input voltage and produces a constant well-defined output voltage. It has just 3 connections (or terminals: the input, the output and a common ground. The 78/79 seriesintegrated circuits are a very common example. 78 devices take positive input and output whereas 79 series take negative. Two further digits in the type code indicate the voltage, for example 780...") |
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A 3-terminal regulator is a device which takes an unregulated input voltage and produces a constant well-defined output voltage. It has just 3 connections (or terminals: the input, the output and a common [[Glossary:Earth|ground]]. The 78/79 series[[Glossary:Integrated Circuit|integrated circuits]] are a very common example. 78 devices take positive input and output whereas 79 series take negative. Two further digits in the type code indicate the voltage, for example 7805 produces +5V output. | A 3-terminal regulator is a device which takes an unregulated input voltage and produces a constant well-defined output voltage. It has just 3 connections (or terminals): the input, the output and a common [[Glossary:Earth|ground]]. The 78/79 series [[Glossary:Integrated Circuit|integrated circuits]] are a very common example. 78 devices take positive input and output whereas 79 series take negative. Two further digits in the type code indicate the voltage, for example 7805 produces +5V output. |
Latest revision as of 21:12, 24 June 2024
A 3-terminal regulator is a device which takes an unregulated input voltage and produces a constant well-defined output voltage. It has just 3 connections (or terminals): the input, the output and a common ground. The 78/79 series integrated circuits are a very common example. 78 devices take positive input and output whereas 79 series take negative. Two further digits in the type code indicate the voltage, for example 7805 produces +5V output.