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I-Pac LEDs
Bgnome:
--- Quote from: dcware on July 04, 2004, 06:29:54 pm ---I mean some sort of circuit so that the 5v current turns the 12v current on. I've seen it on Mameworld a long time ago but cannot find now.
DCWare,
--- End quote ---
use a relay. get one thats normally open, hook it to the 12v line and your lights, then hook the 5v from the ipac to it. whenever the ipac leds want to light up, it will turn on the 12v line..
http://www.radioshack.com/product.asp?catalog%5Fname=CTLG&category%5Fname=CTLG%5F011%5F002%5F013%5F000&product%5Fid=275%2D232
im not completely sure about how the specs work for these but i believe that one operates with 5v for the switch part..
SoundDoc:
You can use the design at Oscars site for the Ipac LED Interface. 3 transistors is a lot cheaper than relays, and I doubt you need to switch 5 or 10 amps. a standard transistor should be good for a couple of bulbs. 1K resistor between the ipac output and the base of the transistor, 12V from the PC, (same connector pin on the other side) to the emitter, and from the collector, forget the resistor, go straight to the bulbs, then to ground (common ground with PC PSU.
Should be fine.
If you want to go with relays, forget a standard relay at 5V as it will draw more current than a led on the IPAC, you would still need the circuit, again minus the resistor on the collector to drive the relay. You could use a 5vdc Reed relay though, digikey is the cheapest at around $8-9 each, and they draw down around 15-20ma, which should be ok on the IPAC.
I'd just use a couple of transistors though.
sd