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  3. 3.3V step up regulator voltage monitoring

3.3V step up regulator voltage monitoring

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  • fhenrycoF fhenryco

    @flopp yes your link is to the method i'm currently using to monitor Vcc which is about 3.3V. But my battery is actually 2 AA in series which output voltage is 3.3 V only when new...and should decrease progressively. My question is: is it necessary to monitor the Voltage of this battery or is it safe to only monitor the Vcc which is the output of the step up 3.3V regulator ?

    F Offline
    F Offline
    flopp
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    @fhenryco
    If you measure after the step-up you will never know when it will "die".
    You need to measure before step-up to see battery level

    fhenrycoF 1 Reply Last reply
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    • F flopp

      @fhenryco
      If you measure after the step-up you will never know when it will "die".
      You need to measure before step-up to see battery level

      fhenrycoF Offline
      fhenrycoF Offline
      fhenryco
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      @flopp Ok but are you sure ? i mean if the step up fails to output 3.3V when battery level gets too low, monitoring a decrease of the regulator output (to arduino Vcc) might indicate death coming soon ... and after all this is all i need to know except if "coming soon" means " too soon" to react and prevent failure by changing battery

      F 1 Reply Last reply
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      • fhenrycoF fhenryco

        @flopp Ok but are you sure ? i mean if the step up fails to output 3.3V when battery level gets too low, monitoring a decrease of the regulator output (to arduino Vcc) might indicate death coming soon ... and after all this is all i need to know except if "coming soon" means " too soon" to react and prevent failure by changing battery

        F Offline
        F Offline
        flopp
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        @fhenryco
        If battery is below 0,8 step-up will not work and your Arduino will not work.
        If battery is 2.3 you will get 3.3 output from step-up

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        • S Offline
          S Offline
          scalz
          Hardware Contributor
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          stepup will simply fail, you'll get brownout, transmit problems etc..so you won't know anything in the end..
          it's better to monitor your batt voltage. you don't need a voltage divider for this, as your batt voltage will always be <= vcc. So Analogread your batt voltage, and your range will be 0 to 3.3v.

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          • S scalz

            stepup will simply fail, you'll get brownout, transmit problems etc..so you won't know anything in the end..
            it's better to monitor your batt voltage. you don't need a voltage divider for this, as your batt voltage will always be <= vcc. So Analogread your batt voltage, and your range will be 0 to 3.3v.

            F Offline
            F Offline
            flopp
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            @scalz is correct, use analog input to read batteries.
            My link at top was to measure what voltage the Arduino I see getting. Sorry for leading you in wrong direction 😑

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            • fhenrycoF Offline
              fhenrycoF Offline
              fhenryco
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              ok thank you

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              • fhenrycoF Offline
                fhenrycoF Offline
                fhenryco
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                actually, as i now remember i was using the voltage divider to reduce the battery voltage below the reference internal voltage ~ 1.1V ... this is some people advice for better accuracy. I'm now wondering if i can avoid this (the voltage divider) and still have a correct precision

                mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
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                • fhenrycoF fhenryco

                  actually, as i now remember i was using the voltage divider to reduce the battery voltage below the reference internal voltage ~ 1.1V ... this is some people advice for better accuracy. I'm now wondering if i can avoid this (the voltage divider) and still have a correct precision

                  mfalkviddM Offline
                  mfalkviddM Offline
                  mfalkvidd
                  Mod
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  @fhenryco what precision do you need?

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                  • fhenrycoF Offline
                    fhenrycoF Offline
                    fhenryco
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    well i don't need great precision, just need to be alerted
                    when the battery voltage is getting dangerously low

                    mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • fhenrycoF fhenryco

                      well i don't need great precision, just need to be alerted
                      when the battery voltage is getting dangerously low

                      mfalkviddM Offline
                      mfalkviddM Offline
                      mfalkvidd
                      Mod
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      @fhenryco then the method recommended by scalz and flopp will be great.

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