LM317T vs rheostat....stir plate build (cheap!)

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ekjohns

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looking to build a stir plate and i see people use either a rheostat or the LM317T fan controller. It seems people say the LM317T is better but is it worth the extra cost and hassel? My next question is if the LM317T is worth it www.sritrplates.com has a DIY kit which has everything minus the fan box and magnet for $20 shipped. Price wise it seems like this may be very close to the price to buy the stuff individually. would you agree or is there cheaper places to but the parts?
 
you can use a cheep pot to control the 317 that will put out an amp or more depending on voltage in - voltage out, and heat sinking. around the south san francisco bay ther are several e-junk stores to get stuff cheap, that would be the route I would go. (lm317 is a voltage regulator, not a fan controller but that is a rant for another time) :mug:
link
 
The only real difference is that the LM317 is designed to safely dissipate the heat and a cheap potentiometer is not. (Although as lincoln suggested, if you use a 12 V supply you're right on the edge of needed a heat sink.) Get a pot that's rated for 3 W or so and there's no real difference - the LM317 will probably give you slightly better regulation, but for this application, who cares?

$20 sounds like a ripoff, but I guess compared to what you'd pay to buy components individually at Radio Shack it probably isn't. You can probably do better buying the stuff online, so it comes down to a question of how much your time is worth. I put together a quick build writeup when I made mine.
 
so i got an old 5.7V phone charger from the GF. Would it be just as good to hook that up straight to a toggle switch and then to a 3A rheostat and be done with it? It would cost be about $6.

a10t2 - you said the potentiometer would give be just as good but yet on your build you went with the LM317 and heat sink which cost about $24 without the stir bar. Was it worth it or would going the cheap easy route produced the same results
 
so i got an old 5.7V phone charger from the GF. Would it be just as good to hook that up straight to a toggle switch and then to a 3A rheostat and be done with it? It would cost be about $6.

that will work fine,

a10t2 - you said the potentiometer would give be just as good but yet on your build you went with the LM317 and heat sink which cost about $24 without the stir bar. Was it worth it or would going the cheap easy route produced the same results

it really depends on how big your fan is; you also don't have to buy a ready made heat sink, any piece of plate aluminum will work to some degree, or if using a metal box just use that.

if you turn the thing on and the 317 gets hot after 20 min to an hour you need more heat sink / airflow, if it just gets warm no worries.
 
a10t2 - you said the potentiometer would give be just as good but yet on your build you went with the LM317 and heat sink which cost about $24 without the stir bar. Was it worth it or would going the cheap easy route produced the same results

Using an LM317 would give you better regulation, but for this application a potentiometer is probably fine. I just had all the parts gathering dust in a drawer - it wasn't going to cost me more than a few dollars either way. Not sure where you're getting $24 though. The only kit I see on that site is $14.95.

Also, 5.7 V may not be enough. I have to run mine at about 9 V to get good circulation in a gallon starter. Might as well try it and see.
 
(lm317 is a voltage regulator, not a fan controller but that is a rant for another time) :mug:
link

I assume you want to use a 555? I thought about building the controller that way, but the 317 was just too simple and cheap.

Using a big rheostat is kind of the brute force way of doing it. It works, but it ain't pretty. Using a 317 gives you more direct control, as you can set it up for whatever voltage range you want, rather than depending on the load from the fan, which will vary.

As for price, it can be done really cheap. I keep a bunch of 317s around, they were <$1 each. Add in some caps and some resistors at pennies each, and a scavenged pot, the entire controller didn't cost me more than a couple of bucks.
 
I assume you want to use a 555? I thought about building the controller that way, but the 317 was just too simple and cheap.

PWM would definitely be the elegant way to do it. I just didn't want to run a 250 mA fan with a 3904, and didn't have any FETs handy.
 
PWM would definitely be the elegant way to do it. I just didn't want to run a 250 mA fan with a 3904, and didn't have any FETs handy.

I'm using a 19V power supply, so I was going to have to do some sort of voltage regulation anyway. Might as well just use the 317.

I do have a question, though. Being that the fan is an inductive load, I used a snubber diode. I see that you didn't mention it on your site. Is it not needed?
 
I do have a question, though. Being that the fan is an inductive load, I used a snubber diode. I see that you didn't mention it on your site. Is it not needed?

It certainly couldn't hurt, I just didn't think of it. IIRC the data sheet for the 317 mentions that it's optional for low-power applications.

Actually, the fan motor is going to take a couple seconds to stop spinning once the current is removed, so wouldn't the back voltage be much less than in something like a solenoid where the cutout is nearly instantaneous? If that's the case and you're using an ordinary silicon diode with a ~2V drop, it might not even help.
 
I assume you want to use a 555? I thought about building the controller that way, but the 317 was just too simple and cheap.

Using a big rheostat is kind of the brute force way of doing it. It works, but it ain't pretty. Using a 317 gives you more direct control, as you can set it up for whatever voltage range you want, rather than depending on the load from the fan, which will vary.

As for price, it can be done really cheap. I keep a bunch of 317s around, they were <$1 each. Add in some caps and some resistors at pennies each, and a scavenged pot, the entire controller didn't cost me more than a couple of bucks.
ya, and put a diode across R2 to give you a set period. new 555 can be had for under .50$ but for this application it really don't mater. The bigger think is to make it easy to build and to leverage what you have or can scrounge.

as to the subbing diode i wouldn't worry, that is a bigger problem for relays and solenoids when interfacing them to digital stuff like an mcu.
 
Scimmia - my problem is i dont have any thing so i would have to buy everything from radio shack which means i have to buy a package of resistors etc. Unless i can toss some money your way and you can send me 1 of all the parts i need!:)
 
Scimmia - my problem is i dont have any thing so i would have to buy everything from radio shack which means i have to buy a package of resistors etc. Unless i can toss some money your way and you can send me 1 of all the parts i need!:)

Don't buy anything from Radio Shack. Even with shipping, you can get it cheaper online. Try http://www.taydaelectronics.com

eBay is actually a really good source for oddball stuff. Five LM317Ts for $.99: http://cgi.ebay.com/LM317T-5PCS-/260634298514?cmd=ViewItem&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item3caf03c892
 
awesome that site is def cheap! now time to spend 12 hrs trying to find posts with all the parts i need. I have very little electrical work but i can solder and follow directions. Does anyone know of a thread that has all the parts needed to make a stir plate with the LM317T?
 
huh, wish I would've known about that kit earlier...well maybe. I build DIY speaker and headphone amps so I'm used to soldering stuff w/o a PCB as well as ordering from mouser. Who cares mine WORRRKSSSS!!!!!!!!!!:rockin::mug::tank::mug: :rockin:
 
welp i think im going to try the rheostat first. I can get one for $3 and hook a cell phone charge (got a 6V and a 9V) and see which one works best. This way my total cost is about $6 including the rheostat and project box. If i find that i really start using the parts ill upgrade it to the stir plate LX. Thanks all for the input
 
I have a drawer full of wall warts of different voltages........The local thrift shop had them and I made an offer on the entire box full of them....... I've never regretted it. My stir plate has no control at all.....I just did the trial and error method to find the optimal voltage..... No fuss, no muss.... Just plug it in and it goes.............. I an advocate of the KISS principle.


H.W.
 
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