SM12 chip ? device?

Submitted by Ty Tower on Thu, 02/27/2020 - 11:58

I have a circuit with a dc photovoltaic string of about 280 volts feeding into this. The circuit calls for a SM12 chip with I think 4 pins. I guessed it was a voltage regulator of some kind but all the googled datasheets give different devices and none seem to fit this .
Can anyone tell me what it would be and where I would get one?

Its marked Pin 1 is L, Pin 2 is N, Pin 3 is +12 v, Pin 4 is 0 v Just noticed in the notes he says " A small Chinese postage stamp sized 12v dc power supply provides power ." Could these two be the same thing .

Oh crikey one of those sites !

How on earth do I fix my errors if I can't edit?

 

The title should be SM12

  Joined February 27, 2020      6
Thursday at 11:53 AM

Here is a pic of it -No cant upload a file CHRIST

  Joined February 27, 2020      6
Thursday at 11:53 AM

You can upload image by using the IMCE. Clicking on this icon will open another dialog box were you can click on upload and browse for the image to be uploaded 

  Joined August 14, 2018      44
Tuesday at 03:25 PM

Maybe I get an edit button after 4 or 5 posts.

  Joined February 27, 2020      6
Thursday at 11:53 AM

Please upload a picture of the IC.

  Joined August 22, 2019      125
Thursday at 12:29 PM

2019-07-16_164431_SolarHotWaterboardschematic.gif.jpeg

  Joined February 27, 2020      6
Thursday at 11:53 AM

OK so circuit uploaded for 3 days . What's that achieved?

  Joined February 27, 2020      6
Thursday at 11:53 AM

Voltage from Photovoltaic s about  280 V DC  Heater element  240 V  Big capacitor across element .

So what I don't understand is how the 555 timer can withstand the high voltage.?

  Joined February 27, 2020      6
Thursday at 11:53 AM

jaksonlee

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A system on a chip is an integrated circuit that integrates all or most components of a computer or other electronic system. These components almost always include a central processing unit  memory, input/output ports and secondary storage – all on a single substrate or microchip, the size of a coin.It must contain digital, analog, mixed-signal, and often radio frequency signal processing functions, otherwise it will only be considered as an "Application Processor". As they are integrated on a single substrate, SoCs consume much less power and take up much less area than multi-chip designs with equivalent functionality. Because of this, SoCs are very common in the mobile computing and edge computing markets.
Systems on Chip are in contrast to the common traditional motherboard-based PC architecture, which separates components based on function and connects them through a central interfacing circuit board.

  Joined November 07, 2019      124
Thursday at 04:25 PM