Electronic – How to Determine a PCB’s Power Requirements

ledpcbpower

Disclaimer: I have very little (almost none, really) electronics experience.


I purchased a set of IR illuminator boards off of eBay. The only information that the seller provided was that the board had an operating voltage of 12 VDC and that the board has a built-in auto protection circuit that prevents damage from high voltage.

I have two questions. One directly related to this PCB, and one general:

  1. How can I figure out how much current these boards will draw?
  2. Suppose the seller omitted the required voltage information. How would I go about figuring out how much juice a certain board needs without frying it?

The board in question is sold by a lot of eBay sellers. Here's one listing with decent pictures.


EDIT: Thanks for your answers everyone; you were all helpful.

Best Answer

You can measure the amount of current the board draws using the current measurement capability of a multimeter. If your multimeter does not have a fuse on the current input you should put one in series. You place the multimeter in series with either the positive or negative line of your power supply. I would use the negative line.

When first powering a device I would use a supply with a current limit. This limits the current if there is a fault or if the vendor really meant 5V and not 12V, etc.

Did the vendor mention if the device has an internal current limit?

It is not clear what the "high voltage" protection is. It could be a transient protection device that will not protect the device if you apply a continuous voltage that is beyond the input voltage range.

It is not really practical to determine the input voltage specification unless you have a reasonable idea what it is before you start. You will not be able to determine the maximum input voltage reliably.