How to reduce current

amperagecurrentdrivervoltage

I need help reducing current in my motor driver. The chip is the L293D motor driver with output max 600mA. My stepper motors draw maximum 350mA per phase and operate at 12V, so I am concerned about overcurrent. Is this ok to do, or do I need to add resistors? I looked at some other questions similar in askings, but not the answer I was looking for. The power supply is switching between 8 AA batteries and a wall wart that supplies 5A @ 12V. I am concerned because I wonder if I would need to limit the current at all, and if needed, what do I do. I am also thinking about if I use the batteries, since they are rated in Amp-Hours, the circuit could draw only the needed current. I don't know. Please Help!

Best Answer

If the stepper motor only draws 350mA max, it will only ever consume that much (and probably only at high loads). The driver is capable of supplying 600mA, but that doesn't mean it's going to insist the motor uses it all! There should be no overcurrent problems from the motor's perspective, and I would expect the driver IC to have in-built protection to prevent more than 600mA being drawn if the motor were to take leave of its senses and go crazy.

Any rudimentary current-limiting may just add unnecessary drain on the batteries, or have a detrimental effect on the circuit in general. The whole point of a motor controller is to eliminate these sorts of headaches