PICdude-3 wrote: > > Doing the math for an SC4517A buck regulator using their datasheet, > and right off the bat it asks me for something I'm not sure of -- > peak-to-peak inductor current. I'd think that I should just specify > the in/out voltages, output current and the output ripple voltage, and > it would then determine the peak-to-peak inductor current, which would > then tell me what inductor I would need. > The data sheet says that the switch in your chosen part is rated for 1.5A... so I would take that as the peak inductor current... cos any higher risks burning out your IC. PICdude-3 wrote: > > Some other Q's ... > > - Some inductor datasheets only state Max Current. Would this be Irms > or Isat? > - Is it okay to drop in an LDO after a buck converter to really smooth > things out? Yes, I'd have to raise the buck output voltage. > Just guessing, but I'd assume that an inductor's "Max Current" would be the highest design current before saturation. Otherwise, maybe it's the max current before the inductor bursts into flame... :O By LDO, do you mean a linear regulator? You can do that but it's kind of overkill. I expect that the buck regulator should be "stiff" within its designed output range, and any ripple at the switching frequency (~ 1 MHz) is easy to filter out. HTH... -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Buck-specs---inductors-tp26354258p26396491.html Sent from the PIC - [EE] mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist