I asked a while ago, how to build an automatic light switch and finally got around to actually building it.
My board is an ESP8266 mini D, and ignoring all the sensor parts, my problem right now is powering the actual light.
It’s just a small LED array and I connected it directly to the 5V and GND pins (controlled via a transistor).
Measuring from the wall (so including the PSU), this whole setup pulls about 3W (so far expected), however, one small component close to the USB connector gets uncomfortably warm, and I’m not sure, whether that’s ok.
The hot component is one of the two small thingies circled in the picture. I thought the 5V get pulled directly from the USB plug, so I’m not sure, why there is any circuitry involved.
cubism_pitta@lemmy.world 2 months ago
5V will be pulled directly from 5V supply
The chip you are concerned about getting warm I believe is your 3.3V regulator.
I would ensure your transistor has some resistors to ensure you are not drawing more current than required from the 3.3V supply
If that is all good then I will remind you of a few things
I couldn’t find an exact Datasheet but I am led to believe that the chip is a clone of this www.sunrom.com/download/670.pdf
Which I found on this store page sunrom.com/…/rt9193-33gb-rt9193-33pb-sot23-5-300m…
And here is a wiki entry incase you are curious about Voltage Regulators and the such en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-dropout_regulator