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On 12:10 12 May 2025, Martin Brown said:LED contrast is *very* sensitive to battery voltage - the chip is already using an antiphase pair of signals and possibly a voltage doubler to drive the LCDs. 3.3v to 5v being a typical drive voltage.On 10/05/2025 14:37, Pamela wrote:If beeping consumes 10mA then, in theory, you would get 100 hours ofI'm interested to know the current drawn by a kitchen LCD digital>
timer.
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(1) How much current does the timer draw when counting time?
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(2) How much current is drawn when the piezo buzzer is sounding?
(Averaging out beeps and silent bits.)
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My guesses are 2mA and 25mA, respectively. Is that about right?
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I mean a timer similar to this one, running off a 1.5V battery.
https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Kitchen-Timer/dp/B00GOPICNM
Second one might be about right perhaps 10mA is more likely but I'd
be very surprised if the display operating and timing current was
more than 20uA (and it could easily be lower).
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Bare metal LCDs take almost no current at all (but have to be driven
with an AC signal). They are no different at the core to LCD digital
watches with an alarm function probably even using the same chips and
a slightly beefier piezo sounder.
beeping from single AA alkaline (1,000 mAh).
That's 6,000 one-minute "overruns", under optimal conditions. Let's say
it's only 1,500 in real life conditions.
In conclusion, if overruning beeping is done twice a day, then the
battery would last a couple of years.
That's seems slightly optimisitic because I usually change the battery
about once a year or so when I don't let the beeping run on. (However, the
abttery is changed largely because the display has started to dim.)
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