Im trying to modify a potentiometer to go from 80 ohms to 115 ohms by adding series / parallel resistors.
I have a assortment of pots:
1K 2K 5K 10K 20K 50K 100K 250K 500K 1M
(Screenshots Below) pp
In the simulator if I have a 1k pot. I connected a 35Ω resistor between pins 1 & 2 and a 10Ω resistor between pins 2 & 3. Then I have one side of a 80Ω resistor conneced to pin 1.
If I take a reading between the 80Ω resistor and pin 2, the pot does exactly what I need it to! It goes from 80Ω to 115Ω...
Unfortunately after building it for real it doesn't work like that at all! The pot for some reason measures 115ohm turned either direction... I triple checked all my connections and made sure that the wiper in the simulator is the same as the pot I'm using. The wiper is in the middle.
Below are some screenshots and a short 5 second video of the pot working in the simulator.
If some can help me I would greatly appreciate it! Maybe point out what I'm doing wrong or suggest a simpler method to achieve this... THANKS!
Hello,
It does not look like the high end resistance would be 80+35=115 because there would be 1k in parallel with that 35 Ohms which would reduce the top end slightly. To get that 115 you would have to make that 35 Ohm resistor about 36.3 Ohms.
You can also remove that 10 Ohm resistor.
However, there is a bigger problem.
In theory, all that above works just fine. In practice potentiometers do not usually go to zero Ohms at either end, there is usually some resistance that remains between the wiper and either end terminal. That means that when you adjust it fully counterclockwise (which would normally short out that 35 Ohm resistor) you could see a higher value than 80 Ohms. How high it is depends on the quality of the potentiometer.
The pot is effectively being used as a rheostat where the resistance is being altered from 1k max to 35 Ohms max. That's a really big change. It would be better to try this with a 100 Ohm pot although it looks like you do not have one of those unfortunately.
Maybe what you meant to do is connect the external leads to the two END terminals of the pot. Make that 80 Ohm resistor 70 Ohms and that 35 Ohm resistor around 45 Ohms, then that 10 Ohm resistor would actually do something useful. You'd still have to check the range of resistance though.
What you should do is test the potentiometer separately without any other resistors and see what the end resistances are, and even if the pot is working right at all. If the pot is faulty, it will never work.