Please keep it below 3.9V 3.7 Volt has a similar effect as 90 degrees C, it is outside specification and will eventually reduce the life of the device from a typical >> 20 years to may be 20 years. I did not check this statement with our quality department but I do have a pretty good understanding of the processes. The process can tolerate 3.7V By the way we will update the specification for Vbat. Right now it is 3.0V to 3.6V, it is going to be 2.0V up to 3.6V, extending the battery life a lot. We measured function of the RTC down to approx. 1.5V but with tolerances and temperature bahavior, 2.0V seems a save bet. Robert --- In lpc2000@yahoogroups.com, Owen Mooney <ojm@s...> wrote: > Thanks for your last reply Robert. It's great to know whats going on in > the factory, and its great to be able to change my design from 8 bits to > 32 bits. > > But here's another question:- > > The spec sheets for the LPC series states voltage from 3.0 to 3.6, but a > look at the Tadiran site show that Li battery voltage at higher > temperatures and low current can get almost up to 3.7 volts > > How goes the lpc series on these voltages? > > Thanks > > Owen Mooney
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Re: Another one for Robert - 3.7 volts
2005-02-04 by philips_apps
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