Hi You could diode isolate the vin to a buck boost to isolate it's input and you can diode isolate its output to create a pseduo isolated regulator that would prevent reverse bias from being a big problem.
Typically, the output stage of a buck/buck-boost regulator is an inductor- capacitor. The voltage on the cap is the regulated rippled/filtered output. Then there usually is a resistor feedback network right at the capacitor to feedback the cap voltage to the regulator IC and close the loop; so you can actually regulate the output. You can usually put a diode after the inductor and before the capacitor to pseudo isolate the output. The feedback network should still be located at the capacitor though. This way, the regulator will achieve your desired output voltage (that you set through the resistor divider network) regardless of the diode drops. Steve Spano > > From: Joseph Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: 2008/11/15 Sat PM 04:33:24 EST > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > CC: Peter Stuge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, coreboot <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: [coreboot] LPCflasher Project > > > > > On Sat, 15 Nov 2008 16:09:58 -0500, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Host USB ports are supposed to use a MosFET with internal current sense > for > > power protection. The FET signals the O/S when its current threshold is > > being > > exceeded and then the O/S suspends the port and removes power. > > > > If you apply +5v INTO the host port, you can create current spikes across > > the > > FET which would damage the FET, trip the O/S into thinking a power fault > > has > > occured and shut down the port. Even in this state, the reverse bias > diode > > in > > the FET will continue to allow the external voltage to be fed into the > the > > motherboard. > > > > The FET/Motherboard external voltage will keep fighting each other as the > > ripple in the motherboard +5v and your external +5v criss-cross each > > other. > > > > This would probably be bad.... > > > That's what I was thinking, thanks. > > > > You can diode OR all of your mother board/external supplies together and > > then run them into a buck/boost regulator. THat way the buck/boost will > > maintain a local +5v supply at your board "regadless" of external > > voltages. > > > > Thoughts? > > > Ah, so I can use a Buck-Boost regulator to compensate for the diode voltage > drop. That makes sense. In that case I could just cut out the simple LED > circut, use the Buck-Boost regulator to boost the 5V to 8V and put a LED > inline as my diode and the output should be a solid one way 5V power line > right? > > -- > Thanks, > Joseph Smith > Set-Top-Linux > www.settoplinux.org > -- coreboot mailing list: [email protected] http://www.coreboot.org/mailman/listinfo/coreboot

