What you implied was that you are doing something that nobody else can.
That the non-technical person better buy from the expert.  Your systems seem
fine and reasonably priced.  But why pretend that you have a big secret.


> What I said was, I wasn't interested in showing OUR circuit, which IS
> proprietary.  Of course there are many current regulator designs out
there.
> Some are quite complicated; some aren't.  Ours just works quite well at
> holding low current levels with very little temperature drift and undue
> complexity.  We use discrete components; i.e. transistors, diodes,
> resistors.  Anyone is free to use whatever they think they can assemble.
We
> just design and assemble colloid generators for others and charge them for
> our expertise and labor and make a profit at the same time.  No problem
with
> that as far as I can see.

This implies that discrete components have some superiority over I.C.s.
Sorry but in this application it ain't so.  I would agree for an audio
application where there many complex factors involved, but we are talking
simple direct current here.

> Good luck on your home electronic project.
This is a rather patronizing statement.  The current regulator component is
built by a leading semiconductor company and has been used in thousands of
professional products for decades. We are talking about a power source, a
current regulator, and wires.  Not exactly complex and it does NOT require
expertise, just enough skill to know which end of a soldering iron gets hot.




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