Lm3915 Calculator Now
Desired input at pin 5 for LED10 = 5.0 V (peak). Actual peak input = 1.414 V. Thus, we need gain , not attenuation. Instead, set RHI lower: Use a voltage divider from Vref to set RHI = 1.5 V (peak). Then:
( V_\textRHI = 1.5 ) V. Check: 1.5 V peak corresponds to ~1.06 Vrms → ~0.5 dBV (close to 0 dBV).
[ V_\textth,n = V_\textRLO \times 10^(n-1)/10 \times \fracV_\textRHIV_\textRLO \times 10^9/10 ]
From Vref = 5V to RHI = 1.5V: Use voltage divider between pin 7 and ground, middle to pin 4. Choose Rtop = 10 kΩ, Rbottom = 4.285 kΩ (approx 4.3k). LM3915 Calculator
[ R2 = R1 \times \left( \fracV_\textref1.25 - 1 \right) ]
0 dBV = 1 Vrms → peak = 1.414 V. -30 dBV = 0.0316 Vrms → peak = 0.0447 V.
A dedicated calculator solves these with direct equations. 4.1 Reference Voltage Divider (R1, R2) Given desired ( V_\textref ): Desired input at pin 5 for LED10 = 5
But for simplicity, designers often set ( V_\textRLO = V_\textLO ) and ( V_\textRHI = V_\textref ) (if ( V_\textref ) is scaled to match highest LED threshold). More practically: The LM3915’s internal divider has a ratio of ~1.25 dB per step in voltage terms, so the voltage at step n is:
Example: For 20 mA (typical bright LED), ( R_\textset = 12.5 / 0.02 = 625 \ \Omega ). Use 620 Ω standard. Design goal: Audio level meter for -30 dBV to +6 dBV (36 dB range, but LM3915 only does 30 dB, so compress or shift). Desired: LED1 = -30 dBV, LED10 = 0 dBV (30 dB span). Reference voltage = 5.0 V (from 12V supply). LED current = 15 mA.
[ V_\textin,peak = \sqrt2 \times V_\textrms ] Instead, set RHI lower: Use a voltage divider
Then choose ( R_\textin1, R_\textin2 ) as a voltage divider. [ R_\textset = \frac12.5I_\textLED ]
[ V_\textRLO = V_\textLO - \text(offset) \quad \textand \quad V_\textRHI = V_\textRLO + \fracV_\textHI - V_\textLO10^(9/10) ]
RLO = 0 V (ground). RHI = 5.0 V (to reference). But now the highest LED triggers at ( V_\textin \approx 5.0 ) V peak? That’s far above 1.414 V. So we must attenuate input.
[ \textAttenuation factor = \fracV_\textref,desiredV_\textmax ]

