I have the Pro and don't mind looking inside. In the meantime, it will take me awhile to get the pictures, Here is someone elses input on another fourum. He mentions the delta amount that the regulator requires above the operating voltage of 8 volts. Whites, however, claims the MXT works down to 8 volts. This person says it works on 8 volts PLUS the delta amount and that makes more sense just as you suggested that regulators would require. This also explains why so many swear that 9 volts is irratic and some claim to notice it at 10 volts. I cannot imagine using the MXT at 8 volts! I cannot link outside this forum....
With a detector that uses an internal voltage regulator, higher battery voltages do not affect performance, as long as the battery voltage level is higher than the regulator's output voltage setting, plus a delta amount to keep the regulator working.
For example, the MXT internals run off an internal regulator set for 8V. In order for the regulator to work properly, it needs a battery voltage of about 8.5 to 9V.
Having said that, you need to differentiate between the battery pack's "open circuit voltage" and the pack's output voltage under load (ie. the voltage when actually powering the detector).
So, going back to the MXT example, I find, on my MXT, little if any performance difference between a fresh pack and one that has drained down to around 9V.
Posted by a user named Rudy.
EDIT: I see Larrys post before this one showing Whites statement now. I think it is pointless to spectulate about the regulators existence. I do think it needs a bit extra input to provide 8 volts to the board and not only that but a battery has a different voltage at rest than it does under a load. That said, I think anytime the MXT is turned on it is under said load so the battery meter should account for that.
With a detector that uses an internal voltage regulator, higher battery voltages do not affect performance, as long as the battery voltage level is higher than the regulator's output voltage setting, plus a delta amount to keep the regulator working.
For example, the MXT internals run off an internal regulator set for 8V. In order for the regulator to work properly, it needs a battery voltage of about 8.5 to 9V.
Having said that, you need to differentiate between the battery pack's "open circuit voltage" and the pack's output voltage under load (ie. the voltage when actually powering the detector).
So, going back to the MXT example, I find, on my MXT, little if any performance difference between a fresh pack and one that has drained down to around 9V.
Posted by a user named Rudy.
EDIT: I see Larrys post before this one showing Whites statement now. I think it is pointless to spectulate about the regulators existence. I do think it needs a bit extra input to provide 8 volts to the board and not only that but a battery has a different voltage at rest than it does under a load. That said, I think anytime the MXT is turned on it is under said load so the battery meter should account for that.