I have built an adjustable current source based on the LT3081, as shown. The load is a series-connected string of LED emitters connected via several hundred feet of wire in an outdoor environment (wet soil etc).
I am experiencing a number of failures of the LT3081 device and I can't understand why. Specifically, it ceases to carry current. The SET pin is at a reasonable voltage (e.g. 100mv). With a diode load (on my test bench instead of outdoors) the IN pin is about a diode drop below the supply voltage (30v as supplied by the pfet "header"), 1ma of current flows, and the OUT pin is at 1mv. With no load, IN and OUT are near ground.
At least some failures have occurred while I'm fiddling with the LED string, while the circuit is activated. So I might be quickly transitioning between presenting a short-circuit load and an open-circuit load, and anything in between. Maybe I'm hoping for too much, but it doesn't seem like this should be frying the device. With a short-circuit load, the thing should regulate properly (and pull 100ma with the SET pin at 100mv). With an open circuit, the device should pull IN close to ground vainly trying to pull 100ma to match the SET and OUT voltages. If somehow the SET pin were to go too high (and call for too high a current), the current-limiting resistor (on the Ilim pin) should limit the current to well under 1 amp and failing that the device's internal current limit is something like 1.5amp. The device is attached to a 6.4-degreeC/watt heatsink.
A penny for your thoughts !