SGS/Thompson L293 series datasheets

The SGS/Thompson L293 series of chips are power H-bridge motor drivers. The L293B and D have been used for several years in many MIT robot controller boards, such as the 6.270 Rev 2.1 board and miniboard. Unfortunately, they are often hard to find and usually can't be bought in single quantity.

If anyone has suggestions for better motor driver chips, please contact Randy Sargent (rsargent@media.mit.edu).

The L293B and D chips are both in 16-pin dip packages, and both have two h-bridge drivers. An H bridge is typically capable of running one DC motor bidirectionally (forward, backwards, off), or two separate motors unidirectionally (forward, off). Thus a L293 chip can run two motors bidirectionally, or 4 unidirectionally.

L293 chips take logic-level inputs to direct the H-bridges, and have a separate pin for the motor supply (which is often higher than the standard 5V logic supply).

The L293B and D chips have identical pinouts, but have two differences. The first is that the L293D can run motors up to 600 ma, while the L293B can only run all the way up to 1 amp per H-bridge. The other, and perhaps more important difference, is that the L293D has protection diodes which shunt the current spikes produced by inductive loads (such as DC motors) when they are turned on or off (such as during the armature contact switching or pulse-width modulation). The L293B has no such diodes, so the user must usually add his own. An approach used on the MIT 6.270 board is to piggyback the two types of chips: the two give about 1.6A, and the D chip has the protection diodes.

These datasheets were scanned from the SGS-Thompson databook.


L293B and L293E

Important Pages

All pages


L293D

Important Pages

All pages


Randy Sargent <rsargent@media.mit.edu>