> I come up with R1=50300R (47k+3k3 series) and R2 = 100kR to get me at 11.976 volts.
> ...wart the pedal came with is rated at 300mA
1) "50300" seems awful fussy. What is the difference, 11.976V or 12.2448V?
1a) "50300" seems fussy, if a 10% "47K" resistor could be 51.5 (51700) Ohms.
2) Take your 50K+100K divider and put a 300mA (0.3A) load on it.
12V at 0.3A is like 40 Ohms. So your "100K" is really 39.984 Ohms, your "12V" is really 0.014V. (18V * 39.9/50339.9)
> "well, duh"
Ah, I missed that. So you already knew.
If we *knew* the pedal sucked 0.3A at 12V (acts-like a 40 Ohm resistor), you could just use a 20 Ohm series resistor to drop-off 6V.
But the "300mA" rating may just be the smallest size of wart they could buy. Like using a 2x3 to support a closet shelf-- that's the cheapest hunk of lumber (1x3s cost more) so we use it even if "too good" for the job.
And 12V * 0.3A is almost 4 Watts which is a LOT for a small box.
If the pedal realy sucks 30mA (a more likely number), then a dumb 20 Ohm resistor will only drop 0.6V, and 17.4V gets to the pedal. Not wise without further investigation.
You really should quantify the pedal's actual demand. You certainly can NOT design a voltage divider without that info.
A "regulator" saves trouble because you will for-sure get 12V, whatever the pedal sucks, up to the reg's limits (heat or current).
Do you need a heat-sink? Again, you *need* to know the pedal's demand.
If demand is truly 0.3V, and you need to lose 6V, power wasted is almost 2 Watts and the TO220 package will be right at its short-term limits.
If demand is really more like 30mA, 0.03A, power is like 0.2 Watts and the TO220 will run slightly hot but fine forever.
> it could heat up to 117*C
If you are selling to strangers with a 30-day warranty, do it.
Building for yourself, keep it cool. 50 deg rise (75d operating) is plenty hot. Heatsinks are cheaper than blown-gigs and repair work.
In particular, a steady 100+C may last a very long time, but repeated cycling works-loose and micro-cracks the seals, lets beer (or humidity) in, rots the Silicon, chip dies.
Yes, 3 times a night eight days a week is probably enough thermal cycling to ever kill the chip. But I just don't see a need to run chips hot.