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| Experienced Member | Quote:
The problem with "Just the old transformer for stepdown" is that at 1200W it will be huge. You need the "high" frequencies to get the size of the inductor down. It is imperative that you use switchmode since even a 50VA transformer will run $30 and up in that power range $200 plus shipping on something 8" diameter by 4" high at 25lbs. http://www.supertex.com/pdf/app_notes/AN-H50.pdf is a good appnote on it, though what I suggest is going a bit further than that. And http://search.digikey.com/scripts/Dk...?name=M8374-ND would be a suitable inductor if a bit weak on the current. It would run buck mode and I believe will reliably deliver 27A into 20V from a rectified mains. The formulas are all in the sheet. The other irritating detail is that this will NOT be isolated, which means that the entire circuit is tied to the mains. On the other hand, it IS the least expensive. I would add that at the high levels in this discussion I would add an FET driver. Last edited by Ubergeek63 : 27th April 2008 at 06:23 PM. | |
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| Experienced Member | Quote:
With the current source chip you can use AC output of the transformer for your current source reference to the LD (Linear Dimming) pin and a pot to adjust the average current and be able to get almost the full VA from the transformer as power out to your load (I believe you are trying to do resistance welding) | |
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| Experienced Member | pulsating DC. Electroplating makes sense, but I still do not think you need it fully filtered. You generally want some headroom, but you do not need double the current capacity. It is more important that you have enough heat sinking. This one is reasonable and would handle it by itself: http://search.digikey.com/scripts/Dk...=497-5166-5-ND Assuming you are using your step down. |
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| Experienced Member | Quote:
I would not have figured it would need low ripple. There is a trade off in that case for what would cost less. a simple isolation transformer and high voltage parts or your 40VAC transformer with a big mother cap, this one might be a good trade off: http://search.digikey.com/scripts/Dk...name=P10035-ND ... you need to keep the ripple valley over the output voltage, the current regulator will do the rest. The ripple current in the cap will determine it's life and you still want the small $5 caps around it to take the high frequency current. Last edited by Ubergeek63 : 28th April 2008 at 05:17 PM. | |
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| New Member | What are you electroplating? 40 volts it way higher than you need for most stuff, like zinc only takes up less than one volt and other metals 2 or 3 volts. So you don't want linear current regulation, you would burn up just about every bit of your available power simply in the regualtion. You could do it with SMPS techniques, but a simple buck regulator probably isn't the ticket for such a big voltage ratio. Are you up to high power PWM current source regulation? Why not use a transformer to lower the voltage and increase the current first, then worry about current regulation? |
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