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| I have found a nice transformer that puts out a little over 40 volts. The center tap puts out about 21 volts. The transformer is rated at something like 2.4 amps. It came out of an equipment monitor from IBM... I would like to make a variable power supply with it. 0-30v would be sufficient. I would be fine with something around 2 amps (the more the better). Anyone have any ideas? I was going to go off on my own and design something, but i figured it would be safer to ask first... Variable current would be nice, but it isn't mandatory. Meters would be nice, too... (ok, i am done asking for features... thanks.
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| Hero has a power supply project posted in the projects forum, and it seems very well developed: http://www.electro-tech-online.com/e...er-supply.html Take a look at that one, it should give you ideas. | |
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| There is a 0V to 30V/2mA to 3A regulated lab power supply project at Electronics-Lab. It doesn't meet its spec's and many of its parts operate beyond their max allowed ratings. It is a kit. We fixed and improved it and have a reliable version that meets its specs very well and there is a 5A version too.
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| Yeah, i saw the one at electronics lab... But after reading the thread about Electronics-lab, i am wondering whether or not not i should trust it... Could i have a link to the "improved" one? The one that won't kill me, please. This is the one i saw. http://www.electronics-lab.com/proje...003/index.html But i just found this one, as well. http://www.electronics-lab.com/proje...032/index.html Would my 21volts from the center tap work?
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| Project #003 is the original faulty project that we fixed and improved. The moderator didn't bother sorting troubleshooting, parts substitutions, adding meters, fixes and improvements etc. from the 153 pages in the forum. Many people posted their own pcb but the original one can be used with a couple of small changes. It uses a 30VAC/4.2A transformer. I have never heard from anybody who made project #032 but it should be the same as in the datasheet for the LM723. Its minimum voltage is 3.0V and its max current is fixed at 2.5A but can be reduced to 1.7A for your transformer. Your 21V center-tapped transformer can make an unregulated supply of 57.4V or 27.7V. No electronics parts distributor has an OPA445AP high voltage opamp in stock so you won't be able to make a 50V/1.7A project. You could make a 20V or 21V/1.7A project.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| I think i may have a 30VAC transformer from an old printer. I don't know if it works yet or not... Would a 2n3054 work instead of a 2n3055? I found a 3054 while i was trying to search for a 3055... EDIT: Would it be possible to drop the ~40vac to 30vac?
__________________ There is no "I" in "team", unless Apple makes it... Then it would be iTeam. Last edited by Marks256; 30th March 2008 at 08:32 PM. | |
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| The 30V/3A power supply needs two 2N3055 transistors. 10 little 2N3054 transistors might work. If you drop 10V at 3A then the power wasted is 30W. I have seen 25W resistors in an aluminum heatsinked case. Maybe somebody makes a 50W one.
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| The project uses a lot more than just two very common power transistors. I recently made a separate thread about replacement opamps for it: http://www.electronics-lab.com/forum...?topic=14259.0
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| Quote:
Not the 40 volts at 2.4 amps. With good filtering, you might possibly get 1.5 amps DC output. And if your building a power supply, find one with both Voltage and Current limiting. There is one on my website that fairly good.
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| I'd recommend building a bipolar trqacking supply similar to mine. A 20V centre tapped trqansformer should pretty comfortably give a DC voltage of +-22VDC. The LM317 probaly isn't a good idea as the output current will drop at lower voltages so you're probably better off using a uA723 and a beefy transistor.
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| Hey Mark, I'm also in the process of making a power supply. A few of the "must-have" features include the following: Fixed voltage outputs of 5, 9, 12 and 15 Volts Adjustable positive and negative outputs (-18__0__+18) A cooling fan that goes on when a certain temperature is reached, and then turns off when the temp goes below a certain level. LCD display Here's a link for an inexpensive ($9.00) 3 1/2 LCD. I bought a few of these, and the work great. http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bin/category.cgi Good luck | |
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