Continue to Site

Welcome to our site!

Electro Tech is an online community (with over 170,000 members) who enjoy talking about and building electronic circuits, projects and gadgets. To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

  • Welcome to our site! Electro Tech is an online community (with over 170,000 members) who enjoy talking about and building electronic circuits, projects and gadgets. To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

110V ACDC PCB - change to 220V

Status
Not open for further replies.

zemana

New Member
hi, I have the PCB for an air purifier (ie basically it's a DC fan) which does the AC/DC conversion.
I've attached a picture.
There are 2 versions of this PCB, a 110V and a 220V.
My version is the 110V, but I'm in Europe, so I'd like to change that to 220V.
Seeing as there are only a few elements in the PCB I figure it's simply a matter of replacing one or two components.

Can anyone help me? Ie which part(s) do you think need to be replaced?

thanks
Ze
 

Attachments

  • pcb.jpg
    pcb.jpg
    326.1 KB · Views: 238
Thanks for your suggestion.

I don't have a Walmart near me - I'm not in the US. The ones I found here cost around 20€ and from the user reviews I've seen on Amazon they usually don't last long and can be a fire hazard.

Also, it's more inneficient.
 
Can you provide us with a another JPEG (same dimension) of the reverse side of the board?

It would allow an examination of the circuit and an estimate of any possible changes that might meet your goal.
 
Front view of the PCB - the 110V wires connect to the left side - it's the white connector with one black and one white wire.
118419



Still front view, closer view of the left side - where the 110VAC comes in, and a closer view of the wires
118420



Still Front view, but now looking closer at the right side. The wires that leave the circuit here are going to power the fan and ion producer
118421



Back view of the PCB
118422



A closer view of the capacitor on the back
118423


Continues on the next message (Size limitation)
 
(continued from above)

This is where the 6 wires (red+black and red+yellow+white+black) go after leaving the PCB. The red+black go directly to the ion generator. The rest go to the fan
118425



And here I changed their positions to make it easier to read the labels on the 2 parts. One is a NanBai negative ion generator which works in 110V
The other is CBB61capacitor, but which can work with 250VAC.
118426


So looking at the whole picture, does anyone have any idea of what needs to be replaced in the circuit to make it work on 220V instead of 110V?
Clearly there must be a way, since they produce the same PCB in 110V and 220V versions, but to me it's not clear what to change.

cheers
 
PCB only:
On the back of the board is a 3uF 250V capacitor. (CX2) I think it needs to be 1.5uF 500 to 600V. (value = 1/2, voltage = 2x) This is the part that drops the voltage down to some thing small.
Top side of the board "ZR1" is probably a 120V device and needs to be 220V. So again 2x the value. (or remove it for now) Used for over voltage protection.
Double check if CX1 is good for 220V.

Jungle of wires:
I do not know what is happening here. Why the 5uF cap? The "Ion Generator" is clearly not going to work at 220V. There is a "**broken link removed**". I think you can get a 220V version on ebay or some where. It looks like the 5uF cap sends power to another area not shown and it might need to be 1/2 value to reduce the power there.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest threads

New Articles From Microcontroller Tips

Back
Top