hello spec sorry about the writing but it's a one finger job tonight (as the art mistress said to the gardener)
the 60a monster had wheels so i managed to get it in the kitchen whilst the hoard were out Christmas shopping. unfortunately after i had stripped it it had no wheels. i managed to slide it on an old mat to the garage door and walk it along the floor to a corner. i will weigh it but i can say it's bl**dy heavy, much heavier than i estimated. i'll post the pics tomorrow. there is an awful lot of really really nice gubbins. i could not find the rectifier. looking at the pics i found them. there are 8 large single diodes 4 on each side mounted through the steel angle frame. they are like nothing i have ever seen. most of the wiring is ok but some of the thinner stuff is in a sad way. all in all though a nice bit of kit if you wanted to jump start a lorry in Siberia.
will it be ok to post these pics. they are relevant if one wanted to make a linear power supply of unusual thrutch ? Is there a size in MB limit? it's quite complex but I think 4 to 6 pics at about 1MB each should show all. i know it's not exactly relevant but purely from the gubbins point of view it's rather interesting.
i wonder why it never blew the plug out of the wall? there are several odd bits that i don't understand. i was expecting a very large unit to control the voltage / current ? adjustment but it's quite small. i think it must be done either on the mains side or through some clever gubbins. it's a 60a variable battery charger with a boost facility for starting. i did try it on an old car battery but when white acid vapour started pouring out and the bottom blew out i switched off . The transformer has the look of something that would enjoy being abused. don't we all?
i got the tv apart. nothing there much these days. it was one of the last CRT types. a few caps, diodes, heatsinks and the odd black thing with legs. very disappointing. there are a few big resistors well off the board that i'll keep.
last night i decided to look through the volt/ammeters on ebay - all 4397 of them. 90% are repeats. somewhere i found a nice 4 digit dual one quit cheap with trim pots but i can't find it now. might have been on amazon.
sometimes you see things that 'look right' and they usually are. i have to admit spec that i look at some electronic components, especially switches, and i'm disgusted. planned obsolescence, cheap, cost effective, does the job - and kills people. like these tumble dryers. like car recalls. (I'm vertical) It's what they call progress. No thanks. Give me a great lump of armour plate or a Rolls Royce V12 any day. Those tag strips and heat sinks look nice though
Changing the subject. I was sitting here watching yet another video on AC sine waves and I suddenly realised half of our AC is below the zero line. Is it really negative or just positive volts in another direction.? It was rather nice I managed to sort it out though. There's hope yet. Are you using those 2 diodes in the reverse action of a bridge rectifier?
He's not a bad chap, I quite like his videos. He has done one two and a half hour video on an old classic Sony receiver. I didn't understand a word of it. 95% of it anyway.
If I have 40V DC 3A going through a linear power supply set to a 40V output what watts are going through the power transistors? It's not regulating therefore I assume they would stay cold. The above video is of a 13.5V 16A linear regulator that uses 4 x LN3771 or something similar. That's 276W or 54W per transistor. They do say that you should not use more than 40% of it's advertised rating or even less. A nice row of fans would help.
I hope this doesn't come out in full on the thread, if it does OOPS! and sorry. It's a good read for me though.
https://www.repeater-builder.com/astron/astron-intro-stuff.html
Poor little Lucy, she's only 4 and coughing her heart out in the next bedroom. Her mom Samantha went into the chemist and was advised something that would help. If you drank a gallon of this rubbish it would do nothing. The active ingredient is 'blackcurrant'. That and a preservative. £3.80. Do not exceed the stated dose. Sounds like 'The Green Pineapple' needs an airing.
JP