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OK, good. Thanks.jocanon said:We're using the LM358AN, ...
I have them, thanks. He has more than one Op-Amp in the folder. So I didn't know which exactly to go with.Dusey52 said:ronv's files, which include the LM358 are back on post #135
Yeah, it looks pretty good. I'm not complaining.ronv said:For an oldie the 358 is not to bad.
ronv said:When we decide how many watts to make the new one maybe a little larger sense resistor would be better since we will use a higher power resistor and we can drop the maximum current per FET by a little to add some more margin all around.
Mr. RB,
OK I finally see what you are saying. It is stable with respect to the 24 volts, just not with respect to the reference. The problem we have in this case is the power sequence. The 12 volts is already on when the 24 volt supply comes up. With the fast loop the current pulse is pretty short, but with the big integrator it gets pretty big. I don't know the exact power up time of the 24 volts supply. If it's real slow it may not matter so much.
I have played around a bit with the loop and can make it better, but right now it is 12 db down when it gets to 180 degrees.
... I am only concerned that the current sense resistors survive. If they can handle the heat that is all I am concerned with. When I checked the temperature they were getting very close to the max rating of 275c so it had me a little worried that we could be over doing it. So I think if the wattage is increased to 10 watts but the temperature stays the same, then I assume the rated temperature must be higher on the 10 watters...
...
Mr RB said:It's a fairly standard problem measuring currents at 50 amps, why not just use a 50A (or better still) a 100A current shunt?
**broken link removed**
They can be found on ebay for about $10.
jocanon said:I am only concerned that the current sense resistors survive. If they can handle the heat that is all I am concerned with. When I checked the temperature they were getting very close to the max rating of 275c so it had me a little worried that we could be over doing it. So I think if the wattage is increased to 10 watts but the temperature stays the same, then I assume the rated temperature must be higher on the 10 watters
Mr RB said:I think running normal style power resistors over about 80'C is unacceptable from a reliability viewpoint and approaching 150'C the solder will fail and they will fall out of the connection.
ronv said:How about this.
Nice round number like 13 FETs.![]()
.2 ohm 10 watt resistors like this.
https://www.mouser.com/ds/2/303/20_series-4544.pdf
The little current meter with shunt to measure total current.
Hey guys.
My two cents.
If one increases the resistance of a part while keeping the current the same, the percentage of watts "generated" in that part will also increase in accordance with I[SUP]2[/SUP]R. This also means that given the same heat sinking, that part will undoubtedly get hotter, regardless of it's rated wattage.
With this in mind, if the goal is to reduce the temperature, then we should do one or more of these three things.
(1) Reduce the resistance. (2) Reduce current. (3) Increase cooling.
Note that adding more channels with the same unit resistance will do all of the above, however the effect is directly related to the number of channels already existing. Meaning we will need to add lots to have any real effect.
If we go to a whopping 20 channels, and 20 of the 10 Watt 200 milliohm resistors, AND good cooling fans, we will be beyond safe on all fronts. And the total resistance will be a nice clean 10 milliohms. (not that this really changes anything, I don't think.) Also, 18 channels + 180 milliohms, or 16+160mΩ, or 14+140mΩ are all acceptable arrangement's. Could even do odd numbers too, but I'm very partial to symmetry myself.
I like symmetry to, don't know why I just do.
I agree with everything except when you use a bigger resistor it has more surface area so it doesn't get as hot. I think the 10 watt ones would only be about 65C if I remember right. Still toasty, but way cooler then the 5 watt ones.
The problem with going to many channels and low resistance is that the sense voltage gets pretty small so the offset in the op amp starts to be a problem especially at low currents. Right now the op amp is only 4 mv so with .1 ohms we would have an potential error of 40 ma in each channel so our minimum current might be .4 amps. With 20 twice as much, plus the sense voltage would be down in the mud. Thats why I made it a little bigger. We could probably find a better op amp I suppose.
The other danger I see is with J's desire to have a higher voltage we can't protect against the pot being left at a high current setting from testing 24 volt supplies then switching to 50 volt supplies. Right now it can't be set to more than about 6 amps, but 6 amps at 50 volts is a lot more power than at 24 volts. So if we need to do this we may need some type of over current protection.
Dusey, I like those to, but since we are still using them as fuses I'm not sure about unsoldering them in case of an oops. Lets see what J thinks.
According to the datasheet, the electronics are insulated from the tab, so we could in fact solder them to the pipe with great effect. I would rather use these, but there is the problem that ronv pointed out that we were planing on using the sense resistors as fuses. Also, there is the problem of having to solder more things to the pipe in the first place, taking up more area on it. I can't help but think that things would start to get crowded, but maybe not. As far as performance and precision though, those units are the way to go. Resistors will lose precision as they change temperature, and the normal ones are harder to keep stable.Dusey52 said:Something like this for the sense resistor solves the cooling issue (assuming it can be soldered to the water pipe along with the Mosfets).
ronv said:when you use a bigger resistor it has more surface area so it doesn't get as hot. I think the 10 watt ones would only be about 65C if I remember right. Still toasty, but way cooler then the 5 watt ones.
ronv said:The problem with going to many channels and low resistance is that the sense voltage gets pretty small so the offset in the op amp starts to be a problem especially at low currents. Right now the op amp is only 4 mv so with .1 ohms we would have an potential error of 40 ma in each channel so our minimum current might be .4 amps. With 20 twice as much, plus the sense voltage would be down in the mud. Thats why I made it a little bigger. We could probably find a better op amp I suppose.
ronv said:The other danger I see is with J's desire to have a higher voltage we can't protect against the pot being left at a high current setting from testing 24 volt supplies then switching to 50 volt supplies. Right now it can't be set to more than about 6 amps, but 6 amps at 50 volts is a lot more power than at 24 volts. So if we need to do this we may need some type of over current protection.
...
The problem with going to many channels and low resistance is that the sense voltage gets pretty small so the offset in the op amp starts to be a problem especially at low currents. Right now the op amp is only 4 mv so with .1 ohms we would have an potential error of 40 ma in each channel so our minimum current might be .4 amps. With 20 twice as much, plus the sense voltage would be down in the mud. Thats why I made it a little bigger. We could probably find a better op amp I suppose.
...