'Cuz the US gov't won't fund NASA to do it. Everybody knows that!
Except me. I have learned. Thanks throb.
Regards,
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'Cuz the US gov't won't fund NASA to do it. Everybody knows that!
Not buying it? Didn't know I was selling something.Sorry not buying it. I have worked around industrial systems my entire life and to this day I have yet to ever see any system that did not already have one or more of the standard off the shelf system voltages active in it that was not able to be easily tapped into to add any type of small accessory power pack for other purposes.
As far as small and cheap goes for supplying 5 volts at a few watts of power to something I quite regularly buy the small 12 - 24 VDC cigarette lighter USB adapters for the
DC work and for the AC powered stuff I get the little power cubes that are about 1" cubed that take any voltage from a 85 - 250 VAC and put out 5 VDC @ 1 - 2 amps. Both units can be bought for less than $3 each.
Now with any system that does not already run on those two ranges of input power there is more than likely some internal subsystems that do operate on power that is in one of those ranges which gives you a tie on point that will work as a power source just the same.
My point is no matter what the higher power input voltage was there is almost always some electronics that are running off of a common lower AC or DC power buss that can be tied into.
Yeah thats it, well its the only way I'd think it could perhaps work as well.so, it's been establilshed that wide-range ac or dc psu's are easy. For what you want then have an "ac or dc" detector, then a bit of logic switches the input via a n/o relay to the appropriate converter. Have you considered if this would pass safety regulations though?
Meh, not necessarily.If it were possible to do it cheap, small and safely you'd see such devices on the market.
You can send DC into a AC power supply.'smart switch' circuitry to either select the AC psu or DC psu
Inventory controlwhats the point?
That is "a bridge too far". (movie)12-250V ad, dc
Meh, not necessarily.
Check back a few posts of mine, I posted a Ti solution thats damn close.Not meh at all, from a manufacturing standpoint this would save them plenty vs having to manufacture two separate devices.
Have you ever seen anything even remotely close to what you're looking for? I haven't. But if you do post a link I'd be interested.
Good point, I've heard about that before. With an SMP it rectifies the AC mains anyway, and the chopper makes the AC for you. So you would just need to optimise it to work with the voltages you require, and change "can" into "designed for". Could maybe get rid of "smart switching" altogether - or maybe it just be between a couple of transformer taps to cope with the extremes.You can send DC into a AC power supply.
Does the 12-60 need isolation?Yeah, I reckon its necessary to revise the input specs:
90-264VAC and 12-60VDC