Enginuitor
- Jul 25, 2004
- 36
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2004
- Messages
- 36
The other day I stopped by Halted Specialties Company in Santa Rosa (an electronics surplus place) and managed to talk them down to $25 for a large 0-40VDC @ 0-10A lab supply. It's by "Power Ten Inc." and the model number is 3101-4010. It's a big rackmount chassis with a pretty basic design. Coarse/fine adjustment knobs for both voltage and current, bananna plug outputs, analog meters.
Internally, it's basically a 3-part design. First the input stage, where the incoming line voltage passes through a switch and fuse, then through a rectifier bridge, then is smoothed out to about 65 volts DC by a large capacitor. This plugs into a port on the board. The output port of the board connects to an identical capacitor, then to the screw terminals on the back, then to the front bananna jacks.
Three additional taps on the transformer connect via a header. This appears to be rectified, regulated and filtered into positive and negative low-voltage lines, which presumably power the logic (among other things).
There is a circuit with a 12 zener diode and 1.5k resistor which both get very hot. However, I am overlooking it at this point because the temperatures seem to be within their operating ranges. However, there is evidence of extreme overheating in the past (the board below the resistor is charred) so I have replaced both of these components with higher-wattage values just in case.
When powered on, the unit makes a pleasing hum, and the voltage needle drifts slightly to the left, below zero (hmm, wierd...). Output voltage is about -0.5VDC. Turning the voltage setting down results in a slightly greater negative voltage, while turning it up results in a smaller negative voltage (closer to 0).
More info to come. I'm basically going to keep posting here as I discover and test things, and would appreciate suggestions on things to check or possible solutions.
View attachment 35620
Internally, it's basically a 3-part design. First the input stage, where the incoming line voltage passes through a switch and fuse, then through a rectifier bridge, then is smoothed out to about 65 volts DC by a large capacitor. This plugs into a port on the board. The output port of the board connects to an identical capacitor, then to the screw terminals on the back, then to the front bananna jacks.
Three additional taps on the transformer connect via a header. This appears to be rectified, regulated and filtered into positive and negative low-voltage lines, which presumably power the logic (among other things).
There is a circuit with a 12 zener diode and 1.5k resistor which both get very hot. However, I am overlooking it at this point because the temperatures seem to be within their operating ranges. However, there is evidence of extreme overheating in the past (the board below the resistor is charred) so I have replaced both of these components with higher-wattage values just in case.
When powered on, the unit makes a pleasing hum, and the voltage needle drifts slightly to the left, below zero (hmm, wierd...). Output voltage is about -0.5VDC. Turning the voltage setting down results in a slightly greater negative voltage, while turning it up results in a smaller negative voltage (closer to 0).
More info to come. I'm basically going to keep posting here as I discover and test things, and would appreciate suggestions on things to check or possible solutions.
View attachment 35620