J
John Nagle
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
Where do you find stock transformers for switching power supply design?
Apparently, for most commercial work, the transformer is at least semi-custom.
And no, I don't want to wind my own. I can model what I want in LTSpice,
but the transformer I've defined is not a standard part.
Digi-Key, surprisingly, isn't that helpful. Even the Pulse Engineering
site doesn't seem to help much.
What I'm looking for is a transformer with about 10uH on the primary,
and 140uH on the secondary. Nothing in the Digi-Key catalog seems to have
a turns ratio of more than 3:1, and I need more like 4:1. (I'm designing
a boost converter to boost 12V up to 120VDC at 6mA or so, using an
LT-3484 family IC, which is a camera flash capacitor charger. This
is part of my ongoing effort to drive antique teletypes with modern
electronics instead of boat-anchor power supplies.)
This is a little board-mount part, not a big power transformer,
probably about 1cc in volume. Sources?
John Nagle
Apparently, for most commercial work, the transformer is at least semi-custom.
And no, I don't want to wind my own. I can model what I want in LTSpice,
but the transformer I've defined is not a standard part.
Digi-Key, surprisingly, isn't that helpful. Even the Pulse Engineering
site doesn't seem to help much.
What I'm looking for is a transformer with about 10uH on the primary,
and 140uH on the secondary. Nothing in the Digi-Key catalog seems to have
a turns ratio of more than 3:1, and I need more like 4:1. (I'm designing
a boost converter to boost 12V up to 120VDC at 6mA or so, using an
LT-3484 family IC, which is a camera flash capacitor charger. This
is part of my ongoing effort to drive antique teletypes with modern
electronics instead of boat-anchor power supplies.)
This is a little board-mount part, not a big power transformer,
probably about 1cc in volume. Sources?
John Nagle