Re: compound variable power supplies--possible?




Bennett Price wrote:
Some devices have connectors that put the - voltage on the center pin,
others put + on the center pin. (For center pin, you can substitute big
pin/socket, funny looking pin/socket, yellow pin/socket, etc.)

In your PC, the power supply is generating both +12 and -12 volts -
there's an instance where both voltages are needed - rather than just
swapping the + and - pins.





you can probably just reverse the leads on one of the connections. So a
parallel circuit/device goes minus plus, the other parallel device goes
plus minus. The classic reverse parallel dive. Guess though these would
have to share current. Maybe those professional power supplies devices
are isolating the ground for some reason. Perhaps for less noisy
signals. Is it possible to have a positive ground? Or is that just as
Seussian as DC peaks? Thanks for your replies by the way.

I ordered a book by Witte on electronics instruments. Keeps on getting
canceled and now the shipping is slow cause i am buying one of those
limited distributed (illegal to possess in the west) Hindu pulp mass
copies of copyrighted western textbooks. You can often find them at
bookfinder4u.com.




It doesn't make much sense to talk of DC peak voltages; ideally,
DC voltage is smooth and doesn't have peaks. AC voltage, on the other
hand, can be measured in several ways (Average, RMS, Peak).

Are you sure that both of your scanners need DC? You said one required
15 volts, the other 16. In all likelihood you could use the same power
supply for both. I'd buy 1 power supply (perhaps from the scanner mfr)
and use it for both. Which to buy 15V or 16V? - whichever is cheaper.






i thought about that but decided on the variable 12 v cause its only 20
dollars and a 16v adapter would cost at least that much. Although i
risk burning my house down with bad soldering connections, i also gain
not having to buy all these little wallwarts i have. I think i'm gonna
need a 6v soon too.







whyzard@xxxxxxxx wrote:
You can connect two DC adapters in series (not paralle), plus of one to
negative of the other; then add the two voltages together. In your
example, a 6V and 3V will yield 9V If one is turned off, you will not
warp the universe.
No, but it will damage the smoothing capacitor of the adaptor that is not
powered because reverse voltge will be presented across it. It will be
limited to 1.4-ish volts by the bridge rectifier being forward biased, but
it's still not good news.

Dave




this shouldn't be a problem. The variable would have serviceable parts.
the fixed switcheable universal probably isn't serviceable cause all
the parts are in those plastic cases and they are tightly manufactured,
but these are also quite cheap. I can just replace the switcheable and
fix the variable if needs be.

by the way, looking into power supplies more,
why would someone need negative DC volts. They are below the 0 v line
on a scope right?
What uses negative DC? A 50 dollar elenco variable had a spec of -1 to
-15 dc v

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Zenith DLP Set Not Working After Lamp Replacement
    ... those pins did power the PSU and all voltages are now normal, ... I've since tried injecting 400V from an external power supply, ... I guess a tech should never assume a blown lamp is just a blown lamp, ... Notice the "POWER ON" signal at pin 1 and the ST-5.5V rail at ...
    (sci.electronics.repair)
  • Attn: Paul/WTomRe: Power up problem
    ... black/green pins on the 20 pin mb connector and them press my start button. ... Under mormal shutdown conditions in which I power off it restarts fine.. ... Also useful is to measure voltages on green and gray ... numbers and how those voltages responded as power switch is pressed. ...
    (alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt)
  • Re: Tech: Funhouse display just quit
    ... Check connector J306 and J307 for these voltages with the ... power on, ... J307 pin 4: input AC reference. ...
    (rec.games.pinball)
  • Re: Power issue follow-up question: UPS?
    ... But if we look at what happens when there is a power outage / power flicker ... charts for voltages that are ... Same charts also define high voltages that 120 volt electronics must ... How do we limit those spikes so that internal appliance protection is ...
    (alt.guitar.bass)
  • Re: psu requirements-think i found it
    ... :: jump from 20 pin to 24 pin? ... Ian, you can use a 20 pin power supply, on a 24 pin connector motherboard. ... and even less of an issue for the 12V rail. ...
    (alt.comp.periphs.mainboard.asus)