cupoftea
Advanced Member level 6
Hi,
Today I tested a 350W offline linear regulator (Mains transformer/rectifier/capacitor/regulator).
It did appear a little “drifty” and the current limit seemed to limit at a different (higher) current level when the unit was hotter.
It was for 69.5V and 5A output.
I had no BOM for it, just a dodgy schematic which had no component values, also the schem had “crossing” traces with no way of knowing if the track cross points were joined or not. (no “blobs” at the track junctions to show connection). I re-drew the schematic as in the attached, but cant be sure about the exact trace connections shown.
I believe the attached is very poor. Surely its way too susceptible to temperature change issues with the BJTs and zeners? As such, will try to find a better way to do it.
Do you know why they did it like the attached? Is it a recognised configuration?
(sorry if attached schem is not super accurate due to the above mentioned “dodgy” schematic.)
I wasn’t permitted to reverse engineer it. Its all thru-hole, and should always stay like that.
The 15v and 80v are from separate secondaries on the mains transformer.
Woudl you agree that the attached is a far better way to do this...no trim pots needed at production time, no dependence on semiconductor temperature.......
Why didnt they do it liek this in the first place?
(LTspice simulation and PDF schem attached)
Today I tested a 350W offline linear regulator (Mains transformer/rectifier/capacitor/regulator).
It did appear a little “drifty” and the current limit seemed to limit at a different (higher) current level when the unit was hotter.
It was for 69.5V and 5A output.
I had no BOM for it, just a dodgy schematic which had no component values, also the schem had “crossing” traces with no way of knowing if the track cross points were joined or not. (no “blobs” at the track junctions to show connection). I re-drew the schematic as in the attached, but cant be sure about the exact trace connections shown.
I believe the attached is very poor. Surely its way too susceptible to temperature change issues with the BJTs and zeners? As such, will try to find a better way to do it.
Do you know why they did it like the attached? Is it a recognised configuration?
(sorry if attached schem is not super accurate due to the above mentioned “dodgy” schematic.)
I wasn’t permitted to reverse engineer it. Its all thru-hole, and should always stay like that.
The 15v and 80v are from separate secondaries on the mains transformer.
--- Updated ---
Woudl you agree that the attached is a far better way to do this...no trim pots needed at production time, no dependence on semiconductor temperature.......
Why didnt they do it liek this in the first place?
(LTspice simulation and PDF schem attached)
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