Thanks, as you kindly say, it throttles back....just as i thought.....the question is , and its impossible to find out...at what situation does it start to throttle back?I've definitely had laptop adaptors that could provide >200W continuously. They have extremely efficient circuits to shrink the form factor. Obviously if you shove the thing under a blanket it will overheat and throttle its output, but in normal use cases they're fine.
I know because my job was to benchtest one, with an electronic load. Can't say very much because of NDA, but mains voltage was ~110VAC. Enclosure hot spot was within limits (75C, IIRC) at steady state. No idea what internal temperature was. Measured efficiency was >96%, so it was it was only dissipating <10W total.Thanks, as you kindly say, it throttles back....just as i thought.....the question is , and its impossible to find out...at what situation does it start to throttle back?
I am guessing that you were running it at 220VAC?.....and also, how did you know it gave 200W?......and would it still give 200W after an hour? (it may well have a timed throttle-back, and in fact, is strongly likely to)
No completely different project.Thanks,
May ii ask, if it was associated with this....?...
...i note you have been in the "plastic enclosure space" yourself.
"a lot"? How so? Show your work.As you suggest, knowing the internal temps is essential when doing offline 200w in plastic. 10W is a lot in a plastic case.
Any good power supply will "throttle back" if its temperature rises enough for some reason. This is a feature, not a bug. According to your criteria I suppose every PSU with OTP would be excluded, since if you put it in a room with Ta=85C their output would be derated greatly?Yes there are LED drivers and Chargers available like that...but they simply do not count, as they throttle back their output when temperatures are high.....even if they only start throttling back some half hour after the temperature goes high...they do throttle back....so they do not count in this study,
Thanks, though the changers and led drivers throttle back far more aggressively than standard offline SMPS. That is why we cannot consider them in analysis. I am not speaking about standard OTP which as you kindly say, exists in virtually all PSUs.Any good power supply will "throttle back" if its temperature rises enough for some reason. This is a feature, not a bug.
....Thanks but not talking about this....talking about the far more agressive throttling back seen in chargers and led drivers......According to your criteria I suppose every PSU with OTP would be excluded, since if you put it in a room with Ta=85C their output would be derated greatly?
Thanks, though i believe it merely provides a constant Voltage to the charger in the product...as such, albeit indirectly , its main power function is battery charging...that device, the "Zbook mobile workstation" has a large battery inside it , and that PSU, is responsible for the charging of it....so really, its a charger, in terms of its mains purpose....the internal charger (the one in the zbook( is highly likely to throttle back so that shown PSU doesnt have to do it.....to preserve the life of the PSU (charger)often called a charger. In my eyes wrongly. It has no charging function, not caring about battery type, not adjusting charging current.
Probably the same thing that makes a Scotsman a True Scotsman.What makes a charger a charger?
What makes a power supply a power supply?
Thanks, its certainly of great interest....but we know what would be the next questions..For your info, the device is primarily supplying the docking station and the computer in stationary operation. Up to 200 W continuously.
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