You have to be very carefull with these kind of measurments, the ground lead of your probe can pick up enough signal to show this kind of spikes. Try to measure again with an as short a possible ground connection.
A bit like in the attached drawing.
PS. I didn't say there can not be a problem, I just know a wrong measurement can show the problem to look much, much bigger
My probe will pick up secondary waveforms off of a flyback SMPS when it’s a several inches away. Ideally you’re supposed to use shielded coax and BNC connectors. If you don’t want to do that Stick your probe with a small ground lead right in the output terminal block this provides some shielding ,or it does for me. I bet your spikes will get a lot smaller.
i know that probe picks up noice,....but my problem is when i increase the load noice increases and my dc/dc transformer giving some sound.....i dont know why..
but i did some analysis here...when i loaded the converter upto 4A the o/p dc is pure dc with out any spikes/noice....here everything is fine i.e controlling and no sound at my transformer..
when current beyond 4A output voltage has the spikes...and transformer is giving some sound...
darla1,
One simple way of reducing nois is to place a series RC network across the transformer secondary. Values of .001uf and 1.2K work well. It requires a bit of experimentation to determine the optimum values. Much of the noise is caused by momentary shorts across the secondary when one set of diodes turns on before the other set has completely turned off.
Regards,
Kral