eem2am
Banned
Hello,
We have bought this offline switch mode power supply.
SMPS; LPS205-M ; Emerson Netwrok Power.....
**broken link removed**
You can see on the first page of its datasheet that the 'switch-ON' inrush current can be up to 50 Amps.
......The thing is, we plug this supply in to the mains in Cambridge, UK....
-our nearest power station is Little Barford Power Station which is 20 miles away.
...this of course means that this 50 Amps of inrush current comes along 20 miles of power transmission cable.
-even though there are step down transformers in the path, which make the upstream cable inductance appear smaller than it really is, i would still expect 20 miles of power transmission cable to have a large inductance.
So.....
1. Can you estimate what the line inductance is from Little Barford Power Station to Cambridge?
2. Isn't 50 Amps of inrush current far too much to expect?, since the 20 miles of line inductance would never allow it to get this high?
We have bought this offline switch mode power supply.
SMPS; LPS205-M ; Emerson Netwrok Power.....
**broken link removed**
You can see on the first page of its datasheet that the 'switch-ON' inrush current can be up to 50 Amps.
......The thing is, we plug this supply in to the mains in Cambridge, UK....
-our nearest power station is Little Barford Power Station which is 20 miles away.
...this of course means that this 50 Amps of inrush current comes along 20 miles of power transmission cable.
-even though there are step down transformers in the path, which make the upstream cable inductance appear smaller than it really is, i would still expect 20 miles of power transmission cable to have a large inductance.
So.....
1. Can you estimate what the line inductance is from Little Barford Power Station to Cambridge?
2. Isn't 50 Amps of inrush current far too much to expect?, since the 20 miles of line inductance would never allow it to get this high?