Bill,

 

Where are you monitoring the surge voltage? At the output of the surge
generator? In our case, the generator output looks fine, but when we look at
the surge pulse at the input to our power supply (after our line filter) the
surge pulse is much larger. 

 

Case in point, I am currently working on piece of equipment that has a 500
watt 24Vdc power supply connected after a 60 amp line filter. The 2KV Line to
PE surge pulse is 3500 voltage at the power supply.  

 

The Other Brian

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bill Owsley
Sent: Thursday, September 09, 2010 11:25 AM
To: [email protected]; Brian O'Connell
Subject: RE: Surge Pulse After Line Filter

 

What is the setup, the equipment arrangement, etc. for the surge test?
I monitor the surge voltage and have not seen the common occurrence of much
higher voltages, so I'm wondering what am I missing.

I'm not Brian, either one of them...
 Bill








--- On Tue, 9/7/10, Brian O'Connell <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Brian O'Connell <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Surge Pulse After Line Filter
To: [email protected]
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, September 7, 2010, 5:09 PM

Only one of my esteemed power supply competitors has replied - most
dissapointing.

Another important principle for 'surge' ratings for component power supplies
is the energy. The I^2T is what sends the power supply to the dark side. A
customer from the Great State of Australia was killing my children. Cannot be,
said I, as all knew the unit was rated level 3 and tested higher. But I must
see, said I, as I was still in disbelief. Set this before your beady green
eyes, the customer said, and I did. Behold, the addition of evil caps in front
of the sacred input filter. Sacrilege said I. I bade them a non-fond farewell.

The intended end-use of X and Y caps is NOT surge suppression. They are rated
for some big hits, but they are NOT intended to function as a VDR within the
meaning of IEC60950-1 annex Q. These caps are considered part of the 'line'
filter. But it should be noted that for some resultant surge waveforms, an
input-filter cap will appear as a very low Z for a short period before the VDR
starts to conduct.

There can be an interaction between a front-end pi filter and the resultant
shape of the waveform that is propagated into the power supply during a surge
event. This is why I re-test surge immunity if the designer changes LC values.

Pat, from SL Power, noted the common combo of VDRs and gas tubes. The only
problem with gas tubes is turn-on time. But once the gas ionizes, the
conduction is on hard, regardless of the waveform and adjacent L.

But the more important issue - who among us shall be considered the original
'Brian' ?

Brian

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of Fred Townsend
Sent: Wednesday, September 01, 2010 1:25 PM
To: Kunde, Brian
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Surge Pulse After Line Filter

Dear Other:

It seems like this discussion has been around for a long time in a slightly
different form. Input capacitors (x-y caps?) help kill the surges. As I recall
the size of these caps is limited by the allowable leakage currents.  Maybe
someone can comment on the solution to that problem.

Fred Townsend
DC to Light

Kunde, Brian wrote:

Most all over the counter power supplies will pass the 2KV Line - PE surge
immunity test (IEC 61000-4-5) when tested stand-a-lone, however, when these
power supplies are used in an assembly with other Mains driven devices through
a large Line Filter, the surge pulse seen at the power supply can be much
larger in amplitude. During the 2KV Line-PE test it is not unusual to see a
peak that exceeds 3KV or more.  This is a common phenomenon. 

Most power supply can handle the higher surge pulse, but some have trouble
with it ranging from restarting to blowing its guts out.  The problem seems to
be getting worst. We are having a hard time finding power supplies to pass
under these conditions. 

Is there a simple solution to this problem? Are line - PE surge suppressors
the only solution?  Are they allowed in products going to Europe?  I have
heard that northern Europe doesn't allow line to PE surge suppression due to
safety. Has this changed?  Is there a good over the counter device I can buy
and drop in my product? 

If a surge suppressor is used, what requirements does it have to meet? I hear
gas tubes are a must. How about overcurrent protection? Where would the fuse
go? In the PE line?

I have seen surge suppressors with UL and CSA agency approval, but not with a
European agency approval (I may just be looking in the wrong place). Is this
evidence they are not allowed in Europe?

Thank you,
The Other Brian 

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