I’m using 15V on the 16V lines, + & -.  There is no need for anything greater.  
I know of no S100 board that uses more than a 12V regulator, very few -12V’s 
and -5V’s in fact.  Used by a few early CPU chips and RS232 drivers,  that’s 
it.  Doubt you would ever see more than 1A on both these lines for the whole 
bus.


John

 

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Vince Mulhollon
Sent: Monday, April 7, 2014 10:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [N8VEM-S100:3049] Re: PSU

 


On Monday, April 7, 2014 8:00:29 AM UTC-5, Thierry Schembri wrote:

John uses the meanwell T60C 
(http://s100computers.com/My%20System%20Pages/The%20Box/The%20Box.htm#The_Power_Supply),
 I'm wondering how he stepped the -15/+16 up to -16/+16, or maybe  using 
-15/+15 is fine on the S100 bus? (the voltage regulators on the cards would 
work fine with -15/+15??)


My "development" S100 motherboard has mean well supplies and all the ones I've 
seen have a little trimmer next to the output connectors and you just dial them 
up to the correct voltage.  They are 15V nominal but from memory you can wiggle 
the trimmer and vary by quite a few volts.

I'm guessing the peculiar selection of voltages available for mean well 
supplies is because you can generate any voltage at all from 0 to whatever 
using them by picking the closest one and wiggling the trimmer a bit.  So I 
have a "7.5 volt" supply but it now outputs perfect 8.0 volts.

I have basically zero current draw on my 16V lines so I'm using 1 amp "pack of 
cards" sized supplies.  The modern boards don't use +/- 16 but I have some long 
term plans involving analog/audio/RF stuff, in my infinite spare time, etc.  So 
I'd be using a couple mA to run some opamps.  I did the same thing as suggested 
earlier in the thread with hooking up the + output to ground on the -16 volt 
supply.

RS-232 is supposed to be liberal in what it accepts so +/- 10 "should" work 
just as well anyway.  From memory, +/- 5 is pushing the limits of whats 
technically tolerable WRT the RS-232 spec on the read side although stuff will 
usually work even if a bit out of spec.  Some old boards might do something 
with the +/- 16 that isn't drive RS-232 of course, and as such may require a 
perfect 16 volts.  Or maybe not.

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