A whole bunch of IN-28s. The current won’t be constant, and I don’t want the 
voltage to fluctuate, so time for plan B it seems. Whatever that might be.

Thanks for the insight, is that on that datasheet somewhere?

> On Feb 20, 2020, at 6:48 PM, gregebert <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> Essentially, yes. But be aware of the open-circuit output voltage; the supply 
> will attempt to pump-out the amount of requested current, and in order to do 
> so, it will increase it's output voltage until the desired current is 
> obtained.
> Just make sure that *you* are not the load. For example, if you set the 
> current to 150mA, and touch the terminals, you will probably be killed. I'm 
> not joking. The 1400mA supply will crank out as much as 420V, and 100-200mA 
> is fatal.
> 
> I suspect that when the supply is energized, it will rapidly increase the 
> output voltage from 0 volts, up to the maximum no-load output voltage (420V), 
> until the measured current reaches what you set it to. If the load's 
> resistance decreases as the current increases, the output voltage will also 
> decrease; this is typical behavior of a gas discharge as it ionizes.
> 
> What are you driving from the supply ?
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