On 5/1/20 12:07 PM, Tim Shoppa wrote:
Jim, when it comes to "bench supplies" - knobs for voltage and meters -
most of the commonly available Chinese bench supplies in the under 3A-range
are linear with series regulator.

This unit (HY1803D) is typical and has a transformer (relay-selected
winding depending on the voltage setting) and a 2N3055 heat sink on the
back.
http://www.mastechpowersupplies.com/variable-regulated-power-supply-hy1803d.html

After you get to the 5A range they start becoming switchers. There are only
a couple of common designs with different trim and brand names on the front.

Of course old-school (50's-80's era) regulated HP bench supplies are
commonly available on the surplus market and they are built like tanks and
pretty much infinitely repairable as long as the meters haven't been
smashed in.



True, but these days, I'd rather fool with oscillators and mixers than power supply repair. I've kind of gotten out of the "buy old surplus gear and make do" phase. Although if you go somewhere like the San Bernardino Microwave Society meetings, there's people there with literal truck loads of old test gear, for which I would have sold my future children into bondage for, when it was only 20 years old - of course, now it's 50 years old.

I'm past the thrill of running a 1980s sweeper or the venerable 8640 signal generator.

Hence the question about "off the shelf bench power supplies"






I would be reluctant to use a bench supply for long-term use because you
bump that knob and what was supposed to be 3.3V becomes 18V.


Uh, no, I'd never do that, no, uh-uh. At JPL we have bunches of overvoltage protector widgets from some company I can't remember, banana plugs or wires, external to the bench supply. If you go over 5.25V, it crowbars.



Few to no current production wall warts are linear. Power-conserving
regulations around the world now pretty much require wall warts to be
switchers. Linear (including regulated) wall warts are still available from
the surplus outlets but they are less common than before.

yeah, i've got a box of those older linear warts - a transformer, a diode, maybe a bridge, and maybe a capacitor. Good for stuff like running LEDs or small motors.



Few to no current production modular fixed-voltage supplies are linear.
With a handful of exceptions (I think a couple of the Lambda linear modules
are still available) they are almost all switchers.

Acopian is your friend for linear "bricks".

https://www.acopian.com/linear-regulated-power-supply-models.html

That familiar gold box is a common sight.



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