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Related

bench power supply

aster94
aster94 over 8 years ago

hello,

 

I started drawing in eagle this afternoon to make my first home made pbc board for a bench power supply that with an input of 12V/5A will have two output of 12V, 5V, 3.3V and an adjustable voltage (lm317)

the switches are these with ground in the middle

565935243_150.jpg

I hope that the schematic is clear (it is also in the attachments), maybe you could give me some hint or advice about something that i m doing wrong

about the .brd i didn't route it since maybe you will say me to modify my schematic

 

thanks in advance

 

Immagine.png

Attachments:
bps.rar
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  • COMPACT
    COMPACT over 8 years ago in reply to mcb1 +3 suggested
    Here is an example of what I mean. 8V in from a regulated power supply being output as 5VDC using an LM7805 Linear Regulator. (The current limit has been set to 50mA on the bench power supply as not to…
  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 8 years ago in reply to aster94 +2 suggested
    the rated current it is 0.5 at 50v so I could reach 2A at 12v It doesn't work that way. The current specifies how much the switch will pass without damaging the contacts. The voltage specifies how high…
  • aster94
    aster94 over 8 years ago in reply to mcb1 +2
    As it is clear I am an hobbyist, thanks for the hint about the current In your schematics the middle pin of the potentiometer is not connected, is it correct? Is this schematic also good? http://www.electronics…
  • aster94
    0 aster94 over 8 years ago

    board redesigned with:

    -added protection diode for 7812

    -removed slider switch

    -added ceramic cap for every IC

    -modified the wiring of the potentiometer

     

    image

     

    i hope it is ok image

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  • geralds
    0 geralds over 8 years ago in reply to aster94

    Hi,

     

    please check the detail with the amp-meter - its something wrong as I seen in the blockdiagram of the meter.

     

    Best Regards,

    Gerald

    ---

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  • aster94
    0 aster94 over 8 years ago in reply to geralds

    I think i should aliment the ammeter between 4.5 and 30v and i do it (upper part of the shematic)

    For the measurements:

    black wire to VOLTMETER GND

    Red to AMMETER-OUT/VOLTMETER-IN

    blue to AMMETER-IN

     

    So the lm317 now is correct imageimage??

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  • geralds
    0 geralds over 8 years ago in reply to aster94

    image

    hi,

    please look exactly.

    image

    Gerald

    ---

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  • aster94
    0 aster94 over 8 years ago in reply to geralds

    ok, i think that i get it now and i will also take ideas from your schematic. when i will receive the lm7812 i will make the board (ordered only yesterday)

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  • geralds
    0 geralds over 8 years ago in reply to aster94

    Hi,

    Attached you'll find the schematic.

    You can use freely all what you needs; its my pleasure.

    Then with this you can build your pcb.

    There is also a heatsink on there you can mount the V-regulators.

    But use for all an isolation pad between the device and heatsink.

    Also isolate all screws.

    After mounting check it with an Ohm (wire finder) -Meter !!!!!!!

     

    The isolated DC/DC converter is a pcb mounted type like NME1209, or similar. An ISOLATED DC/DC converter is necessary.

    At the output of the DC/DC you have a resistor with 270 Ohm. That can be a higher value <1k (9mA, 9V); >270 (30mA, 9V)

    The thinking about is that the DC/DC needs a load resistance for regulation the output voltage to the nominal value (9V).

    With that R you makes the minimum burden current for this converter;

    see in the datasheet which minimum current it needs and then calculate the resistor value.

     

    Yes, IC1 is a LM317T.

    The other regulators are LDOs with attribute S - 78S12.... that have a better dropout voltage.

    At the input you find a filter - that filters out spikes from the power supply that you use for this regulators.

    -> You have to see that you use up to > 3A if all regulators are working. -> the filter with min. 6A would be ok.

    The max. input voltage will be 15V because the DC/DC converter can not more stressed.

    Here you have a zener diode ZD15V with 1 Watt. This is for security if the input voltage increase over 15V.

    But stay always under 1 Watt power lost (over voltage and current through the zener).

     

    I've build the schematic with Eagle V7.7.0.

     

    I wish you the best for your project.

    Best Regards,

    Gerald

    ---

    Attachments:
    powertripple1.zip
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  • COMPACT
    0 COMPACT over 8 years ago

    You might find this of help.

     

    PCB Creation - MONTMAN.INFO

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  • aster94
    0 aster94 over 8 years ago

    follow up:

    i hope that with this post i won't be seen as arrogant since I didn't use the schematic from @geralds

    His draw is obviously far away better than mine, but my main desire was to do this bench power supply on my own

     

    I completed the board in only one side, i used extra isolation for the ground plane than needed since i m not sure about our homemade etching quality

     

    image

     

    Now i will just have to wait for the 7812 then i will finish it image

    P.S: I know that the ground plane is not perfect near the lm317's outputs i will put a jumper

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  • COMPACT
    0 COMPACT over 8 years ago in reply to aster94

    Vincenzo,

     

    You seem to be focused on ancillary considerations and not the primary considerations as I've tried to lead you.

     

    Don't concern yourself about using power plane fills but get the essentials in order first.

     

    Here are some observations.

     

    1. PCB traces are too thin; they need to be thick enough to handle the envisaged current and be thick enough firstly to avoid acting as an unwanted fuse and handling the envisaged load.

     

    2.Your low impedance, small capacitance (100n) capacitors for the voltage regulator outputs are far too far away from the voltage regulators; ideally they should be adjacent.

     

    Have a look at Steve Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar How to build your own Z80 computer book which is available online which has a great section on power supplies for beginners.

     

    https://books.google.com.au/books?id=mVQnFgWzX0AC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

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  • aster94
    0 aster94 over 8 years ago in reply to COMPACT

    "You seem to be focused on ancillary considerations and not the primary considerations as I've tried to lead you."

    you are right i was so focused to connect all the components in the board that i forgot to give an appropriate width to the tracks, I used this calculator: The CircuitCalculator.com Blog » PCB Trace Width Calculator  and i used 50mil for the main power lines before the ICs and 32mil after the ICs since techinically the max amp after them should be <1.5 amp

     

    about the capacitors i really misunderstood a previous post, i thought that they had to stay as near as possible to the outputs....

    now i think it is correct

     

    image

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