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#1
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Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power
supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard |
#2
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Richard wrote:
Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. If the output pins are isolated from each other and from the chassis, you can series the power supplies. If the chassis is connected to the common lead, you can't. Think batteries. You can generally series two batteries unless both negatives are tied to the vehicle chassis. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#3
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current will be limited by the lesser of the two supplies...
Regards, John "Richard" wrote in message news:teAbe.436$3V3.55@edtnps89... Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard |
#4
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it is possible as long as both output terminals are isolated from the line
ground (and case preferably for safety!). many dc supplies connect the negative to the case and line ground so if you tried to put them in series you would short one of them out through the other one's ground. "Richard" wrote in message news:teAbe.436$3V3.55@edtnps89... Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard |
#5
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On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 20:05:51 -0000, "Dave" wrote:
it is possible as long as both output terminals are isolated from the line ground (and case preferably for safety!). many dc supplies connect the negative to the case and line ground so if you tried to put them in series you would short one of them out through the other one's ground. "Richard" wrote in message news:teAbe.436$3V3.55@edtnps89... Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard I am reminded of a day in our engineering lab at Westinhouse Ordnance Department in 1958 when I was working on the depth control system for the MK-45 (ASTOR) torpedo. Everything aboard the fish ran on 24 volts for a variety of reasons - tradition, it was readily available as a tap off of the main battery, and there was a host of 24 vdc electrical equipment available from the war years. We had a 24 vdc motor generator set in the lab that produced all of the 24 dc main power to the workbenches in the lab. Each workbench had a pair of wires coming to it with a large two-pole knife switch to connect or disconnect the 24 vdc source. Each person working at a bench was generally engrossed in his own private hell of trying to make whatever he was working on work properly. As you might expect, no one paid much attention to how his circuitry was grounded locally - if at all. One day a lab technician named Mike working a couple of benches away from me started laughing about the smoke that he saw rising up from the circuit on my bench. I felt rather stupid about the fact that for some reason my circuitry was cooking, big time. Then I noticed that behind Mike there was a column of smoke rising up from his circuitry, as well. You guessed it, he had the negative side of the system grounded at his bench and I had the positive side grounded at my bench. We had a general meeting shortly thereafter. Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA Replace "nobody" with my callsign for e-mail http://www.qsl.net/w9dmk http://zaffora/f2o.org/W9DMK/W9dmk.html |
#6
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![]() "W9DMK (Robert Lay)" wrote: On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 20:05:51 -0000, "Dave" wrote: it is possible as long as both output terminals are isolated from the line ground (and case preferably for safety!). many dc supplies connect the negative to the case and line ground so if you tried to put them in series you would short one of them out through the other one's ground. "Richard" wrote in message news:teAbe.436$3V3.55@edtnps89... Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard I am reminded of a day in our engineering lab at Westinhouse Ordnance Department in 1958 when I was working on the depth control system for the MK-45 (ASTOR) torpedo. Everything aboard the fish ran on 24 volts for a variety of reasons - tradition, it was readily available as a tap off of the main battery, and there was a host of 24 vdc electrical equipment available from the war years. We had a 24 vdc motor generator set in the lab that produced all of the 24 dc main power to the workbenches in the lab. Each workbench had a pair of wires coming to it with a large two-pole knife switch to connect or disconnect the 24 vdc source. Each person working at a bench was generally engrossed in his own private hell of trying to make whatever he was working on work properly. As you might expect, no one paid much attention to how his circuitry was grounded locally - if at all. One day a lab technician named Mike working a couple of benches away from me started laughing about the smoke that he saw rising up from the circuit on my bench. I felt rather stupid about the fact that for some reason my circuitry was cooking, big time. Then I noticed that behind Mike there was a column of smoke rising up from his circuitry, as well. You guessed it, he had the negative side of the system grounded at his bench and I had the positive side grounded at my bench. We had a general meeting shortly thereafter. Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA Replace "nobody" with my callsign for e-mail http://www.qsl.net/w9dmk http://zaffora/f2o.org/W9DMK/W9dmk.html Small World... I worked at Westinghouse in Cleveland, OH on the MK48 ADCAP torpedo. -- Joe Simon WB2JQT Owego, NY Remove .NOSPAM to send e-mail |
#7
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![]() "Joe Simon" wrote in message ... "W9DMK (Robert Lay)" wrote: On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 20:05:51 -0000, "Dave" wrote: it is possible as long as both output terminals are isolated from the line ground (and case preferably for safety!). many dc supplies connect the negative to the case and line ground so if you tried to put them in series you would short one of them out through the other one's ground. "Richard" wrote in message news:teAbe.436$3V3.55@edtnps89... Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard I am reminded of a day in our engineering lab at Westinhouse Ordnance Department in 1958 when I was working on the depth control system for the MK-45 (ASTOR) torpedo. Everything aboard the fish ran on 24 volts for a variety of reasons - tradition, it was readily available as a tap off of the main battery, and there was a host of 24 vdc electrical equipment available from the war years. We had a 24 vdc motor generator set in the lab that produced all of the 24 dc main power to the workbenches in the lab. Each workbench had a pair of wires coming to it with a large two-pole knife switch to connect or disconnect the 24 vdc source. Each person working at a bench was generally engrossed in his own private hell of trying to make whatever he was working on work properly. As you might expect, no one paid much attention to how his circuitry was grounded locally - if at all. One day a lab technician named Mike working a couple of benches away from me started laughing about the smoke that he saw rising up from the circuit on my bench. I felt rather stupid about the fact that for some reason my circuitry was cooking, big time. Then I noticed that behind Mike there was a column of smoke rising up from his circuitry, as well. You guessed it, he had the negative side of the system grounded at his bench and I had the positive side grounded at my bench. We had a general meeting shortly thereafter. Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA Replace "nobody" with my callsign for e-mail http://www.qsl.net/w9dmk http://zaffora/f2o.org/W9DMK/W9dmk.html Small World... I worked at Westinghouse in Cleveland, OH on the MK48 ADCAP torpedo. really small world... i was on submarines and shot (dummies anyway) mk48's and 37's... i think those were the right numbers, its been a few years now. |
#8
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:16:28 -0000, "Dave" wrote:
really small world... i was on submarines and shot (dummies anyway) mk48's and 37's... i think those were the right numbers, its been a few years now. Dear Joe and Dave, Yes indeed, it is a small world. Just last week I had lunch with some of the old gang from that era at a Westinghouse Retirees luncheon in Glen Burnie, MD. Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA Replace "nobody" with my callsign for e-mail http://www.qsl.net/w9dmk http://zaffora/f2o.org/W9DMK/W9dmk.html |
#9
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:16:28 -0000, "Dave" wrote:
"Joe Simon" wrote in message ... "W9DMK (Robert Lay)" wrote: On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 20:05:51 -0000, "Dave" wrote: it is possible as long as both output terminals are isolated from the line ground (and case preferably for safety!). many dc supplies connect the negative to the case and line ground so if you tried to put them in series you would short one of them out through the other one's ground. "Richard" wrote in message news:teAbe.436$3V3.55@edtnps89... Can someone tell me if it is possible to hook up two 12 Volt DC power supplies in series to increase the voltage, I have two supplies that I would like to do that with , one being a variable supply. I need About 25 volts total. Any info on this is greatly appreciated. Richard I am reminded of a day in our engineering lab at Westinhouse Ordnance Department in 1958 when I was working on the depth control system for the MK-45 (ASTOR) torpedo. Everything aboard the fish ran on 24 volts for a variety of reasons - tradition, it was readily available as a tap off of the main battery, and there was a host of 24 vdc electrical equipment available from the war years. We had a 24 vdc motor generator set in the lab that produced all of the 24 dc main power to the workbenches in the lab. Each workbench had a pair of wires coming to it with a large two-pole knife switch to connect or disconnect the 24 vdc source. Each person working at a bench was generally engrossed in his own private hell of trying to make whatever he was working on work properly. As you might expect, no one paid much attention to how his circuitry was grounded locally - if at all. One day a lab technician named Mike working a couple of benches away from me started laughing about the smoke that he saw rising up from the circuit on my bench. I felt rather stupid about the fact that for some reason my circuitry was cooking, big time. Then I noticed that behind Mike there was a column of smoke rising up from his circuitry, as well. You guessed it, he had the negative side of the system grounded at his bench and I had the positive side grounded at my bench. We had a general meeting shortly thereafter. Bob, W9DMK, Dahlgren, VA Replace "nobody" with my callsign for e-mail http://www.qsl.net/w9dmk http://zaffora/f2o.org/W9DMK/W9dmk.html Small World... I worked at Westinghouse in Cleveland, OH on the MK48 ADCAP torpedo. really small world... i was on submarines and shot (dummies anyway) mk48's and 37's... i think those were the right numbers, its been a few years now. Hi All, Getting smaller.... I calibrated the sonar domes in the Navy, and then pressure tested them for Honeywell at their Marine Systems Division here in Seattle. Funny story about that. The pressure vessel was controlled by an ancient program running in FORTRAN (if you can imagine that). Honeywell asked me to consult (after I had been a Metrologist for them some years earlier) on how to translate the FORTRAN to HP Basic. That sort of drew a slack-jawed reaction from me, it was rather a regressive move. I suggested that the HP computers had a very nice Pascal that would do a lot better, and the fireworks went off. "Pascal? Isn't that one of those European commie languages? It is written backwards isn't it?" Management wanted to read the code. The handwriting was on the wall and it spelled DOOMED. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC (ET1 Fleet Electronics Cal Lab, USS Holland AS-32) |
#10
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Pascals' syntax is structured with beauty/logic--the very language itself is
pseudo-code... I love the brevity of text characters in "C", and the power and "brute force"... but Pascal has beauty.... Regards, John |
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