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#1
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wrote in message
... HELP Astron 70 amp PS I have a astron 70 amp power supply and was hooking up a transmitter to it and I pulled the power supply closer to me and the positive wire came loose and hit the ground terminal on power supply. Now when I turn it on you can hear the power supply turn on and the light on the power swithch comes on, but no volts comes up on the meter. I checked the terminals on the back and no volt, very little if at all. The outside fuse is good. I took off top cover and I don't see and internal fuse. Is there a diode I should be looking for? I'm sure it has to have some kind of protection if the wires are reversed. Any help would be great. Rich Rich - Well you shorted the power supply output. Normally the crowbar protection circuitry cuts in and the fuse will blow. First, NEVER open a power supply case/cover while it is still plugged into the AC mains. Second, ALWAYS properly discharge the electrolytic capacitors before poking around inside a power supply. With a power supply of this amperage - it will have one or two very large capacitors that will still have stored energy after being turned off. Now. Unplug the unit, come back in a couple of minutes (allow time for SCR crowbar to reset) and then plug into AC mains and see if you have voltage. If not, then some components have likely been damaged and will require replacing. If you have little technical skill, the I would recommend repair in a "mentoring" process with an experienced technician. A web site that may be useful for your troubleshooting is he http://www.kbt-dc-supplies.com/index.php Astron schematic diagrams http://www.repeater-builder.com/rbtip/astron-index.html The Astron power supply has an overvoltage protection circuit that will clamp the output of the supply to near 0 volts when the power supply's output has gone over the predefined voltage above normal. In most Astron power supply's the point of overvoltage is near 15 vdc. When an Astron power supply has gone into protect, it must be reset by turning off the mains power to the supply for at least 10 seconds. This gives enough time for the filter capacitors to bleed down so complete reset is possible. Protection in the supply is afforded by the use of an SCR to crowbar the output when an overvoltage situation has occurred. The circuit that fires the SCR is very fast, and remains in protect mode until mains power to the supply has been dropped for at least 10 seconds. Greg, W9GB |
#2
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![]() "G.Beat" wrote in message news:FSs3d.78590$D%.30566@attbi_s51... wrote in message ... HELP Astron 70 amp PS I have a astron 70 amp power supply and was hooking up a transmitter to it and I pulled the power supply closer to me and the positive wire came loose and hit the ground terminal on power supply. Now when I turn it on you can hear the power supply turn on and the light on the power swithch comes on, but no volts comes up on the meter. I checked the terminals on the back and no volt, very little if at all. The outside fuse is good. I took off top cover and I don't see and internal fuse. Is there a diode I should be looking for? I'm sure it has to have some kind of protection if the wires are reversed. Any help would be great. Rich Rich - Well you shorted the power supply output. Normally the crowbar protection circuitry cuts in and the fuse will blow. First, NEVER open a power supply case/cover while it is still plugged into the AC mains. Second, ALWAYS properly discharge the electrolytic capacitors before poking around inside a power supply. With a power supply of this amperage - it will have one or two very large capacitors that will still have stored energy after being turned off. Now. Unplug the unit, come back in a couple of minutes (allow time for SCR crowbar to reset) and then plug into AC mains and see if you have voltage. If not, then some components have likely been damaged and will require replacing. If you have little technical skill, the I would recommend repair in a "mentoring" process with an experienced technician. A web site that may be useful for your troubleshooting is he http://www.kbt-dc-supplies.com/index.php Astron schematic diagrams http://www.repeater-builder.com/rbtip/astron-index.html The Astron power supply has an overvoltage protection circuit that will clamp the output of the supply to near 0 volts when the power supply's output has gone over the predefined voltage above normal. In most Astron power supply's the point of overvoltage is near 15 vdc. When an Astron power supply has gone into protect, it must be reset by turning off the mains power to the supply for at least 10 seconds. This gives enough time for the filter capacitors to bleed down so complete reset is possible. Protection in the supply is afforded by the use of an SCR to crowbar the output when an overvoltage situation has occurred. The circuit that fires the SCR is very fast, and remains in protect mode until mains power to the supply has been dropped for at least 10 seconds. Greg, W9GB The SCR DOES NOT fire on a short circuit condition. The SCR fires on overvolage conditions, not over current. The current is sensed, and if the current drain is exceeded, the output will fold back limiting the current to maximum the supply is set for. Now, the SCR might have falsely fired, and in that reguard you might be correct in suggesting waiting several seconds with the power switch off. Peter |
#3
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![]() " Uncle Peter" wrote in message news:njy3d.282268$Lj.181967@fed1read03... "G.Beat" wrote in message news:FSs3d.78590$D%.30566@attbi_s51... wrote in message ... HELP Astron 70 amp PS I have a astron 70 amp power supply and was hooking up a transmitter to it and I pulled the power supply closer to me and the positive wire came loose and hit the ground terminal on power supply. Now when I turn it on you can hear the power supply turn on and the light on the power swithch comes on, but no volts comes up on the meter. I checked the terminals on the back and no volt, very little if at all. The outside fuse is good. I took off top cover and I don't see and internal fuse. Is there a diode I should be looking for? I'm sure it has to have some kind of protection if the wires are reversed. Any help would be great. Rich Rich - First, NEVER open a power supply case/cover while it is still plugged into the AC mains. Second, ALWAYS properly discharge the electrolytic capacitors before poking around inside a power supply. With a power supply of this amperage - it will have one or two very large capacitors that will still have stored energy after being turned off. Now. Unplug the unit, come back in a couple of minutes (allow time for SCR crowbar to reset) and then plug into AC mains and see if you have voltage. If not, then some components have likely been damaged and will require replacing. [snip] The SCR DOES NOT fire on a short circuit condition. The SCR fires on overvolage conditions, not over current. The current is sensed, and if the current drain is exceeded, the output will fold back limiting the current to maximum the supply is set for. Now, the SCR might have falsely fired, and in that reguard you might be correct in suggesting waiting several seconds with the power switch off. Peter Better to check the easy items first, before disassemblying the pass transistors (2N3055 or 2N3771) to check them and replacing the LM723 --- which are the usual suspects. gb |
#4
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Hi yes check the pass transistors and replace them with exact replacements or at least 2n5686 (full batch) if you wana invest longterm ......
Does any one have a copy of the rs 70 psu diagram i would appreciate it as the website i found is down and cannot be downloaded .. :-( great day to all .. |
#5
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repeaterbuilders.com has a copy for 70 amp it is listed under astron
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