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#41
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![]() Ugh! It's very similar to a power supply I worked on in the mid-1970's for a tacan pulse power calibration system. The scars had almost healed. There's not much advantage in it over a vintage blood and thunder supply beyond improved regulation. No reduction in the amount of steel or output capacitance needed... lots of stored energy. Though I did learn a lot about PUT's and SCR's in the process so overall it was fun. It's also when I learned that power supply engineers always run Towards the explosion. steve H http://www.realhamradio.com/hvreg.pdf for a schematic. |
#42
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On Sep 15, 8:09*pm, Grumpy The Mule wrote:
Ugh! *It's very similar to a power supply I worked on in the mid-1970's for a tacan pulse power calibration system. *The scars had almost healed. *There's not much advantage in it over a vintage blood and thunder supply beyond improved regulation. *No reduction in the amount of steel or output capacitance needed... lots of stored energy. Though I did learn a lot about PUT's and SCR's in the process so overall it was fun. It's also when I learned that power supply engineers always run Towards the explosion. * steve H http://www.realhamradio.com/hvreg.pdf for a schematic.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I dont suppose there is an SMPS pwer supply design book for dummies ou t there somwhere. Seriously what would be a good book for transformer design. I downloaded the info ferroxcube had. I was hoping they had someready made transformers. I know they have made some for the military/gov, but I didnt see anything off the shelf available except their cores. Jimmie. |
#43
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Howdy,
It's a tough choice, most of the books in the subject have at least a couple of strong points or useful tricks. If I could have only one book and it had to cover all aspects of SMPS design I'd chose "Switching Power Supply Design" by Abraham L. Pressman. There are many individual books devoted to topology convolution, wound magnetics design, control systems engineering and the care and feeding of semiconductor switches. So no one book covers evey aspect thoughoughly but Abe's book is pretty good. He also wrote "Switching And Linear Power Supply Design, power Converter Design", which was his first book. Worth having for sometimes you might need a big linear supply. "Switchmode Power Supply Handbook" by Keith Billings contains many practical tips. For magetics "Transformer And Inductor Design Handbook" by Colonel Wm. T. McLyman is good. Another good book is Magnetics Engineering Fundamentals and Computer Aided Design" by Fred M. Lillenstein. "Transformers for Electronic Circuits" by Nathan Grossner is good too, especially for heavy metal. There is a copy of it online at some tube audio site but I can't find the link off hand. Also check the free software and app notes at Magnetics Inc. And at Micrometals Inc. too. Some decent vendors of needed odds and ends are Pleo, lodestone pacific, Robison Ind.,Dexter, MH&W. CWS Coil Winding Services is worth checking out too. For built transformers you'll mostly find low voltage and telecom stuff off the shelf. Can't recall seeing any high power (more than a couple of hundred watts) high voltage transformers off the shelf. Even low power HV stuff is rare unless you count the measly few hundreds of volts for EL and neon lighting. I really think this is a roll your own kind of affair. Furukawa TEX-E triple insulated wire might be handy without a segmented secondary bobbin. I hope you find some of this useful. There are a LOT of books on these subjects. Enough to cause my house to sag under the weight. I dont suppose there is an SMPS pwer supply design book for dummies ou t there somwhere. Seriously what would be a good book for transformer design. I downloaded the info ferroxcube had. I was hoping they had someready made transformers. I know they have made some for the military/gov, but I didnt see anything off the shelf available except their cores. Jimmie. |
#44
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On Sep 16, 8:15*pm, Grumpy The Mule wrote:
Howdy, It's a tough choice, most of the books in the subject have at least a couple of strong points or useful tricks. If I could have only one book and it had to cover all aspects of SMPS design I'd chose "Switching Power Supply Design" by Abraham L. Pressman. * There are many individual books devoted to topology convolution, wound magnetics design, control systems engineering and the care and feeding of semiconductor switches. *So no one book covers evey aspect thoughoughly but Abe's book is pretty good. * He also wrote "Switching And Linear Power Supply Design, power Converter Design", which was his first book. *Worth having for sometimes you might need a big linear supply. "Switchmode Power Supply Handbook" by Keith Billings contains many practical tips. For magetics "Transformer And Inductor Design Handbook" by Colonel Wm. T. McLyman is good. *Another good book is Magnetics Engineering Fundamentals and Computer Aided Design" by Fred M. Lillenstein. "Transformers for Electronic Circuits" by Nathan Grossner is good too, especially for heavy metal. *There is a copy of it online at some tube audio site but I can't find the link off hand. Also check the free software and app notes at Magnetics Inc. And at Micrometals Inc. too. * Some decent vendors of needed odds and ends are Pleo, lodestone pacific, Robison Ind.,Dexter, MH&W. CWS *Coil Winding Services is worth checking out too. For built transformers you'll mostly find low voltage and telecom stuff off the shelf. *Can't recall seeing any high power (more than a couple of hundred watts) high voltage transformers off the shelf. *Even low power HV stuff is rare unless you count the measly few hundreds of volts for EL and neon lighting. I really think this is a roll your own kind of affair. Furukawa TEX-E triple insulated wire might be handy without a segmented secondary bobbin. I hope you find some of this useful. *There are a LOT of books on these subjects. *Enough to cause my house to sag under the weight. I dont suppose there is an SMPS pwer supply design book for dummies ou t there somwhere. Seriously what would be a good book for transformer design. I downloaded the info ferroxcube had. I was hoping they had someready made transformers. I know they have made some for the military/gov, but I didnt see anything off the shelf available except their cores. Jimmie.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - My big problem at the moment is designinging a transformer. after much reading in the last couple of days I am begining to think it is not the big deal I thought it was. Since I am not trying to build 50k units I dont have to use the cheapest thing I can get by with and can overdesign a bit. I can see that just a few cores may take care of all of my needs. Oh well its back to work so it will be a few days before i get to piddle with this anymore. One of my jobs this week is to go through all the old UPSs we have in the store room and find out which ones are good and chunk the rest. Jimmie |
#45
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Howdy,
I found the URL for Grossner's book online. http://tinyurl.com/3z7mxv It seems to me that using the inverter oven transformer and IGBT with a flyback controller like UC3842 might work. Just a straight enough, hard-switched, flyback with single ended output. You'd "only" get 1.5-2KV out less output power maybe one half to three quarters as much... but that's not bad. Mmm! Old UPS's have lots of good parts in them, especially the ones with big 60Hz transformers and big heatsinks. Chuck them into the trunk of your automobile. My big problem at the moment is designinging a transformer. after much reading in the last couple of days I am begining to think it is not the big deal I thought it was. Since I am not trying to build 50k units I dont have to use the cheapest thing I can get by with and can overdesign a bit. I can see that just a few cores may take care of all of my needs. Oh well its back to work so it will be a few days before i get to piddle with this anymore. One of my jobs this week is to go through all the old UPSs we have in the store room and find out which ones are good and chunk the rest. Jimmie |
#46
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On Sep 17, 7:59*pm, Grumpy The Mule wrote:
Howdy, I found the URL for Grossner's book online.http://tinyurl.com/3z7mxv It seems to me that using the inverter oven transformer and IGBT with a flyback controller like UC3842 might work. Just a straight enough, hard-switched, flyback with single ended output. *You'd "only" get 1.5-2KV out less output power maybe one half to three quarters as much... but that's not bad. Mmm! *Old UPS's have lots of good parts in them, especially the ones with big 60Hz transformers and big heatsinks. *Chuck them into the trunk of your automobile. My big problem at the moment is designinging a transformer. after much reading in the last couple of days I am begining to think it is not the big deal I thought it was. Since I am not trying to build 50k units I dont have to use the cheapest thing I can get by with and can overdesign a bit. I can see that just a few cores may take care of all of my needs. Oh well its back to work so it will be a few days before i get to piddle with this anymore. One of my jobs this week is to go through all the old UPSs we have in the store room and find out which ones are good and chunk the rest. Jimmie- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I was reading up on push-pull topology of switching power supplies and see that they have problems with flux imbalance. I used to work on some power supplies that were push pull when I was in the USAF and the driver transistors were always failing, now I know why. I see that this isnt as much of a problem for FETs, How about IGBTs. Jimmie |
#47
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![]() Short answer, IGBTs are much better but not as good as MOSFETs. In many cases they're good enough that the turn-off tail can be ignored with very minor accommodation if any. In some cases an IGBT may be superior than a MOSFET because you don't have to worry about the switches RDSon drifting apart with temperature. Though now days you can buy a 75V 120A 0.0004 Ohm MOSFET in a T0-220 package... I guess RDSon isn't much of an issue. The main problem with both IGBT and regular old bipolar transistors in a push-pull circuit is the turn-off tail. The MOSFET does not have a turn-off tail. There are two classes of IGBT, punch-though and non-punch through. The punch-trough devices have better turn-off times but are more fragile. Lately I've been using Trench Field Stop IGBT's and they're very good. There are several means of preventing imbalance of the transformer in driven (not self oscillating) converters. The PWM will adjust the on-time to compensate for the tail as it regulates the output voltage. You can sense the differences with a circuit that converts time to voltage (a capacitor and a current source) then make the correction. There are clever flux balancing windings that can be added. One Unitrode app note describes how this can be done in the course of presenting a half-bridge power converter. I can't recall the document number. In the half bridge and full bridge sometimes a capacitor in series with the primary wdinding prevents saturation. I think you could build a two capacitor divider across the input voltage and at the center connect your transformer centertap lead. Then as the imbalance increases the voltage at the center tap with shift to compensate for it. I've seen half bridges built this way... might work for a push pull... just guessing as I've never tried it. A very small gap (0.001-0.003") will prevent saturation if the imbalance is minor and not decrease the magnetizing inductance too much. Sometimes any decrease is unwelcome though. A distributed gap material like powdered-iron, koolmu, MPP or sendust, might be useful if you expect to have flux imbalance problems. Pulse by pulse current limiting will mask the problem, so the transformer is in saturation but not far into it and the current limit keeps it from destroying the switches. Kinda risky to rely on this alone but it's helpful combined with other measures. In a current fed converter the transformer may saturate and then switches are effectively connected directly to the current source. No harm done! A current fed push-pull is a rugged topology. The VAX8800 computer uses one for its control and start-up power supply. I was reading up on push-pull topology of switching power supplies and see that they have problems with flux imbalance. I used to work on some power supplies that were push pull when I was in the USAF and the driver transistors were always failing, now I know why. I see that this isnt as much of a problem for FETs, How about IGBTs. Jimmie |
#48
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On Sep 18, 8:56*pm, Grumpy The Mule wrote:
Short answer, IGBTs are much better but not as good as MOSFETs. In many cases they're good enough that the turn-off tail can be ignored with very minor accommodation if any. *In some cases an IGBT may be superior than a MOSFET because you don't have to worry about the switches RDSon drifting apart with temperature. * Though now days you can buy a 75V 120A 0.0004 Ohm MOSFET in a T0-220 package... I guess RDSon isn't much of an issue. The main problem with both IGBT and regular old bipolar transistors in a push-pull circuit is the turn-off tail. *The MOSFET does not have a turn-off tail. *There are two classes of IGBT, punch-though and non-punch through. The punch-trough devices have better turn-off times but are more fragile. *Lately I've been using Trench Field Stop IGBT's and they're very good. There are several means of preventing imbalance of the transformer in driven (not self oscillating) converters. *The PWM will adjust the on-time to compensate for the tail as it regulates the output voltage. *You can sense the differences with a circuit that converts time to voltage (a capacitor and a current source) then make the correction. There are clever flux balancing windings that can be added. *One Unitrode app note describes how this can be done in the course of presenting a half-bridge power converter. *I can't recall the document number. In the half bridge and full bridge sometimes a capacitor in series with the primary wdinding *prevents saturation. *I think you could build a two capacitor divider across the input voltage and at the center connect your transformer centertap lead. *Then as the imbalance increases the voltage at the center tap with shift to compensate for it. I've seen half bridges built this way... might work for a push pull... just guessing as I've never tried it. A very small gap (0.001-0.003") will prevent saturation if the imbalance is minor and not decrease the magnetizing inductance too much. *Sometimes any decrease is unwelcome though. * A distributed gap material like powdered-iron, koolmu, MPP or sendust, might be useful if you expect to have flux imbalance problems. Pulse by pulse current limiting will mask the problem, so the transformer is in saturation but not far into it and the current limit keeps it from destroying the switches. *Kinda risky to rely on this alone but it's helpful combined with other measures. In a current fed converter the transformer may saturate and then switches are effectively connected directly to the current source. No harm done! *A current fed push-pull is a rugged topology. *The VAX8800 computer uses one for its control and start-up power supply. *I was reading up on push-pull topology of switching power supplies and see that they have problems with flux imbalance. I used to work on some power supplies that were push pull when I was in the USAF and the driver transistors were always failing, now I know why. I see that this isnt as much of a problem for FETs, How about IGBTs. Jimmie- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I work with a couple of pieces of equipment that synthesises a repetitive waveform by playing back the waeform from a ROM. I thought I could do something like this to control the on-off timing of the IGBT. This would set a minimum time between turn on and turn off and the rest would be controlled by PWM. |
#49
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This is one advantage of the flyback and asymmetrical forward
converters. They will reset if there's enough dead time. So in those cases your ROM circuit would do the trick. Symmetrical topologies like push-pull, half-bridge and full-bridge can saturate even if there is plenty of dead time. The core is always being driven by the control circuit, so it has no time to relax, If the drive isn't equal and opposite for each half cycle there is an offset which the core accumulates. Eventually it will saturate. unless there is some means to compensate for the imbalance of the drive (like a coupling capacitor.) So here the ROM circuit will not help. wrote in news:8e344554-a8d0-4796-ae20- : I work with a couple of pieces of equipment that synthesises a repetitive waveform by playing back the waeform from a ROM. I thought I could do something like this to control the on-off timing of the IGBT. This would set a minimum time between turn on and turn off and the rest would be controlled by PWM. |
#50
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On Sep 19, 11:57*am, Grumpy The Mule wrote:
This is one advantage of the flyback and asymmetrical forward converters. *They will reset if there's enough dead time. So in those cases your ROM circuit would do the trick. Symmetrical topologies like push-pull, half-bridge and full-bridge can saturate even if there is plenty of dead time. * The core is always being driven by the control circuit, so it has no time to relax, *If the drive isn't equal and opposite for each half cycle there is an offset which the core accumulates. *Eventually it will saturate. unless there is some means to compensate for the imbalance of the drive (like a coupling capacitor.) So here the ROM circuit will not help. wrote in news:8e344554-a8d0-4796-ae20- : I work with a couple of pieces of equipment that synthesises a repetitive waveform by playing back the waeform from a ROM. I thought I could do something like this to control the on-off timing of the IGBT. This would set a minimum time between turn on and turn off and the rest would be controlled by PWM.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I think I get it. Would this explain why in a push-pull topology after the transistors have been replaced a couple of times the power supply just keeps failing for no apparent reason? Are you saying that in other topologies it doesnt saturate or that it doesnt matter if it does? Ordered Abe's book. Jimmie |
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