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Old January 11th 04, 10:17 PM
Dave Platt
 
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In article ,
Dr. A.T. Squeegee wrote:

I want to design a power supply for a low power rig with protection for
reverse and overvoltage. The requirement would be about 1A at 12-14V.
What is the best way of achieving this? I guess a diode would give
reverse voltage protection but the 0.6V drop is a problem.


Power Schottky diodes are available that have a forward voltage
drop of 0.3 or less. More expensive, yes, but they really do work.


Another trick I've seen is to use a hefty power MOSFET (one with a low
Rds[on]), with the source and drain leads reversed, in series with the
power. Depending on the voltages involved, you can either connect the
gate directly to the opposite side of the power supply, or (if the
supply voltage may exceed the Vgs limit) to a high-Z resistive divider.

When a power supply of the correct polarity is hooked up, the MOSFET's
intrinsic substrate diode is biased forward (conducting normally) and
the MOSFET is turned on "hard" (giving a low Rds, and thus a very low
forward voltage drop). If the supply is hooked up backwards, the
MOSFET is turned off (the gate is pulled down towards hard depletion)
and the substrate diode is reverse-biased, switching it off.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
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Old January 11th 04, 10:17 PM
Dave Platt
 
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In article ,
Dr. A.T. Squeegee wrote:

I want to design a power supply for a low power rig with protection for
reverse and overvoltage. The requirement would be about 1A at 12-14V.
What is the best way of achieving this? I guess a diode would give
reverse voltage protection but the 0.6V drop is a problem.


Power Schottky diodes are available that have a forward voltage
drop of 0.3 or less. More expensive, yes, but they really do work.


Another trick I've seen is to use a hefty power MOSFET (one with a low
Rds[on]), with the source and drain leads reversed, in series with the
power. Depending on the voltages involved, you can either connect the
gate directly to the opposite side of the power supply, or (if the
supply voltage may exceed the Vgs limit) to a high-Z resistive divider.

When a power supply of the correct polarity is hooked up, the MOSFET's
intrinsic substrate diode is biased forward (conducting normally) and
the MOSFET is turned on "hard" (giving a low Rds, and thus a very low
forward voltage drop). If the supply is hooked up backwards, the
MOSFET is turned off (the gate is pulled down towards hard depletion)
and the substrate diode is reverse-biased, switching it off.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
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Old January 11th 04, 10:56 PM
Dave Platt
 
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In article ,
Mike W wrote:

Another trick I've seen is to use a hefty power MOSFET (one with a low
Rds[on]), with the source and drain leads reversed, in series with the
power. Depending on the voltages involved, you can either connect the
gate directly to the opposite side of the power supply, or (if the
supply voltage may exceed the Vgs limit) to a high-Z resistive divider.


Nice one Dave


Not my idea originally, by any means. If I recall correctly I first
saw it in Bob Pease's "Troubleshooting Analog Circuits" book - a
text I recommend to anyone who is fiddling around with analog
circuitry in any way.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
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Old January 11th 04, 10:56 PM
Dave Platt
 
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In article ,
Mike W wrote:

Another trick I've seen is to use a hefty power MOSFET (one with a low
Rds[on]), with the source and drain leads reversed, in series with the
power. Depending on the voltages involved, you can either connect the
gate directly to the opposite side of the power supply, or (if the
supply voltage may exceed the Vgs limit) to a high-Z resistive divider.


Nice one Dave


Not my idea originally, by any means. If I recall correctly I first
saw it in Bob Pease's "Troubleshooting Analog Circuits" book - a
text I recommend to anyone who is fiddling around with analog
circuitry in any way.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
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Old January 12th 04, 01:16 AM
Richard Hosking
 
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Jim
The rig will be powered from a 12V source eg battery/AC wallwart
/whatever. However, internally the rig needs various voltages, including
1.8V for logic and -12V. I want to ptotect against inadvertent
overvoltage or reverse voltage. I want it to be as efficient as
possible, so I dont want to use a linear regulator. SMPS seems the
obvious choice. I may well shield the PSU section, and isolate the
ground etc to reduce noise. I was seeking advice from the experts here
as to whether the idea is feasible and whether there is a redaymade
solution.

Richard

Jim Weir wrote:
I'm not understanding something here. You want to design a power supply that
protects against reverse voltage and overvoltage. OK. Is this power supply a
battery or are you actually building a power supply that runs from the wall
outlet?

The requirements are quite different, depending on what you are trying to
achieve.

Jim



Richard Hosking
shared these priceless pearls of wisdom:

-Dear all
-I want to design a power supply for a low power rig with protection for
-reverse and overvoltage.


Jim Weir, VP Eng. RST Eng. WX6RST
A&P, CFI, and other good alphabet soup


  #19   Report Post  
Old January 12th 04, 01:16 AM
Richard Hosking
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Jim
The rig will be powered from a 12V source eg battery/AC wallwart
/whatever. However, internally the rig needs various voltages, including
1.8V for logic and -12V. I want to ptotect against inadvertent
overvoltage or reverse voltage. I want it to be as efficient as
possible, so I dont want to use a linear regulator. SMPS seems the
obvious choice. I may well shield the PSU section, and isolate the
ground etc to reduce noise. I was seeking advice from the experts here
as to whether the idea is feasible and whether there is a redaymade
solution.

Richard

Jim Weir wrote:
I'm not understanding something here. You want to design a power supply that
protects against reverse voltage and overvoltage. OK. Is this power supply a
battery or are you actually building a power supply that runs from the wall
outlet?

The requirements are quite different, depending on what you are trying to
achieve.

Jim



Richard Hosking
shared these priceless pearls of wisdom:

-Dear all
-I want to design a power supply for a low power rig with protection for
-reverse and overvoltage.


Jim Weir, VP Eng. RST Eng. WX6RST
A&P, CFI, and other good alphabet soup


  #20   Report Post  
Old January 12th 04, 01:19 AM
Richard Hosking
 
Posts: n/a
Default

This sounds like a good solution

Thanks
Richard

Dave Platt wrote:
In article ,
Dr. A.T. Squeegee wrote:


I want to design a power supply for a low power rig with protection for
reverse and overvoltage. The requirement would be about 1A at 12-14V.
What is the best way of achieving this? I guess a diode would give
reverse voltage protection but the 0.6V drop is a problem.


Power Schottky diodes are available that have a forward voltage
drop of 0.3 or less. More expensive, yes, but they really do work.



Another trick I've seen is to use a hefty power MOSFET (one with a low
Rds[on]), with the source and drain leads reversed, in series with the
power. Depending on the voltages involved, you can either connect the
gate directly to the opposite side of the power supply, or (if the
supply voltage may exceed the Vgs limit) to a high-Z resistive divider.

When a power supply of the correct polarity is hooked up, the MOSFET's
intrinsic substrate diode is biased forward (conducting normally) and
the MOSFET is turned on "hard" (giving a low Rds, and thus a very low
forward voltage drop). If the supply is hooked up backwards, the
MOSFET is turned off (the gate is pulled down towards hard depletion)
and the substrate diode is reverse-biased, switching it off.


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