Hello Rob,
s?ndag 29 mars 2020 skrev Rob Jarratt <robert.jarratt at ntlworld.com>:
Thanks Mattis. I do test it with a load, although to
be honest I forgot to
do this when I took the measurements yesterday. I use a modern-ish IDE disk
and a load board from a MicroVAX 2000 as the dummy load. I don?t know if
that is sufficient.
Do you know the nominal output rating for the supply?
It might be the case that even with load board the load is uneven. But it
sounds less likely.
I don?t know enough about PSUs to make the secondary side drawing more
logical unfortunately.
Can be hard. But a good idea is try to minimise the length of wires. Maybe
use designators for networks instead of wires to make the schematic more
readable. On the other hand I was reading the post on the iPad.
I have a variac and a bench power supply, so I could do what you suggest.
To stay safe you need a protection transformer as well. Otherwise the the
bench
supply will end up at line potential. With the protection transformer
in place the circuit will be left floating in relation to earth. With a
variac you can then vary the input and keep it within safe limits. If you
don?t have a protection transformer and variac then another bench DC supply
that can give up to 100 V can be used instead.
Could you be a bit more specific about where to apply what, so I don?t do
it wrong or damage something? Would you put the bench PSU across the UC3842
Vcc and Gnd pins? I am not sure what would happen if the normal supply to
the UC3842 was still in place with the bench power supply also trying to
supply power. Would it be wise to lift R32 so nothing conflicts with the
bench power supply?
Absolutely right. I should have been more explicit about where to introduce
external supply. But as you say, lift R32 to isolate the switching
controller and feed in the bench supply current at VCC. Check the data
sheet for what is approriate voltage.
Good luck!
/Mattis
Thanks
Rob
*From:* Mattis Lind <mattislind at gmail.com>
*Sent:* 29 March 2020 06:39
*To:* rob at jarratt.me.uk; Rob Jarratt <robert.jarratt at ntlworld.com>;
General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
*Subject:* Re: VAXmate PSU
Hello Rob,
l?rdag 28 mars 2020 skrev Rob Jarratt via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org>:
I have posted here a couple of times because I have a failed VAXmate PSU. I
have just posted a little bit more information here:
https://robs-old-computers.com/2020/03/28/further-
analysis-of-the-vaxmate-h7
270-psu-failure/ with some scope traces and a greatly improved schematic.
Although the schematic is likely to have errors still. Unfortunately, a
stray scope probe ground lead blew the fuse so now I have to wait for a new
fuse to arrive before I can continue work.
I would really like to know if all the spiking I am seeing is to be
expected, and any suggestions why it appears to be detecting an
overcurrent?
There do not appear to be any shorts on the secondary side, but that could
be wrong of course. I don't know if a genuine short anywhere would cause it
to trip the SCR quite so quickly (within 20ms of the switching transistor
starting to switch).
This is fly back design and I would expect some spiking when the
transistor shuts off.
Then for over-current. It might be so that there are over-voltage
protection on the outputs that kicks in. A crowbar that short circuits the
output. It looks like there is such a circuit on 5 and 12 V. But to be
honest the output circuit schematic is hard to read.
If you have no load or little load or un-even load the PSU might hae
problems to regulate. I know for fact that the PSU in the MicroVAX 2000
need to have a dummy load when no hard drive is installed otherwise there
will be uneven load which it has hard time to handle sonce the output
regulation is based on the sum of the outputs somehow. It will trip the
crowbar on over voltage on one of the outputs otherwise.
What if you supply the control circuitry on the primary side using a bench
lab supply and then connect a protection transformer and a variac in series
to the normal AC inlet.
Slowly increase input AC voltage while monitoring source voltage and
output voltages. At what AC input voltages does it trip? What is the
output voltages at this point?
If both voltages exceed normal and the crowbar trips I would think that
the feedback network somehow reports to low output voltage to the control
circuitry. Maybe the opto coupler is bad?
Sorry. A lot of guessing here. But it is hard to tell withour more
measurements.
/Mattis
Any thoughts gratefully received.
Thanks
Rob