On 2018-Sep-21, at 3:20 PM, Noel Chiappa via cctalk wrote:
From: Mattis
Lind
The H744 is a buck converter. You can read about
buck converters here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_converter
Wow, that was incredibly hard to read; no clear and simple explanation of the
basic concept of how it works, before getting into the details!
If I understand it correctly, it stores part of the incoming energy of a block
of current in the field around the inductor; later, switches change state to
create a loop that includes the inductor, and it uses the stored energy to
cause electrons to flow around the new (temporary, because of the switch)
circuit. Is that about right?
Yes, that's a basic part of the operation.
The H744 manual doesn't really talk much about
that aspect of the circuit's
operation (at least in terms of 'we use this trick to get all the energy out
of the incoming current flow'); it just describes the stuff around the coil as
"an LC filter". It says "This type circuit is basically only an averaging
device", which I wouldn't say is really on point - that would describe my
(incorrect) prior description as well as the correct one.
And just to make it even more confusing, it says "most of the input voltage is
absorbed across the emitter-collector of Q5", but I looked, and Q5 is tiny,
and I eventually figured out that that only applies to the +15V needed to run
the voltage regulator.
Q5 is functioning as a common-base stage in the driver chain (base tied to fixed +15V).
It is not part of the +15V supply to the 723, that is provided by R2, zener D2, C2.
Q5 'voltage isolates' the 723 from the higher voltages around Q4-3-2 while
nonetheless providing a control signal path from the 723 to the drivers.