Re: Re (2): Voltage halver.

Liste des GroupesRevenir à se repair 
Sujet : Re: Re (2): Voltage halver.
De : legg (at) *nospam* nospam.magma.ca (legg)
Groupes : sci.electronics.repair
Date : 04. Apr 2024, 19:11:35
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <4rmt0jt9jd9gsdq7hv2s8mv0rl6euqfnvi@4ax.com>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : Forte Agent 4.2/32.1118
On 04 Apr 2024 09:37:02 -0700, peter@easthope.ca wrote:

In article <vhct0j9ao9d75ad7dr47r4eha1t9knt5d2@4ax.com>, legg <legg@nospam.magma.ca> wrote:
What does the microscope manufacturer supply for this function?
>
The scope is a Zeiss OPMI 1.  Google finds many listings of various
models with various power supplies. 
>
This scope was donated without the power supply; I can't say what the
original supply was but Zeiss built nice equipment capable of
continuous and reliable duty.
>
If you have a >6V source, simple 555-type buck regulators are
 available with minimum output listed as 1.8V
 
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005006482720286.html?
 
These generally regulate the negative output terminal, unfiltered.
This would not be an issue for an isolated 6V incandescent lamp.
>
Good idea.  Will see what Lee's Electronics has in stock. I expect to
have to limit the voltage somehow to prevent burning the bulb.
>
Thanks,            ... P.

Using a lower voltage wall wart as a source is the easiest limiting
method. Overvolting the bulb by 50% temporarily will not be
catastrophic. If the wall wart is internally limited for power or
current, then overvoltage is unlikely.

There may be issues with wall wart curremt limiting which is best
addressed with filtering (~ capacitive) between the two devices.

The 555 buck regulators are dumb, in themselves, which is often an
advantage driving nonlinear (incandescent) loads. The unit with the
large yellow PTC on-board is a good bet as load protection.

Just remeber that the 'common' rail in the system will be the +rail
of the 555 buck output. The wall wart won't care - neither will
the lamp. You're effectively driving the lamp with a negative supply.

The unfiltered output is a high frequency square wave with peaks
equal to the wall wart's labelled voltage.

Filtering that output to DC would require an external 5A buck diode,
a 5A choke and an electrolytic cap - effectively doubling the size,
weight (and cost) of the regulator section, at no benefit to the lamp.

RL


Date Sujet#  Auteur
3 Apr 24 * Voltage halver.15peter
3 Apr 24 +- Re: Voltage halver.1Roger Hayter
3 Apr 24 +* Re: Voltage halver.5Liz Tuddenham
3 Apr 24 i`* Re: Voltage halver.4Roger Hayter
3 Apr 24 i +- Re: Voltage halver.1Roger Hayter
3 Apr 24 i `* Re: Voltage halver.2Liz Tuddenham
4 Apr 24 i  `- Re (2): Voltage halver.1peter
4 Apr 24 `* Re: Voltage halver.8legg
4 Apr 24  `* Re (2): Voltage halver.7peter
4 Apr 24   +- Re: Re (2): Voltage halver.1legg
4 Apr 24   `* Re: Re (2): Voltage halver.5legg
4 Apr 24    `* Re: Re (2): Voltage halver.4legg
7 Apr 24     +- Re: Re (2): Voltage halver.1legg
25 Apr 24     `* Re (3): Voltage halver.2peter
25 Apr 24      `- Re: Re (3): Voltage halver.1legg

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal