Home
JAQForum Ver 24.01
Log In or Join  
Active Topics
Local Time 18:02 28 Nov 2024 Privacy Policy
Jump to

Notice. New forum software under development. It's going to miss a few functions and look a bit ugly for a while, but I'm working on it full time now as the old forum was too unstable. Couple days, all good. If you notice any issues, please contact me.

Forum Index : Microcontroller and PC projects : Anyone interested in lab power supplies?

Author Message
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 03:35pm 30 Apr 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

This design has been a bit of entertainment for me for day or three. It's for a lab quality power supply, nothing fancy but hopefully it should do the right things reasonably well. In common with many modern supplies the front end is entirely digital, using a RP2040-Zero for the embedded computing and a ILI9341 for control and instrumentation.

Circuit:
mini PSU 01.pdf

It's a completely linear supply to keep electrical noise down, with digital and analogue circuits on separate PCBs that are stacked together. It's intended to be cased and, in theory, will fit into a case about 110mm wide x110mm high x 150mm deep. To manage that I intend to use a CPU cooler heatsink & fan. It should handle it easily as the maximum dissipation is only about 25W. This isn't a high output supply! To achieve that the input voltage to the regulator can be switched, so below 9V it is halved. Output should be 2A up to 9V then 1A from 9V to 18V.

I've designed some PCBs for it and they *should* be ok, but I've not tested everything.

Don't expect me to rush to make this. I'm notorious for designing power supplies that don't get built. TBH, I'm a little more tempted by this one as it's a manageable size and it has a PicoMite in it. :)

Whether it's worth even considering building it is something else. I can get a perfectly usable ready built "Duratool" one from CPC for about 35UKP and the transformer alone for this would be about 16UKP.









Edited 2023-05-01 01:57 by Mixtel90
Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
Volhout
Guru

Joined: 05/03/2018
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 4247
Posted: 07:43pm 30 Apr 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Hi Mick,

At first glance D15 needs to be a shottky diode.

The voltage loop gain seems very high, I expect stability problems. Maybe a resistor in the emitter of Q4?

U2 is powered from 12V, but its inputs U2-3 can be 10v. Is that okay?

Volhout
Edited 2023-05-01 05:47 by Volhout
PicomiteVGA PETSCII ROBOTS
 
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 08:19pm 30 Apr 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Agreed on your first two points. Loop gain is pretty high. Luckily Q5 has neither very high gain nor very high speed, I don't think. :) Yep, an emitter resistor for Q4 is a good idea - I can always capacitor bypass it to trim things.

Ah - the differential amp...
The LM324 top end of the differential input voltage is VCC-1.7V so I think it will probably survive. lol. Do you think it would be better powered from 24V? It can run off up to 32V. 12V just happened to be handy and it would give me some flexibility for increasing the transformer voltage to 12-0-12 (no longer safe for the LM324).
Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
Amnesie
Guru

Joined: 30/06/2020
Location: Germany
Posts: 396
Posted: 08:39pm 30 Apr 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

I can only speak for me, but I would love to see a lab bench PSU driven by MMBASIC!

Greetings
Daniel
 
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 09:08pm 30 Apr 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

You can be the guinea pig and build one if you like, Daniel. :)

As Volhout said though, no guarantees about stability. You almost always need to tweak them.

I've just done a couple of mods. If all the components are mounted on the front of the analogue PCB then you can use 50mm spacers to join it tp the front one, and wire links or something for J2. You can also put Q5 standing up at the back of the board with a small heatsink. This arrangement should be ok for experimentation up to 100mA or so, just to iron out early problems. The holes below the display take standard terminals.
Edited 2023-05-01 07:14 by Mixtel90
Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
Volhout
Guru

Joined: 05/03/2018
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 4247
Posted: 08:22am 01 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

@Mick,

Additionally I would make this modification. Just to cope with stability problems:





R100/R102 can be 0 ohm to achieve your circuit.
In case of stability probelms you can change R100 and R102 into 10k or so, and R101 and R103 ino either capacitors (roll-off) or into resistors (limit gain).

Regards

Volhout
Edited 2023-05-01 18:23 by Volhout
PicomiteVGA PETSCII ROBOTS
 
JohnS
Guru

Joined: 18/11/2011
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3804
Posted: 01:20pm 02 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

  Mixtel90 said  I can get a perfectly usable ready built "Duratool" one from CPC for about 35UKP

Got a link please?

(I couldn't find anything like that price.)

John
Edited 2023-05-02 23:21 by JohnS
 
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 01:46pm 02 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

https://cpc.farnell.com/search?st=duratool%20power%20supplies&gs=true

I don't think I'm going to bother building one. It's probably not worth the hassle at these prices. CPC give free postage over 20UKP (plus vat) too.

They do a lot of other PSUs. These are the cheap ones. :)
Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
IanRogers

Senior Member

Joined: 09/12/2022
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 151
Posted: 01:55pm 02 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

https://cpc.farnell.com/duratool/d03233/power-supply-1ch-18v-3a-adjustable/dp/IN08000

Cheers for that Mick... It is a very good price...
I'd give my left arm to be ambidextrous
 
JohnS
Guru

Joined: 18/11/2011
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3804
Posted: 06:12pm 02 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Thanks, Mick - don't know why I couldn't find that!

John
 
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 04:47pm 15 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

I might not be building a PSU, but I've had some fun putting this design together over the last couple of days.

I did it primarily to try out EasyEDA - which I'm starting to like. It's definitely a better system than Sprint Layout 6 and TinyCAD, but it's not as fast to use. Highly recommended so far. I've not attempted to create my own components yet so I've no idea how difficult that is. It'll have a job to beat Sprint Layout for that.


Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 08:18am 28 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

I'm not sure if this pic belongs here or on the workshop thread! However, I've finally got a bench power supply that's small enough at 100mm wide and 80mm deep. :)



All the clever stuff is in a single Chinese module from ebay. I've added a 7508 regulator to feed a USB socket and a sort of temperature controlled fan that still needs work on it. :) It's a buck-boost converter and is powered from a 19V power brick. Max output is 30V, min is 0.6V and it can dissipate 35W according to the spec (not tested). I'm still getting the hang of the control system, which is slightly weird as expected. Seems to work quite nicely but is a bit "sluggish". I get the feeling that there is too much capacitance across the output, but hey, what do you expect for that price? It beats any LM317 design for flexibility hands down.
Edited 2023-05-28 18:20 by Mixtel90
Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
lizby
Guru

Joined: 17/05/2016
Location: United States
Posts: 3150
Posted: 11:28am 28 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

Nice build-out. I have and like the module (for the same reason--space occupied), but haven't customized it.
PicoMite, Armmite F4, SensorKits, MMBasic Hardware, Games, etc. on fruitoftheshed
 
Mixtel90

Guru

Joined: 05/10/2019
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 6798
Posted: 11:48am 28 May 2023
Copy link to clipboard 
Print this post

I had an even smaller version (just the front half of this box) with a different module but there was no cooling and I eventually bricked the module by accidentally setting OVP to zero. Now I can't even get to the settings screen to fix it! No great loss as the text was tiny and setting things was a pain. I'm now considering re-using the case and fitting a different insides to make a general purpose audio oscillator of some sort.
Mick

Zilog Inside! nascom.info for Nascom & Gemini
Preliminary MMBasic docs & my PCB designs
 
Print this page


To reply to this topic, you need to log in.

© JAQ Software 2024