![]() | |
| Home Page | Mark Forums Read | Today's Posts | My Replies | Classifieds | Reviews | Photo Gallery | Web Links | Share Files | Advertise With Us | Ad List |
| |||||||
| Hobbycnc (Products) Discuss Hobbycnc controller boards here. |
| This forum is sponsored by: |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
A little help here, I hooked my kit up, but didn't put power to the board as yet (safety reasons, good thing too), first thing happened is the four amp fuse blew, tried it again.......blew again, now before i go any further i have to tell you that i didn't use the supplied switch cause it was so small that the plastic on the switch started to melt before i could get the wires soldered, so i used another switch, this one was rated @ 250V, 16A, I figured this is what caused my problem, so i got a smaller switch rated @ 125V 6A, didn't have any more 4A fuses so i tried 3A.....blew, 5A.......blew, 10A.....worked, both switches worked with 10A, now move on to the next problem, out of my DIY rewinded microwave tranformer i'm getting 26.8VAC roughly, after being rectified i'm getting 43.3VDC, this does not compute, I can undo a few windings but don't want to till i find the problem or unless it's really called for, has anyone had similar issues or can assist me in resolving this. |
|
#2
| ||||
| ||||
| Hi A rectified AC voltage is roughly 1.4 times greater so in your case 26.8 X 1.4= 37.5 volts. If you want a certain voltage you can use this formula to work it backwards, ie if you require 35 volts DC divide 35 by the 1.4 (this is the RMS value) = 25 volts AC With regard to blowing fuses so long you have checked and double checked your connections you will probably find it is the inrush current to the transformer and nothing to do with the switches you have used. Hope this helps Andy |
|
#4
| ||||
| ||||
| Where are you measuring your voltage? At the bridge rectifier or after your smoothing caps,I have noticed before with power supplies the output voltage can be affected with size of caps, one of the more knowledgeable members might be able to give a more scientific explanation, I am only drawing on my past experience Andy |
|
#6
| |||
| |||
| you may find this works had the same problem with a 2a fuse on our system the original fuse blew, i believe it was something to do with my poking around to see what it does! i replaced it and it keeps blowing, oh what have i done! well the fuse that came out was a 2at 250vac the important "t" is timelag it allows a start up over current on switch on replace it with a T rated fuse never had a problem in 2 years one other thing i found out is that all these thing work on magic grey smoke and once it puffs up escapes and goes away it will never work again! |
|
#7
| |||
| |||
| The rating of your switch can have no influence whatsover on the fuses blowing unless it fails in a condition putting a short across the line, which has obviously not happened. You could have a giant motor starting switch in place of the original switch and it would cause no problems. If the switch was unable to carry the inrush current or break the running current it would fail, but not in a fashion to cause fuses to blow unless a massive meltdown caused a short across the line - extremely unlikely. Failure would normally occur after a long period of deterioration of the contacts over many switching cycles by erosion until the contacts welded closed or couldn't make contact. Excessive inrush current to your system is probably caused by having a large capacitive load on the rectified output of your transformer. A discharged capacitor is essentially a dead short on the transformer output winding for the first half cycle, with initial charging current limited only by the resistance of the transformer secondary winding and wiring and the voltage drop of the rectifier diodes - all very small. Perhaps your home-wound transformer has lower than normal winding resistance - a good thing for efficiency, but leading to your problem. Putting in larger and larger fuses until they stop blowing is not a proper solution to a problem of this nature. You end up with a fuse that will not blow with the inrush current, but which provides almost no protection for other more common types of circuit failures. This is akin to the common problem of people putting 30 amp fuses in their 15 amp circuits "...because the fuses kept blowing..." and having their house burn down because they didn't find the real problem which was an overloaded circuit. Assuming the problem is capacitor charging upon turn-on and not a wiring or fundamental design error, the proper solution is to provide a low value resistor in series with either the primary or the secondary winding of your transformer and provide a time delay relay (or, much less desirably, a manual switch) to short the resistor after the initial charging of the capacitor bank. There are also negative temperature coefficient inrush limiters that you simply wire in series with your transformer primary, but selection requires more sophistication than I can offer and detailed evaluation of the circuit operating conditions. I can't advise on the appropriate resistor value in the absence of more info on your circuit, but a few ohms at a few watts would probably do the trick. Values are very non-critical. Remember that a discrete resistor having ten times the resistance of your secondary circuit loop will reduce peak inrush current to about 10% of what it was initially. The resistor should be a higher value if used in the primary circuit than if used in the secondary circuit by about the voltage ratio of the transformer. Helps a lot to have a 'scope or a peak holding DVM to monitor what is happening with the peak current as you experiment. Time delay is also non-critical, as the capacitor bank will charge up within a few cycles of the line power upon turn on provided the resistance of your series resistor is not excessive. 0.5 to 5 seconds would be fine. If you are a good scrounger, you should be able to find a time delay relay or module at low cost in electronic surplus stores or catalogs. You could also build a simple delay circuit controlling a common relay, but that's a whole new project. Common types of time delay relays are thermal relays inside a glass envelope of an octal-base tube, solid-state circuits inside a plastic case with an octal base, or small plastic blocks with terminals sticking out. You can also find time delay relays in Grainger's catalog (www.grainger.com) or the various electronic supply catalogs like DigiKey or Mouser. The contacts only need to be rated for a little more than the normal operating current because the capacitors will have charged up by the time the relay contacts close, shorting out the series resistor. If the resistor is in the secondary circuit, the TDR contacts must be isolated from the line power, which excludes the less expensive modular time delays designed for delaying motor starting in HVAC systems. If the series resistor is in the primary circuit, the cheap modules would be useable because you don't require line isolation there. Consider the following: 120 VAC SSAC solid state timer #THC412A. 6 amp max. 3 second on delay relay. 2" x 2". 3/4"-1/4" terminals. Stock #RL2600 $6.95 at www.candhsales.com. Check out the minimum holding current specs with SSAC and measure the minimum input current of your kit before using this type of TDR. They are designed for larger loads and may drop out if the running current is too low. In that case, go with a standard TDR that doel not depend upon load current to maintain contact. Have fun. awright |
|
#8
| |||
| |||
|
|
#11
| ||||
| ||||
| The AC peak and therefore max DC max. of full wave rectifier is RMS x 1.414 Al.
__________________ CNC, Mechatronics Integration and Machine Design. “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.” Albert E. |
|
#12
| |||
| |||
| On a real full wave rectifier circuit with filter you have to substract the Diode's VF voltage in order to find the "no load" output voltage. Last edited by kreutz; 02-25-2007 at 08:18 PM. |
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| X-Axis Blowing fuses | Thom45 | Commercial CNC Wood Routers | 0 | 02-21-2007 01:33 PM |
| Blowing fuses | kaderick | General Electronics Discussion | 2 | 12-05-2006 11:34 AM |
| Blown Fuses | sommerjd | General Electronics Discussion | 6 | 10-01-2006 04:02 AM |
| Blowing the fuses | rocks101 | Hobbycnc (Products) | 2 | 02-26-2005 03:00 AM |
| Motor tuning and Blowing fuses | DAB_Design | Gecko Drives | 0 | 11-01-2004 07:10 PM |