Relay controlled PSU thermistor

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Behemot
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Originally posted by TELVM
    Thanks for your efforts Behemot . Here, token of gratitude .
    I could use that at home
    Originally posted by TELVM
    What do you think that 161Ω resistor in series with the relay coil is for?
    Pretty much as tom says, some drop on resistor to bring the voltage down as relay is 12V rated.

    Leave a comment:


  • tom66
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    9V coil, 161 ohm resistor drops 13.7V.

    Leave a comment:


  • TELVM
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Thanks for your efforts Behemot . Here, token of gratitude .


    What do you think that 161Ω resistor in series with the relay coil is for?

    Leave a comment:


  • Behemot
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    OK. I got this AcBel-manufactured Supermicro server PSU fro end of march, 2010. Both rectifiers are indeed in parallel, nothing special here.

    There is relay, 12 V controlled. As far as I can tell, it has NO connection to secondary. Primary and secondary part are really nicely separated in this PSU so it could not even have any. Voltage on one pin of the relay is something over 9 V while being turned on.

    ADD// Ok, I am getting something. The non-grounded pin of relay is connected through 161ohm resistor to the same potential as is on Vcc pin of CM6800AG. This pin is the supply voltage for the CM6800 controller of some 13,76 V. It means the relay is actually being feed from the same voltage as the CM6800 is. It seems to be using tiny transformer to produce this supply voltage and small circuit from SMD transistors and stuff.

    Hope it helps, I think I have depleted my luck with working on the high side for today and I am mounting it all back together
    Last edited by Behemot; 01-09-2013, 03:33 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Behemot
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Originally posted by tom66
    Another thing it may be for is to save power in standby mode (not always used to short out the thermistor -- check.) Could even use separate bridge and cap for standby supply.
    Umm, there actually are two bridge rectifiers. You are saying they may not be in parallel, but in separate circuits?? Worth checking

    Leave a comment:


  • TELVM
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Originally posted by Behemot
    …but if you would ask really very nicely ...


    Leave a comment:


  • tom66
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Another thing it may be for is to save power in standby mode (not always used to short out the thermistor -- check.) Could even use separate bridge and cap for standby supply.

    Leave a comment:


  • Behemot
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    From the PSU I am reviewing ATM, it is almost instantly. I have just put the thing back together…but if you would ask really very nicely, I may be willing to open that thing again and do some reverse engineering…or at least try to

    Leave a comment:


  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Hmm... tempted to "add" one into my PSU to save a watt or two ... or not...

    Will have to measure the thermistor to see how much loss it really is, at least for a lower-power PSU.

    Leave a comment:


  • TELVM
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Seems the 'click' is seriously intriguing the people :

    http://www.evga.com/forums/tm.aspx?m...e=1&print=true

    http://www.ocia.net/reviews/oczzx850/page4.shtml

    http://www.ocztechnologyforum.com/fo...ain-by-itself&

    http://www.silentpcreview.com/forums...65250&p=567236

    http://www.overclockers.com/forums/s...d.php?t=721437

    http://forums.hexus.net/power-suppli...wered-off.html



    Judging from this video:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9llD5oXVTg8

    the relay clicks in almost inmediately (less than half a second) after pressing the comp power-on button.

    Looks like they could be wiring the relay coil directly to +12V rail ...
    Last edited by TELVM; 01-07-2013, 06:42 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • TELVM
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    A crude test: If any forumer has a PSU with relayed out thermistor, he could keep his ear (not too) close to the PSU exhaust fan while powering on, listen for the relay 'click', and give a rough estimate (v.g. 'about instantly', 'about half a second delay', 'about five seconds delay', or whatever).

    (I'd do the experiment myself, but unfortunately don't have any PSU with relay).

    Leave a comment:


  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Quite possibly.

    I do have to mention that relays with high voltage coils are large and expensive so likely that's the main reason for not using cap voltage directly. I don't think I have any PSUs with the inrush resistor relayed out, if someone could reverse engineer it that would be interesting. Theoretically speaking 12V direct is good enough too, as that drops off and turns off the relay well before the main caps discharge down to zero. Also the nice thing is that there shouldn't be any droop spike that would mistakenly turn "off" the relay... any spikes like that would have been a problem anyway...

    Anyone have some real numbers in losses in this resistor in a properly operating PSU?

    Leave a comment:


  • TELVM
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    You may well be right eccerr0r.

    But it catches my attention that all, or nearly all, OEM PSU thermistor relays I see feed coil with 12VDC.



    I'm just wondering ...

    · As the worst of the inrush current is over very quickly, after just a few milliseconds:


    · And since there must be (I guess) some time delay in milliseconds from the instant of switching the PSU on until the +12V rail is fully alive and kicking.

    · And since the relay takes some milliseconds from receiving the +12V juice to the closing of contacts.


    Could it be possible that the 'natural delay of things' is just OK for this task, no extra delay circuit is needed, and that's what OEMs are doing (feeding the relay directly from the +12V rail)?

    Leave a comment:


  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    I think cheapie's suggestion is right (and cheap!), instead of using the output of the +12 or +5VSB just have the relay turn on whenever the main high voltage capacitors are charged up to their appropriate voltage - perhaps just use a 220VDC coil relay across the input high voltage capacitors. Once the capacitor's voltage is high enough the "inrush" is over and the relay can just short out the inrush resistor and we save a few watts of power there.

    This should work fine if we lose power for a second, depending on how much the caps discharge the relay would open up only if the caps discharge enough and thus need to worry about inrush again.

    The question is how much is "enough". This will determine how feasible this solution is. Ideally the open threshold should be fairly high so that we don't have real inrush problems, but not so high that a temporary drop on cap voltage will open up the relay and now the psu needs to draw power through a really resistive inrush resistor... and the computer crashes...

    Leave a comment:


  • cheapie
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Can't you just use a relay that switches on at ~220 VAC with the coil between out and ground?

    Leave a comment:


  • redwire
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    That style of relay time-delay has never worked good for me. As the cap charges up (to it's whopping 1.4V), the transistors gradually turn on and the relay pulls in "soft" and slow. It does not have crisp switching action. Also, I don't think you'll get a few seconds delay with 150uF/100k to only 1.4V. You would add a zener so the cap has to ramp up to, say 6-9V. If the 12VDC supply ever fails to come up, the PTC will get cooked.

    Here's a schematic of a (audio mute) circuit that I found works well although it takes a while to figure out. It's not my design but clever enough with one transistor doing a lot of work.
    On power-up the S8550 is on (=relay off) until AC is present (which biases S8550 off) AND the 22uF cap has charged up. The mute input is a manual override to turn off the relay and mute things.
    The power-up delay is set by the 47k/22uF/75k to a couple seconds.
    The hold-timer delay (for AC mains sags and brownouts) is set by the 2.2uF/4k75 pair
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • budm
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    What will remove the AC input when the unit is not in used? Is there another switch that removes the AC that feeds the 120VAC_IN? As josh had indicated, it will a one time current limiting only.
    Last edited by budm; 01-05-2013, 07:47 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • tom66
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Depends on how crucial it is but I would just wire it to +5V standby, and use a large-ish startup capacitor on the 5V standby (might even be OK with original.) Then, the relay would click in as soon as the PSU is ready to run, so it wouldn't cause issues with the computer trying to boot immediately after power is applied (e.g. wake automatically) and draw more current than the thermistor can safely allow (voltage drop etc.)

    This is used a lot in LCD TVs, just straight to 5V standby. Works well.

    Leave a comment:


  • TELVM
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    I'm thinking about applying the idea to a typical PC power supply.

    Many middle/high end PC PSUs came nowadays with relayed thermistor/s, v.g.:

    Leave a comment:


  • joshnz
    replied
    Re: Relay controlled PSU thermistor

    Looks very simple already.
    As for it been able to do 230 vac no problem if using a relay with contacts rated for 230v.

    This circuit is only one time though, If the ac drops long enough for the transformer to demagnetize and short enough for the relay/12v to not dropout will still get high inrush current from the transformer.

    Originally posted by mariushm
    With the above circuit, I'd be concerned if there's a half a second or so power loss, the system may reset suddenly and your circuit still overrides the thermistor and the capacitors pull more amps than the fuse.
    But in real life, the capacitors probably won't discharge that fast.
    He doesn't mention if for smps or for large transformer.
    Last edited by joshnz; 01-05-2013, 08:38 AM. Reason: I got ninja posted.

    Leave a comment:

Related Topics

Collapse

  • nmbb
    Can not find Model/Value of Thermistor.
    by nmbb
    Machine: Autoclave.
    Brand/Model: SANYO MLS-3780
    Manual: (Sorry search option not working on this PDF)



    Hello guys, this autoclave running with 2 thermistors already connected TH1 and TH3(on CN1,CN2 sockets). One for the water temperture and second one for chamber temperature. But there is another emtpy socket for optional third thermistor CN2 wich is for TH2 for object temperature. I wanna add the third thermistor TH2 to CN2 socket. But i can't figure what model/brand/value i need to use. In manual document, there is no info about TH1 and TH3 model number...
    06-02-2022, 05:55 PM
  • CuriousJohn
    Burco boiler power problem
    by CuriousJohn
    Burco BCPLSAFWM5L 5 Litre Wall Mounted Automatic Water Boiler With Filtration UK 240v

    Does anybody have any experience with these Burco units at all there is no record of them on the forum lol and a proper service manual would be nice. I invite you all to pesuade me not to botch repair it with a 5v relay, read on.

    This unit was rescued from a skip 3 years ago, the only fault it had then was no backight display (plus it wanted a new probe set and top seal) but the screen was never an issue you can still see the screen as is and I just use it to get 5 Litres of very hot...
    12-22-2024, 10:25 AM
  • valvashon
    Repair Success! Middle Atlantic UPS2200R-IP
    by valvashon
    Yesterday I successfully repaired a Middle Atlantic UPS2200R-IP that had inadvertently been used as a surge suppressor at our transmitter site. It has already been replaced with an updated one but it's coming home with me now instead of being e-cycled. To be specific, this is the MA model that has the blue backlit display and has been discontinued, although this design may have been used in many UPS units including the smaller Middle Atlantic ones in this series.



    Here's what happened: We experienced a brownout/surge at the site, which damaged the UPS and took our broadcasting...
    02-06-2024, 12:54 PM
  • ohren
    Original Xbox 1.0 PSU: Foxlink FTPS-0002 Rev. B. — 12 V low, 5 V high — transformer?
    by ohren
    Hello!

    I'm looking at an original Xbox PSU: Foxlink ftps-0002 rev. B. The 12 V output is too low, and the 5 V output is too (?) high. Unfortunately I don't have an oscilloscope but only a DMM for diagnosis.

    Measured voltages with no load:

    After rectifier diodes
    12V: 6.17 V
    5V: 5.67 V

    Secondary transformer pins AC measurement (really don't know if this says anything)
    12V: 2-2.5 V
    5V: 1.04 V


    I also have another (working) Xbox psu from Delta. The same measures there, in order, being: 10.79,...
    03-18-2023, 10:33 AM
  • mikey5791
    Is it possible for transformer substitution?
    by mikey5791
    Hi all,
    Got this local made DC power supply (12/14V) given free as the transformer has melted. There is no marking or indication to identify what type or rating of transformer used.
    Fyi,. I had a busted autogate mainboard with transformer with marking 13-0-13 . Is this the 13v dc type transformer?
    My questions are
    1. How do i test to see if the transformer is in good working condition?
    2. Can this transformer (marking 13-0-13) be used to replace the melted transformer on the DC power supply?
    Hope you guys understand what i was asking. My intention is...
    11-03-2022, 02:11 AM
  • Loading...
  • No more items.
Working...