Is this switching power supply worth the money that it cost 18 volts @ 20 amp
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The switching power supply is suppose to be here sometime tomorrow afternoon and I might get to do some primary testing on weather or not I can get the desoldering station to work on this switching power supply but we will see if it going to work with out any issues -
Now I have some battery testing equipment that I going to modify the switching power supply to run three battery testing machines and all it really powers is the data logging system controller that communicates to the computer so that you can see it in a graphical chart on the computer screen
These battery testing machines were damaged by me trying to test battery packs with BMS protection boards because this battery testing machines works off of a 24 volt switching power supply even though the charging / discharging controller works on 12 volts because it has a 12 volt regulator on the mosfets board which is the part that has gone bad
But it is functional in the monitoring mode which is why I going through all this trouble with this system setup and I going to use a switching power supply that has voltage and current adjustable for what ever voltage and current that is needed but I have to modify it slightly so that it can interface with the system controller on the battery testing machine and then I will be able to test battery packs that have BMS protection boards and not do damage to the controller circuit
I have figured out how the mosfets board got damaged it because the controller put 24 volts momentary to the battery cell or cells depending on the battery pack setup and BMS protection board will turn off when it see high voltage or high current so that is how the controller board got voltage spikes and destroy it self ( the graphics on the chart told me what was going on when typing to charge battery packs that have BMS protection boards on them you could see the voltage spikes on the chart not all BMS protection boards do this but some of them do this very badly )
I talk about this in another post about exactly what happened and what I plan on doing with these battery testing machines that have failed
I also have soldering / desoldering stations switching power supply failure as well after many hours of use I have not exactly determined what has failed in these switching power supply and I am getting really tired of replacing the hole unit just because the switching power supplies are not replaceable so this is why I was trying to find a suitable replacement switching power supply and modifying it to power the soldering / desoldering system power supply yes it not going to be original but I really do not care about this aspect of this as long as it gives a lot more hours of use until the controller takes a shit or the vacuum pump takes a shit or some other catastrophic failure happens and it would be cheaper to just replace it with a new one ( This is another example of very poor design of a switching power supply circuit )
I had to try this several times before I got it to work more or less but it was not a perfect solution unfortunately
I also have a brand of battery powered power tool that has an issue with the switching power supply transformer seriously overheating to the point that I will not use it anymore because of this issue but I learned from this switching power supply how to modify the switching power supply board and still be able to use charging controller board function the only issue that I ran into was that the charging controller is very picky about the voltage level and if fluctuation is to much it shuts down and I have not figured out how to fix that issue but the manufacturer of this switching power supply battery operated power tool charger has finally offered a dual power switching supply that has USB charging ports that I use it for two cooling fans that keeps the switching power supply transformer and all of its components overheating situation under control and is very usable this way
The question I have to ask you is what are you trying to use this power supply for and how picky is it if it has some kind of controller in it might be picky about how smooth the power supply voltage is or are just wanting a switching power supply to power electronics in general if it then as long as put filtering capacitors on the output this should work fine
One note you can buy switching power supplies that have a current rating anywhere from 10 to 20 amp that voltage and current adjustable but they are a little pricey than a standard switching power supply I have several of them and they do work fairly well but if you decide to buy one I would highly recommend that you do a total recap of the board except the main filtering capacitor they start around $50.00 to over $100.00 depending on the voltage and current rating it has unfortunately Mean-well does not make a version like this as far as I know I have not personally seen one offered most of the ones that I have seen are Chinese manufacturers that have this type of switching power supply and they have a current and voltage meter module on them as well
Here is example of one that I was talking about
https://www.ebay.com/itm/276342873216
Here is another example of one that I was talking about
https://www.ebay.com/itm/276303332637
Last edited by sam_sam_sam; 02-23-2024, 10:26 PM.Leave a comment:
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That's not a bad price. For me, I wanted somwthing high current and the cheapest way was to just build out an old ATX computer power supply. You can buy a cheap DC-DC adjustable regulator, a small voltage/current display, and some knobs.Leave a comment:
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I think about buying it for the desoldering station that I do not have a switching power supply and doing surgery on the original switching power supply that I talked about in another post do you think that I could modify it with this switching power supply that I linked in this post
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by u666saLaptop is HP Envy x360 13-bf0013dx, hp website link, it's an i7-1250U with 8 gig onboard ram.
Platform: ipa32 la-m024p rev 1b
Originally you'd plug power supply into it and it would take up to 1.2 amps and then drop to 200 milliamps and then go back up again to 1.2, staying all the while at 5 volts. Pressing power button would results in power LED blinking amber 3 times. 3.3 volt rail, 5.1 volt rail present, main power rail 8.8 volts. Power button test pads near EC chip 2.7 volts.
I found a short on the other side:
...10-04-2025, 05:03 PM -
by sam_sam_samI have been working on this concept for quite some time now with limited success but recently I found a switching power supply that is setup for the voltage that this soldering station needs to operate at however it also needs part of the secondary circuit from the original switching power because you need several voltage rails
I once tried to get a ZD-915 desoldering station to work on a 18 volt battery power supply but unfortunately things did not go well but I did find a work around but I might try this idea again but going at a little differently more about this another time... -
by sam_sam_samI have wanting to do this project for quite sometime now and I finally found a switching power supply that will work on this desoldering gun station ZD-915 that the original switching power supply took a shit and just was not worth trying to fix it because this switching power is not quite big enough to handle the heater element and the vacuum pump
One note when I tested the switching power supply and the voltage control board I noticed that this desoldering gun heat up much faster than the original switching power supply which I was really surprised by to the point that I might buy... -
by sam_sam_samI saw this switching power supply on eBay and wanted to see if could be modified to run 14.5 volts before the blocking diode was add and this switching power supply seems to have no issues doing this
I did recap the switching power supply except the the main filtering capacitors and I managed to break the selector switch for the voltage setting but just jumped it
One note I used 25 volt capacitors on the output side of this power supply because they used 16 volt capacitors and because I am running the voltage up a little bit higher 12 volts to 14.5 volts there would... -
by sam_sam_samI have this 10 amp 0 to 30 volt switching power supply that decided to have a 630 milliamperes draw on it at 0 volts
I open it up to find non brands name capacitors in it
I am not sure how this switching power supply is set up
Could someone please explain how this power supply works
Here is the capacitor ESR results
(1) 47uf@50 volts 0.46
(2) 47uf@50 volts 0.45
New 47uf@50 volts 0.35
(1) 100uf@25 volts 0.34
(2) 100uf@25 volts 0.35
New 120uf@50 volts 0.08
(1) 220@25 volts 0.13... - Loading...
- No more items.
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