Re: "Unapproved" input filtering
Nice work, as usual.
30A on the 12V should be plenty for just about anything. Maybe even a light duty welder?
We share the same passion, I think
. They are very interesting beasts, aren't they?
Probably what we were just discussing - some X caps are designed not to go short circuit failure mode, so perhaps that's why they felt it is safe to install one before the fuse.
If power supplies were to be thoroughly inspected before being imported, such PSUs surely shouldn't make it to the market here. However, that is not the case. Also, there are a lot of "IFs" involved for a PSU with non-safety Y caps to become dangerous. First, your outlet/house grounding must be faulty. And secondly, the non-safety Y cap between L and G must fail short circuit in order for the computer case to become energized.
Very useful links - at leat the last two. The PDF in the first had its text in very light color and I couldn't read it at all. Perhaps Adobe Reader works with it? I have SumatraPDF, so maybe that's why?
Yes, capacitor guide does word it in a very interesting way:
- "...as well as the fact that the failure mode of metallized capacitors tends toward open circuit, while the failure mode of ceramic capacitors tends towards short circuit, which is potentially more dangerous to users."
I guess the keyword here is "tends". So yeah, you are right, indeed - always check the datasheet. Or if in doubt and can't find a datasheet, just place any X and Y caps after the fuse, and pray that the cheapo glass fuse in the cheapo PSU doesn't fail to fail when the EMI caps fail
(lol, I think my high school English teacher would get a kick out of that sentence
).

Is that a shockingly good beer too?
Yeah, I've seen that before in a Sirtec-built PSU of mine. It had an empty 10 mm spot before the PI coil on the 12V rail (actually, there was a 100 uF cap in that spots), and a 1200 uF cap after the PI coil. I removed the 100 uF cap without thinking and added another 1200 uF (a Panasonic FM, at that). Not sure if the PSU was meant to power only 5V-heavy loads or what, but it definitely wasn't happy with a normal 12V load and almost no 5V load. Oscillations and whinning was the result with pretty unstable voltages (though the PSU didn't manage to explode). I removed that 1200 uF Panny FM and subbed a Teapo SM or SC in its place. That removed some of the while and oscillations, but not completely. I didn't bother testing it further, but my guess is that Sirtec probably cut a few corners by installing that small 100 uF cap instead of a proper bigger cap, and then they "fixed" the compensation up a bit to account for that. But that's only my guess
Originally posted by Pentium4
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30A on the 12V should be plenty for just about anything. Maybe even a light duty welder?

Originally posted by Pentium4
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Originally posted by Pentium4
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Originally posted by Pentium4
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Originally posted by budm
Originally posted by SIDMX
- "...as well as the fact that the failure mode of metallized capacitors tends toward open circuit, while the failure mode of ceramic capacitors tends towards short circuit, which is potentially more dangerous to users."
I guess the keyword here is "tends". So yeah, you are right, indeed - always check the datasheet. Or if in doubt and can't find a datasheet, just place any X and Y caps after the fuse, and pray that the cheapo glass fuse in the cheapo PSU doesn't fail to fail when the EMI caps fail

(lol, I think my high school English teacher would get a kick out of that sentence

Originally posted by SIDMX

Is that a shockingly good beer too?

Originally posted by kaboom
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