C
colin
Tesseract via ElectronicsKB.com said:I'm liking this idea of your's more and more, Colin. I found a 600W PC
power
supply with active PFC on eBay for $25, incl. shipping. That's definitely
cheap enough to play around with. Heck, the Litz wire I'll need for the
secondary will probably cost more than the power supply itself!
If an SMPS uses current mode control, though, paralleling two or more
together is trivial, even if Vo is high. I totally agree that no matter
what
the control scheme you are asking for trouble when you try to put supplies
in
series (dueling feedback loops).
That's the truth, and the components that blow up tend to be expensive
ones...
This was precisely my reasoning for just going with a straight boost PFC
design.
Thanks for the input - I'm definitely going to try this on one supply even
if
the total output from one PC supply isn't enough to make a practical
charger
(I need to keep the total charge time for the two banks under 12 hours for
it
to be at all practical, which means I need at least 2.6kW). Still, as a
quick
and dirty charger it has lots of merit (and it will be isolated, anyway).
If you can access the individual batteries in the packs it might be doable
with lots of them.
or if you can modify one of the secondary windings to give you the volts you
need and leave the primary untouched.
ofc the output stage wont be built with the clearences for 264 v
I made a battery charger out of a computer psu, threw away all but the 5v
output and upgraded the input switch so it was capable of giving enough
voltage. modified the current limit too,
you still need to know what your doing though, but it can save some trouble
debugging the primary side.
even if it doesnt its usfeull for parts, especialy if it has a nice big
transformer.
Colin =^.^=