A
Alex
Hello everybody
I'm having serious problems with a simple +5/+12 V dual output power
supply, which I never had before. I already built many such supplies,
all working without any problems.
It would be great, if anybody could give me a hint/tip
First a description of the circuit:
Load to be connected to the psu: 5V @ about 200mA, 12V @ about 30mA
*The mains (230V 50Hz) enters a standard transformer (12V 0.833A
output rating)
*The secondary winding is connected to a B40C800 bridge rectifier,
then goes to a 10'000 uF filter cap, with a 4.7kohms resistor parallel
to it.
*This gives a measured unregulated voltage of about 19.1 VDC with no
load. A load which draws 400mA, directly connected to the filter cap
reduces the unregulated DC voltage to 16V.
*Connected to the filter cap are two positive fixed voltage regulators
(LM340AT +5V and LM340AT +12V). Each of them with 220nF low loss,
polypropylene foil caps at input and output, just beside the LM340
regulators. The regulators are equiped with apropriate heatsinks.
*At the outputs of the regulators are two LEDs with series resistors
as seperate power indicators for 5V and 12V.
The whole psu is built on a PCB carefully designed regarding the
needed gaps between mains and secondary side, no gnd loops etc.
Now the problems are the following:
If I switch on (no load, only the indicator LEDs) the psu, first
everything is fine: The LEDs are lit, the output voltages are correct
and the current consumption of the regulators is as stated in the
datasheet. Suddenly the current (measured between regulator and filter
cap) begins to rise with about 2mA/min first, then faster and faster
(exponential like behaviour). The quiescent current goes up two 1.7A,
then the unregulated voltage is about 2.5V, the LEDs off. After about
20s, the current goes back to 400mA and a "nice" oscillation of about
250kHz is seen on the scope screen. Soldering 220nF ceramic chip caps
directly to the leads of the LM340AT didn't help anything. Also
changing to different brands of V-regulators (7805/7812 from Motorola
etc.) didn't eliminate the problem. Disconnecting both regulators from
the unregulated voltage and testing them each alone didn't make the
strange phenomenons disappear neither.
It's really frustrating as I'm an electronics engineering student and
had just designed/built a properly working 1GHz frequency synthesizer
with uC-Control, UHF-PA-stage as a project work.
I've already built about a dozen or more of such standard supplies for
digital & analog circuits, which all work fine.
Many thanks for every help in advance
Alex
I'm having serious problems with a simple +5/+12 V dual output power
supply, which I never had before. I already built many such supplies,
all working without any problems.
It would be great, if anybody could give me a hint/tip
First a description of the circuit:
Load to be connected to the psu: 5V @ about 200mA, 12V @ about 30mA
*The mains (230V 50Hz) enters a standard transformer (12V 0.833A
output rating)
*The secondary winding is connected to a B40C800 bridge rectifier,
then goes to a 10'000 uF filter cap, with a 4.7kohms resistor parallel
to it.
*This gives a measured unregulated voltage of about 19.1 VDC with no
load. A load which draws 400mA, directly connected to the filter cap
reduces the unregulated DC voltage to 16V.
*Connected to the filter cap are two positive fixed voltage regulators
(LM340AT +5V and LM340AT +12V). Each of them with 220nF low loss,
polypropylene foil caps at input and output, just beside the LM340
regulators. The regulators are equiped with apropriate heatsinks.
*At the outputs of the regulators are two LEDs with series resistors
as seperate power indicators for 5V and 12V.
The whole psu is built on a PCB carefully designed regarding the
needed gaps between mains and secondary side, no gnd loops etc.
Now the problems are the following:
If I switch on (no load, only the indicator LEDs) the psu, first
everything is fine: The LEDs are lit, the output voltages are correct
and the current consumption of the regulators is as stated in the
datasheet. Suddenly the current (measured between regulator and filter
cap) begins to rise with about 2mA/min first, then faster and faster
(exponential like behaviour). The quiescent current goes up two 1.7A,
then the unregulated voltage is about 2.5V, the LEDs off. After about
20s, the current goes back to 400mA and a "nice" oscillation of about
250kHz is seen on the scope screen. Soldering 220nF ceramic chip caps
directly to the leads of the LM340AT didn't help anything. Also
changing to different brands of V-regulators (7805/7812 from Motorola
etc.) didn't eliminate the problem. Disconnecting both regulators from
the unregulated voltage and testing them each alone didn't make the
strange phenomenons disappear neither.
It's really frustrating as I'm an electronics engineering student and
had just designed/built a properly working 1GHz frequency synthesizer
with uC-Control, UHF-PA-stage as a project work.
I've already built about a dozen or more of such standard supplies for
digital & analog circuits, which all work fine.
Many thanks for every help in advance
Alex