Hi. I'm seeing if I could get some help diagnosing my bench DC power supply that I just fried. It is a unbranded variable 30 volt / 5 amp CV and CC DC power supply. Model number is P305D. Cheaply made, I'm sure, by commie kids in China, but has worked great for years.
The other night I was fixing some power tools and carelessly picked up the leads from the power supply when I meant to grab the leads from my DMM and touched them to an 18 volt battery I was resuscitating. There was a spark, and now something in the power supply is shorted. I'm actually not sure how this could have shorted something since the power supply's leads are meant to be shorted together to adjust the CC and a fully charged 18 volt battery is about 21.5 volts, well within the unit's 30 volt output capability. Still, whatever happened, it wasn't good.
It now acts like the leads are constantly shorted together, even where there are no leads plugged into the unit. The voltage display always reads zero, and the amperage display always reads whatever the constant current is adjusted to, zero to five amps. So I assume there's now a short circuit internally somewhere that the current is going (and being displayed on the LCD display). Looking inside, nothing is visibly burned or looks fried.
Forgive me, I really don't know a lot about electronics. There is a large heatsink inside with a couple very large things I believe are transistors that are the main controllers from the transformer? windings. They are getting quite hot when the unit is on. I thought about desoldering them and testing them, but I can see them being hot by nature though if the unit is shorted like it is and putting out some amperage (there's a huge heat sink on them for a reason) and the culprit is some diode or transistor on the unit's circuit board, but I don't even know where to begin there. Any help is appreciated.
The other night I was fixing some power tools and carelessly picked up the leads from the power supply when I meant to grab the leads from my DMM and touched them to an 18 volt battery I was resuscitating. There was a spark, and now something in the power supply is shorted. I'm actually not sure how this could have shorted something since the power supply's leads are meant to be shorted together to adjust the CC and a fully charged 18 volt battery is about 21.5 volts, well within the unit's 30 volt output capability. Still, whatever happened, it wasn't good.
It now acts like the leads are constantly shorted together, even where there are no leads plugged into the unit. The voltage display always reads zero, and the amperage display always reads whatever the constant current is adjusted to, zero to five amps. So I assume there's now a short circuit internally somewhere that the current is going (and being displayed on the LCD display). Looking inside, nothing is visibly burned or looks fried.
Forgive me, I really don't know a lot about electronics. There is a large heatsink inside with a couple very large things I believe are transistors that are the main controllers from the transformer? windings. They are getting quite hot when the unit is on. I thought about desoldering them and testing them, but I can see them being hot by nature though if the unit is shorted like it is and putting out some amperage (there's a huge heat sink on them for a reason) and the culprit is some diode or transistor on the unit's circuit board, but I don't even know where to begin there. Any help is appreciated.