UK Vintage Radio Repair and Restoration Powered By Google Custom Search Vintage Radio and TV Service Data

Go Back   UK Vintage Radio Repair and Restoration Discussion Forum > Specific Vintage Equipment > Other Vintage Household Electrical or Electromechanical Items

Notices

Other Vintage Household Electrical or Electromechanical Items For discussions about other vintage (over 25 years old) electrical and electromechanical household items. See the sticky thread for details.

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 15th Jul 2023, 9:09 pm   #1
elanman99
Hexode
 
elanman99's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Sandiway, Cheshire, UK.
Posts: 305
Default Another mystery item

I removed this (over 40 years ago) from a linear low voltage PSU I was modifying for some long forgotten reason, it was wired into the low voltage output.

The part in the picture is 40mm x 40mm x 12mm high and is dense encapsulating resin in a nice shade of turquoise.

I have never seen another one, this one has no makings whatsoever (other than my felt tipped ones).

Ian
Attached Thumbnails
Click image for larger version

Name:	PSU Part.jpg
Views:	224
Size:	44.1 KB
ID:	281386  
elanman99 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 15th Jul 2023, 9:17 pm   #2
turretslug
Dekatron
 
turretslug's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Surrey, UK.
Posts: 4,328
Default Re: Another mystery item

A crowbar module with threshold set by the resistor? A crowbar circuit was sometimes offered as an option.
turretslug is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15th Jul 2023, 11:05 pm   #3
elanman99
Hexode
 
elanman99's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Sandiway, Cheshire, UK.
Posts: 305
Default Re: Another mystery item

Spot on!

I presume the PSU manufacturer (Weir I think) must have made the crowbar device in house.

Internally I suppose it act as a sort of Zener diode on steroids but if it just shorts out the PSU something is likely to get quite hot.

Ian
elanman99 is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 16th Jul 2023, 1:23 pm   #4
duncanlowe
Nonode
 
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Stafford, Staffs. UK.
Posts: 2,506
Default Re: Another mystery item

Quote:
Originally Posted by elanman99 View Post
Spot on!

I presume the PSU manufacturer (Weir I think) must have made the crowbar device in house.

Internally I suppose it act as a sort of Zener diode on steroids but if it just shorts out the PSU something is likely to get quite hot.

Ian
It kind of depends on the output limitation. Although these days we tend to have current limit (so maintain a constant, limited current) it used to be common to have foldback limiting. That is, the current gets reduced down to near zero. Works great with crowbars, and saved me a lot of digging once. I happened to choose the only PSU in the lab that had foldback. The device I was testing was blowing fuses and PCB tracks, even though it had passed EOL testing at the supplier. The foldback supply showed the surge at power on, which their test bench supply didn't.
duncanlowe is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 7:29 pm.


All information and advice on this forum is subject to the WARNING AND DISCLAIMER located at https://www.vintage-radio.net/rules.html.
Failure to heed this warning may result in death or serious injury to yourself and/or others.


Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright ©2002 - 2023, Paul Stenning.