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Homebrew Equipment A place to show, design and discuss the weird and wonderful electronic creations from the hands of individual members. |
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#21 |
Hexode
Join Date: Mar 2020
Location: Rochdale, Greater Manchester, UK.
Posts: 351
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Hi John,
thanks for that, I do like the idea of re-purposing an old piece of equipment for a new role, and it has ignited a spark here, I must go off in search of my EF80! I didn't want to make too many assumptions without some circuit details, but your original description of the EF80 as a series regulator AND current limiter was intriguing. Can you elaborate on its current limiting function - is it just the valve "topping out" around 14mA or can it be adjusted at will to limit current within the useful range of a reforming capacitor? Cheers Chris |
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#22 | |
Pentode
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Greenock, Inverclyde, UK.
Posts: 143
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Thanks for the update. Looks good - tidier than mine! Don't know what your mods were, but looking at your display it looks like you may have tweaked the firmware to address one issue I was aware of - when the switch is set to discharge the display shows the inverter output voltage rather than the reforming capacitor voltage. My proposed solution was to add a diode as shown in the attached diagram; this should make the display show the greater of the inverter voltage or reforming cap voltage. Sometime I may get round to adding it to mine! Ian |
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#23 | |||
Pentode
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Greenock, Inverclyde, UK.
Posts: 143
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#24 | |
Triode
Join Date: Sep 2023
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
Posts: 13
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Dazz Why make something simple when you make it complicated AND get it to work? |
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#25 |
Triode
Join Date: Sep 2023
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
Posts: 13
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Hi
The other thread is closed so I can't post there. Some questions for Ian just to understand some design decisions. What is the peak output voltage, zero leakage current? What is the peak output voltage at max design leakage current? What transformer is used? Why was the voltage multiplier used on the transformer output? I am thinking that a max output of 5W or 500V at 10mA would be sufficient. Allowing for say 50% efficiency, this would require a 12V/1A power supply. Too much power risks exploding capacitors. I am thinking of using an off-pcb ferrite pot core transformer to produce up to 500V directly from the driver transistors. Rather than using discrete driver transistors and related components, I think I would use a full H bridge IC. A full H bridge would equivalent to driving the transformer with 24VAC ( with 12V supply). Getting to 500VDC would then require a winding ratio of about 15:1. Not onerous and would reduce parts count. Rather than using switches for input controls/menu select/ range etc, I would use a rotary encoder switch. These are cheap, versatile and wire directly to an Arduino without additional components. A rated switch would still be required for selecting reform/isolate/discharge. I think I would replace the op-amp with a transimpedance amp to reduce parts count. The Arduino Nano works with 6-20VDC unregulated supply so the LM7805 would not be required. Most of Ian's code could be reused. I think I would use PWM and missing pulses to control the output voltage. The issue with the Nano is that the PWM output is limited to about 1kHz. A higher freq would require a physically smaller transformer. So I think I could refine Ian's design and reduce the parts count by about half while reusing a lot of the code.
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Dazz Why make something simple when you make it complicated AND get it to work? |
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#26 |
Pentode
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Greenock, Inverclyde, UK.
Posts: 143
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Dazz,
I’ll do my best to recall and take a few measurements – it’s been a good few years since I worked on this! The voltage multiplier was included so I could get to 450V – that seemed a sensible limit for my needs. I can get to just over 450V with an output current of 4 mA, input voltage above 10V to hit this with input current around 150 mA. Transformer is 230V primary, 3VA 6V+6V secondary reverse connected. Here’s a link to the one I used; https://www.jprelec.co.uk/categories...35-401~835-401 |
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#27 | |
Tetrode
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Leeds, West Yorkshire, UK.
Posts: 94
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You're right - the current limit is just the saturation current, this ensures there is no runaway, but allows currents applicable to 450 volt caps from up to 80 years ago to be reformed as best they can. Attached image of the front of the unit. The output is fed via an inline DC milli/micro-Ammeter to the cap under test. It is just a simple basic unit to do a particular job, made from what was on hand at the time. The original transformer was around 200-0-200 feeding a FW valve rectifier - I kept the transformer and put a bridge circuit across the whole of the 400V secondary instead to achieve the required 500v maximum.
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John Progress consists of doing what you've always done - just more expensively. Last edited by 60136 Alcazar; 30th Sep 2023 at 6:30 pm. Reason: Additional info. |
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#28 |
Hexode
Join Date: Mar 2020
Location: Rochdale, Greater Manchester, UK.
Posts: 351
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Hi John,
thanks for your comments and the photos - classic good-looks stand the test of time. "It is just a simple basic unit to do a particular job, made from what was on hand at the time" - that's my kind of project! Cheers Chris |
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#29 |
Octode
Join Date: Oct 2019
Location: Stockport, Greater Manchester, UK.
Posts: 1,516
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For my capacitor reformer I used paul stenning's circuit from this site, just added a transformer for safety as I had one in the junk box, and the voltmeter is a 0-3v analogue meter permanently mounted.
It does the job. Seen in action in the pic attached. Still need to make 2 proper leads. Gabriel |
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#30 |
Triode
Join Date: Sep 2023
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
Posts: 13
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Hi
I have continued the info exchange here: https://www.eevblog.com/forum/projec...26/#msg5095626 for those that might be interested.
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Dazz Why make something simple when you make it complicated AND get it to work? |
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