[Info-vax] SBB power supplies failing slowly
gah4
gah4 at u.washington.edu
Mon Mar 28 20:36:04 EDT 2022
On Monday, March 28, 2022 at 3:00:05 PM UTC-7, Scott Dorsey wrote:
(snip)
> The filter stuff on the primary side seems to last much longer, except for
> the kickstar cap and I don't know why that one seems to fail so often.
> NOW... I will say that I have only experience with these supplies used on
> 120V and if you run them on 240V then the two big stab-in capacitors on
> the high voltage input will have twice as much voltage across them and this
> may shorten their life. So you may wish to replace those pre-emptively if
> you are in a 240V country. I have never seen one fail in the US.
The popular design some years ago (as in when I was actually looking at
how they were built) is a bridge rectifier in 240V countries, and voltage
double in 120V countries. So the primary side capacitors run
about 300V in both cases. That is, for ones with a 120/240 switch.
Also, it used to be usual to run the oscillator at about 20kHz.
Some now might run much higher.
When working with the computer museum, we would replace all the
electrolytic capacitors before powering up the first time. That is,
for ones that might be 30 or 40 or 50 years old.
They used to make "computer grade" capacitors. I don't know
if they still do that.
In any case, the thing that electrolytics least like is being
reverse charged. I don't know about the kickstart, but it
is possible that it gets reverse charged, maybe just a little.
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