AC Capacitive Voltage Divider - Help?

Thread Starter

Shike

Joined Jun 29, 2008
2
Hey everyone, I'm new here and was hoping I could get some help on something I've been trying to figure out.

Recently I read up on using a capacitive divider to make a simple PSU. I was wondering if anyone could confirm if the circuit I'm thinking of will work.

In general, it'd look like this:



Would this be feasible at providing +30V with upwards of 10A after rectification, and is there any safety issues I should be concerned with besides working with mains?

I plan to expand with fusing and further filtering if it's given the ok.

Thanks in advance,

-Drew ;)
 

mik3

Joined Feb 4, 2008
4,843
You dont need the 250 and 750uF capacitors, remove them. I would recommend you to use a center tapped transformer to have a bipolar power supply.
 

SgtWookie

Joined Jul 17, 2007
22,230
It is not a safe design. If the 250uF cap should short, the remainder of the circuit would be connected to the mains. Caps frequently short out when they fail.

You should use a transformer, or a "buck" design.
 

Thread Starter

Shike

Joined Jun 29, 2008
2
It is not a safe design. If the 250uF cap should short, the remainder of the circuit would be connected to the mains. Caps frequently short out when they fail.

You should use a transformer, or a "buck" design.
What would you suggest for a buck design then that's capable of putting out +20V-35V and up to roughly 10A?

I'm trying to build a ~500W/channel class A/B amplifier and transformers for this are generally expensive and cumbersome. I know I've seen sub plate amps with even more power without transformers, so I know it can be done. :confused:

Mik3 said:
You dont need the 250 and 750uF capacitors, remove them. I would recommend you to use a center tapped transformer to have a bipolar power supply.
Actually, the goal there was to use reactive capacitance to provide a load and step AC down without the need of a transformer.
 

thingmaker3

Joined May 16, 2005
5,083
There are two strong disadvantages to using dividers to "step down" a voltage. One is waste. The other is a changing load can have a large effect on the desired voltage.

A much better use of dividers is for measurement - a negligible amount of power is needed and the load is fixed.
 
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