How about this 0-100V,0-10A Adjustable Switch Power Supply

Thread Starter

LAOADAM

Joined Nov 21, 2018
862
Hi,
I am try to buy this power supply as the picture attached, any advice there please?
and is the current 0-10A means the maximum current is 10A at any voltage? or can be larger at lower voltage?
Thanks
Adam

btps.1.PNG
 

SamR

Joined Mar 19, 2019
5,031
Max current at any voltage is 10A. Why do you need so much power? Most are satisfied with 30V, 3A bench power supplies.
 

Thread Starter

LAOADAM

Joined Nov 21, 2018
862
Max current at any voltage is 10A. Why do you need so much power? Most are satisfied with 30V, 3A bench power supplies.
Thanks.
I had one many years ago, and broken, I used for my diy projects.
Actually what I need is a large current at low voltage say: 0-48V and 0-40A; low current at high voltage say 3A at 60-90V.
 

ElectricSpidey

Joined Dec 2, 2017
2,758
Then that is not the unit for you.

You will need at least a 2000 watt supply, twice what that one can deliver...40 amps @ 48 volts in a lab supply will cost a great deal.
 

SamR

Joined Mar 19, 2019
5,031
If you want a noisy switch mode power supply... There is no voltage adjust or current limit capability either. Those are what I consider to be a single purpose power supply and not an accurate and reliable bench instrument. FWIW
 

LowQCab

Joined Nov 6, 2012
4,023
What you are asking for is either very-large, or very expensive, or both.
Prices start at at least ~$200.oo for clean, Regulated Power in that range .......

Do you really NEED that much Current/Power ?

If you want a cheap DIY High-Power-Supply,
start out with a MOT (Microwave-Oven-Transformer),
which you can get from any "Thrift-Shop".
2-MOTs would be ideal, because they generally don't have
enough Inductance in the Primary Windings for efficient operation.
( they need to be fed half of their rated Primary-Voltage, i.e., 2-Primaries in series )

Then wind your own Multi-Tap-Secondaries with ~10-gauge, THHN insulated, Stranded-Wire,
and provide high-Current-Connectors for selecting
the various Voltage-Ranges that you expect to need.

Now that you have High-Current AC,
you need to convert it to well-Filtered-DC, which is not as easy as you may think.
( a third, completely stripped, MOT Core, makes a great Inductor-Core for part of the Filter ).
Plus ~$50.oo to ~$150.oo worth of Bulk-Storage-Capacitors.

Then you need to Regulate the DC-Voltage, with a serious Linear-Voltage-Regulator,
and, provide adjustable Current-Limiting,
and, Meters for both Voltage and Current,
and, a nice fat Heat-Sink for that ~100-Amp Linear-Regulator,
and, Cooling-Fan(s) to keep everything happy,
and, an Aluminum-Box to put it all in.

This will create a Clean Power-Supply capable of a continuous and comfortable ~500-Watts,
with maximum Current of ~50-Amps.

If you're really dead-set on this, I'll show you how to pull it off,
but first, make sure your specifications are actually what you need.
 

Thread Starter

LAOADAM

Joined Nov 21, 2018
862
What you are asking for is either very-large, or very expensive, or both.
Prices start at at least ~$200.oo for clean, Regulated Power in that range .......

Do you really NEED that much Current/Power ?

If you want a cheap DIY High-Power-Supply,
start out with a MOT (Microwave-Oven-Transformer),
which you can get from any "Thrift-Shop".
2-MOTs would be ideal, because they generally don't have
enough Inductance in the Primary Windings for efficient operation.
( they need to be fed half of their rated Primary-Voltage, i.e., 2-Primaries in series )

Then wind your own Multi-Tap-Secondaries with ~10-gauge, THHN insulated, Stranded-Wire,
and provide high-Current-Connectors for selecting
the various Voltage-Ranges that you expect to need.

Now that you have High-Current AC,
you need to convert it to well-Filtered-DC, which is not as easy as you may think.
( a third, completely stripped, MOT Core, makes a great Inductor-Core for part of the Filter ).
Plus ~$50.oo to ~$150.oo worth of Bulk-Storage-Capacitors.

Then you need to Regulate the DC-Voltage, with a serious Linear-Voltage-Regulator,
and, provide adjustable Current-Limiting,
and, Meters for both Voltage and Current,
and, a nice fat Heat-Sink for that ~100-Amp Linear-Regulator,
and, Cooling-Fan(s) to keep everything happy,
and, an Aluminum-Box to put it all in.

This will create a Clean Power-Supply capable of a continuous and comfortable ~500-Watts,
with maximum Current of ~50-Amps.

If you're really dead-set on this, I'll show you how to pull it off,
but first, make sure your specifications are actually what you need.
Thank you for so detail.
Firstly, you said right, it is not necessary to have such large I/V in both, at least don't use it often.
Then I'll do the test as your idea start from a MOT, actually I have two of MOT left on the shelf by a DIYed spot weld.
Best
 
Top