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Sometimes amateurs like to home-brew their power
supplies instead of purchasing one off the shelf at any of the major ham radio
retail dealers. The advantage to rolling your own power supply is that it
teaches us how they work and makes it easier to troubleshoot and repair other
power supply units in the shack. It should be noted that there is no real cost
advantage to building your own power supply unless you can get a large power
transformer and heat sink for a super low price. Of course rolling our own gives
us the ability to customize the circuit and make it even more reliable than
commercial units. The circuit in Figure 1 will give us 10 amps (12 amps surge)
with performance that equals or exceeds any commercial unit. The circuit even
has a current limiting feature which is a more reliable system than most
commercial units have.
Just like other commercial units, this circuit uses
the LM723 IC which gives us excellent voltage regulation. The circuit uses 3
pass transistors which must be heat sinked. Resistor R9 allows the fine tuning
of the voltage to exactly 13.8 volts and the resistor network formed by
resistors R4 through R7 controls the current limiting. The LM723 limits the
current when the voltage drop across R5 approaches .7 volts. To reduce costs,
most commercial units rely on the HFE of the pass transistors to determine the
current limiting. The fault in that system is that the HFE of the pass
transistors actually increases when the transistors heat up and risks a thermal
runaway condition causing a possible failure of the pass transistors. Because
this circuit samples the collector current of the pass transistors, thermal
runaway is not a problem in this circuit making it a much more reliable power
supply.
The only adjustment required is setting R9 to the
desired output voltage of anywhere between 10 and 14 volts. You may use a front
panel mounted 1K potentiometer for this purpose if desired. Resistor R1 only
enhances temperature stability and can be eliminated if desired by connecting
pins 5 and 6 of IC-1 together. Although it really isn't needed due to the type
of current limiting circuit used, over voltage protection can be added to the
circuit by connecting the circuit of Figure 2 to Vout. The only way over voltage
could occur is if transistors Q2 or Q3 were to fail with a collector to emitter
short. Although collector to emitter shorts do happen, it is more much more
likely that the transistors will open up when they fail. I actually tested this
and purposely destroyed several 2N3055's by shorting the emitters to ground. In
all cases the transistors opened up and no collector to emitter short occurred
in any transistor. In any event, the optional circuit in Figure 2 will give you
that extra peace of mind when a very expensive radio is used with the power
supply.
The circuit in Figure 2 senses when the voltage
exceeds 15 volts and causes the zener diode to conduct. When the zener diode
conducts, the gate of the SCR is turned on and causes the SCR to short which
blows the 15 amp fuse and shuts off the output voltage. A 2N6399 was used for
the SCR in the prototype but any suitable SCR can be used. While over voltage
protection is a good idea, it should not be considered a substitute for large
heat sinks. I personally feel the best protection from over voltage is the use
of large heat sinks and a reliable current limiting circuit. Be sure to use
large heat sinks along with heat sink grease for the 2N3055 transistors.
This power supply will be a welcome addition to your
shack and will greatly enhance your knowledge of power supplies.
Parts List
| R1 |
1.5K ¼ Watt Resistor
(optional, tie pins 6 & 5 of IC1 together if not used.)
|
| R2,R3 |
0.1 Ohm 10 Watt
Resistor (Tech America 900-1002) |
| R4 |
270 Ohm ¼ Watt
Resistor |
| R5 |
680 Ohm ¼ Watt
Resistor |
| R6,R7 |
0.15 Ohm 10 Watt
Resistor (Tech America 900-1006) |
| R8 |
2.7K ¼ Watt
Resistor |
| R9 |
1K Trimmer
Potentiometer (RS271-280) |
| R10 |
3.3K ¼ Watt
Resistor |
| C1,C2,C3,C4
|
4700 Microfarad
Electrolytic Capacitor 35 Volt (observe polarity) |
| C5 |
100 Picofarad Ceramic Disk
Capacitor |
| C6 |
1000 Microfarad Electrolytic Capacitor 25
Volt (observe polarity) |
| IC1 |
LM723 (RS276-1740) Voltage Regulator IC.
Socket is recommended. |
| Q1 |
TIP3055T (RS276-2020) NPN Transistor
(TO-220 Heat Sink Required) |
| Q2,Q3 |
2N3055 (RS276-2041) NPN Transistor (Large
TO-3 Heat Sink Required) |
| S1 |
Any SPST Toggle Switch |
| F1 |
3 Amp Fast Blow Fuse |
| D1-D4 |
Full Wave Bridge Rectifier
(RS276-1185) |
| T1 |
18 Volt, 10 Amp Transformer Hammond #165S18
(Digi-Key HM538-ND) |
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