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Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
开云体育OK, I'll bite-- What kind of power supply would you recommend?? I always thought
that a regulated supply would be the safest.? Were these linear or switcher supplies that produced the spikes? Thanks, Dave On 8/20/2018 2:31 PM, Alan Melia via
Groups.Io wrote:
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Joel Kist, was Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
On 08/20/2018 02:48 PM, Mark Wendt wrote:
Off subject – I still get duplicates – Joel?Yes, he is. There have been no duplicate messages here. That's a Yahoo problem specifically. Joel, you are subscribed at both your sbcglobal.net address and your att.net address. If you let me know which one you want to keep, I can chop the other one for you. -Dave -- Dave McGuire, AK4HZ New Kensington, PA |
Re: A huge thank you!
kevin kearns
开云体育Well done David!
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Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
开云体育I did a lot of power supply testing for HP, Agilent, and NGC, including the 6012A/B’s,Here is the spec sheet:?. ?What you want to look at is the transient response - right hand column. ?Calibration transient response is tested for both voltage and current modes and is tested full to no resistive load, and also with 100/90% resistive load change. ?2ms/100mv. ?I believe that a min. 5 min. warmup time is required for specs to apply. Don Bitters |
Re: 8566B SA all PLLs unlocked
I too have seen a failed power resistor. ?Other failed item maybe be a leaky diode that then shuts down the power supply. ?If the -40v supply is other than 0, -40v suspect a leaky diode, or shorted or leaky cap on the affected supply. ?
You will also get a similar symptom if you have an ext 10 MHz ref and it drops out, or you lose the internal 10MHz, or the 100MHz loop is down. Don Bitters |
Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
On Mon, Aug 20, 2018, 14:22 Joel R Kist <joel-kist@...> wrote:
By chance are you subscribed to the group with two different email addresses? Check the headers of the emails that are dupes the next time you receive them.? Mark |
Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
?
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During 10 years or so doing life tests on
transistors in the 1960s and 70s I would not use regulated power supplies for
powering the devices during their life test. When asked, I demonstrated the
switch on pulse with a Tek storage scope. ok it was only microseconds wide but
peaked at the unregulated level.~35v .....enough to damage 24v transistors.This
can also happen with a transcient load. It is to do with the bandwidth of the
feedback loop.
?
Alan
G3NYK
?
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Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
开云体育Also many bench supplies have very large output capacitors. I have a smaller HP on my bench and recorded over 100 amps instantaneous on a short with a couple feet of #10 leads. That was all from the output cap, it’s a 10 amp supply.?Peter On Aug 20, 2018, at 2:18 PM, george edmonds via Groups.Io <G6HIG@...> wrote:
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Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
开云体育Off subject – I still get duplicates – Joel STS SS ? From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of wilson2115@...
Sent: Monday, August 20, 2018 12:50 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [HP-Agilent-Keysight-equipment] HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation ? I refined my test... |
Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
Hi In my experience most bench power supplies show a similar behaviour. ?At one time I suffered repeated damage to equipment that was powered from a bench supply, when checked with a storage scope it went to a high voltage on turn on before settling back to the set voltage. I still think that for valid measurements you cannot use a light bulb, they are NOT a linear devices if you do an applied voltage plot against observed resistance, from a sixtey year old memory of an experiment they are square law devices 73 George G6HIG ?? On Monday, August 20, 2018 5:50 PM, "wilson2115@..." <wilson2115@...> wrote: I refined my test... Instead of ramping the voltage with the knob. I basically set the voltage to 20V and the amperage to 2 amps. I connected the voltmeter in series with the bulb and performed a dynamic load test by opening and closing the circuit by touching the probe lead of the voltmeter to the output of the power supply... I also have the Fluke voltmeter set to peak amperage measurement and these are the results that I found. With the 6012B set to 20V and 2A, upon closing the circuit the peak amps are 4 amps but quickly settles to 2 amps With the 6024A set to 20V and 2 A, upon closing the circuit the peaks amps are about 2.5 but quickly settles to 2 amps. The important observation here is the 6012B settles back to 2 amps, it seems the settle time is longer and the deviation is larger than the 6024A. Although these are two completely different supplies. If anything I could be nit picking here on the 6012B for its regulation settle time and overshoot, which is why I wanted to see if someone else had a similar supply and could see if they could duplicate the same results to see if this is normal... Thanks for the help |
Re: HP 6012B volt zero and current regulation
I refined my test...
Instead of ramping the voltage with the knob. I basically set the voltage to 20V and the amperage to 2 amps. I connected the voltmeter in series with the bulb and performed a dynamic load test by opening and closing the circuit by touching the probe lead of the voltmeter to the output of the power supply... I also have the Fluke voltmeter set to peak amperage measurement and these are the results that I found. With the 6012B set to 20V and 2A, upon closing the circuit the peak amps are 4 amps but quickly settles to 2 amps With the 6024A set to 20V and 2 A, upon closing the circuit the peaks amps are about 2.5 but quickly settles to 2 amps. The important observation here is the 6012B settles back to 2 amps, it seems the settle time is longer and the deviation is larger than the 6024A. Although these are two completely different supplies. If anything I could be nit picking here on the 6012B for its regulation settle time and overshoot, which is why I wanted to see if someone else had a similar supply and could see if they could duplicate the same results to see if this is normal... Thanks for the help |
Re: A huge thank you!
Thanks for the smooth move! On Mon, Aug 20, 2018 at 6:32 AM Keith Monahan via Groups.Io <keith=[email protected]> wrote: Thanks indeed! |
Re: A huge thank you!
Thanks indeed!
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I guess there was no problem at all transferring messages? I scraped the group awhile ago when I thought yahoo might disappear. No jails, no throttling, no VPN required. It just worked. I think it was a little slow, maybe overnight for 88K messages. Glad to see you had no troubles! Thanks again! Keith On 8/20/2018 9:08 AM, James Allen wrote:
Ditto from me Dave!!! |