Maybe I would for some chemistry experiments,
That's it! I've wanted to do electrolysis rust removal for years. I have a full-size rusty anvil and some cast iron. Except I'd have to Google the amperage of that since the manual explicitly says not to use it for applications that draw above 20 A...
you can easily add a regulator block to make a variable supply, for general electronics.
That crossed my mind, and since you say it's easy it definitely sounds interesting. It would be both useful and instructive, although I'd need to find a guide or primer on the subject. (In my head I'm not currently a person who designs or modifies circuits, but merely repair them.)
no noise compared to the modern switchers
That was my first thought too, after discovering that the model was discontinued and replaced by its SMPS counterpart — surely HAM operators are a bit fussy about that (well Paul of Mr Carlson's Lab seems to go to great lengths to only use DC in his LED radio mods at least).
I don't see the whole radio appeal currently — not that I know much about it.
There is current limiting. It is even adjustable.
Look at the schematics you provided. Current limiting is set with RP1
I see. I don't know where I got that from then — I was sure I had read it somewhere. Maybe the store listing for it simply didn't mention it, while the listing for its replacement did.
This would've been posted in the beginners section except for that that didn't seem the best fit for asking about project ideas. In other words, my pattern recognition isn't good enough to spot this in the schematics, so thanks for taking a look.
Looking at it now and... ok, it spells it out in plain text. Haha.
...I wonder why the manual is so adamant I should keep track of max current draw.
- Electrolytic rust removal
You beat me to it.
I started drafting this reply but new posts just kept piling up 🙂
if it works fine, resell it and buy yourself an good linear one variable to better voltages and current ?
Yeah maybe. I currently don't have a good way of testing it that I know of. Would be a bit embarrassing to sell it before that.
I use one as a central 12V-ish PSU to power several T&M devices and bench lights. A linear PSU is ideal for this, much better than a power strip full with SMPSU wallwarts.
This is interesting. Why is linear ideal and better for this? I mean compared to a similarly central SMPS?
I've not done much testing more than confirming correct output voltage under no load and determined it currently draws 9 W doing nothing, with a power factor of 37%. Centralized 12 V appeals to me a great deal, but I'm not sure if 9 W standby does.