I took a variac, stepped the output down with a microwave oven transformer, rectified it and then needed to smooth the rectified AC out with a smoothing capacitor. This power supply needs to provide a lot of amps (about 25A) so the smoothing cap bank needed to be large.
Image:
http://sites.extremehosting.ca/trash/ps.jpgSo I go to a web site like below and entered DC amps of about 25A, allowable voltage drop of something small like .5V, and time of 8.3ms because its rectified mains AC so 60Hz * 2 or 1000ms/120Hz = 8.3ms. This says I needed a large cap bank of 415,000uF.
http://digitalskywave.com/filter_capacitor_size.htmlSo I bought 18 of these in parallel which is 33,000uF * 18 = 594,000uF.
http://www.digikey.ca/product-detail/en/0/338-2260-NDI then power it up, it charges the cap bank to 14V DC because of wherever my variac is dialed too, and I then turn on my circuit and try to draw some current. Here's a video (
). The question is, why does it drop 4 Volts from 14V to 10V? Especially when I'm only drawing like 4A as shown on the LCD display? I would expect it to drop to about 13.5V or even less, hence the entire point of calculating the cap bank size...
Can anyone enlighten me as to why I cannot maintain a very minor voltage drop when I turn my circuit on? I'm trying to get something as close to this commercial DC power supply which drops no voltage at all as shown here (
) with the exact same circuit.
Thanks for any help.