Products > Test Equipment
Wanptek DPS3010U toughts
mumuseggroll:
Hello!
I am planning to buy a bench power supply, for laptop, phone repairs, I am from hungary, so it have to know 220v.
Looking for the Wanptek DPS3010U as it can be seen in the subject.
I searched here and not found much about this model, sorry if missed a discussion.
So the reason I opened this topic is that I would like to know if anybody had an experience with it, and what your toughts about it.
I have a link from aliexpress (not this model is the default selection).
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001770370741.html
Thank you in advance for the informations and the help!
Link changed by Simon from referal link
Microcheap:
Have you really made any search about the product on the internet or or is this post just a spam to promote the affiliate link to the store so you can get a commission?
Here the clean link to the store: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001770370741.html
And some information about the refereed model: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=dsp3010u
Simon:
If you post another referral link you will be banned. In the mean time maybe you can tell us what you want from the power supply. We can't offer advice unless we know what you want to do or what you expect.
Veteran68:
Assuming the interest is sincere and they're not, in fact, a spammer/bot...
I have the APS3010H, the upgraded version of the DPS3010, available from that same listing. I bought it as a tertiary utility supply, primarily to power up devices on my bench that I'm repairing or troubleshooting, such as laptops. I have better linear supplies for general electronics work, but needed a way to power up things like gaming laptops that require more than 5A to function. This one has fit the bill for me so far. I have a "smart" universal USB-C power cable I leave attached to it that has 15 different DC barrel tips to power about any laptop or other consumer electronics device.
I have not measured the noise on it, as I said it's really used more as a utility supply that I can monitor voltage/power with while powering up something I'm working on, so switching noise wasn't a critical consideration for me. What was critical to me is the ability to turn on/off the output independently of the power supply itself. The APS and WPS models support this, while the DPS does not, so to be safe you must ensure your DUT is disconnected until after you've powered it up and set your voltage/current.
mumuseggroll:
Thank you for the answers!
First of all I am really sorry about the referral link, it's my bad but i didn't know it was a referral link, i copied it from my phone by the share button on aliexpress for later use and reused it here... I apologize for that.
Ofcourse i looked on youtube, but wanted the toughts of the people here, and in my first post i told that i was looking here for info but i didn't found it, so i tought i will open a thread maybe someone tryed it or used it and have experience with it and can tell me him/her opinion.
On the second question I am looking for a bench psu which i can use to turn on mainly laptops, and i would like to use it for short searching and troubleshoot laptops.
Thank you for the information about the aps models and the differences between them and the dps ones.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
Go to full version