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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Recognise this trace?
Gentlemen,
The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ |
#2
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Recognise this trace?
On 7/9/2017 10:10 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" Not sure what's causing it, but it's indicative of a non- linear load. The "knee" is where the load transitions from one value to a smaller value. -- Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi http://www.foxsmercantile.com --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
#3
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Recognise this trace?
On Sun, 9 Jul 2017 15:10:46 -0000 (UTC), Cursitor Doom
wrote: Gentlemen, Surely, you jest. The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...posted-public/ Is the mystery load the hardware appearing in adjacent photos? EXIF says that they were taken 4 days earlier, which suggests a connection. These photos looks odd: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/34892442244/in/photostream/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/35564536392/in/photostream/ because C17 (the 2nd blue electrolytic from the right) seems to have been soldered into the wrong PCB holes. The white silk screen circle makes a good target for installing capacitors. If my crystal ball is correct, this capacitor might be presenting a higher than normal current load to the power supply, which is reacting by producing excessive ripple that you're seeing on the scope. Is this the capacitor you removed from the board? https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/35050368241/in/photostream/ If so, you ripped out the plated through hole. 4 terminal radial caps are not common, so I guess you substituted something else. What did you put in its place? Did you test and fix the PCB traces? Oh, never mind. I found your rather ugly solder wick PCB fix: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/35602405551/in/photostream/ You might want to double (or triple) check your soldering and PCB through hole connections. From this photo: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859641@N02/35564539582/in/photostream/ there's a tuning screw, semi-rigid coax cable, and cavity filter on the left side. Too bad the power supply board is missing. There are some gold connector pins in the photo. So, what is it? -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#4
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Recognise this trace?
If it's your signal generator thing, yes, it's very possible / likely to
have dried out caps (excess ESR). Yes, the nippley appearance is likely ESR. But, if you say it's okay, then it must be okay. Right? Tim -- Seven Transistor Labs, LLC Electrical Engineering Consultation and Contract Design Website: http://seventransistorlabs.com "Cursitor Doom" wrote in message news Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ |
#5
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Recognise this trace?
On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 10:20:47 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
Is the mystery load the hardware appearing in adjacent photos? EXIF says that they were taken 4 days earlier, which suggests a connection. If the adjacent photos were of any relevance, Jeff, I'd have mentioned it and linked to them. Oh, never mind. I found your rather ugly solder wick PCB fix: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...n/photostream/ You might want to double (or triple) check your soldering and PCB through hole connections. All I did was replace an electro with one of identical parameters; it just happened to be a bit smaller than the original (which is not at all uncommon). From this photo: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...n/photostream/ there's a tuning screw, semi-rigid coax cable, and cavity filter on the left side. Too bad the power supply board is missing. There are some gold connector pins in the photo. So, what is it? You're complicating this unduly and massively, Jeff. I simply posed a question about an oscilloscope trace, that's all. |
#6
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Recognise this trace?
On 7/9/2017 8:10 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ You might get this when you have two caps separated by an inductor. First cap usually gets more peak charge current than the second one and develops high ESR first. Even if both caps are good, the inductor (or resistor) in between can cause this effect. |
#7
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Recognise this trace?
On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 12:34:51 -0700, mike wrote:
You might get this when you have two caps separated by an inductor. First cap usually gets more peak charge current than the second one and develops high ESR first. Even if both caps are good, the inductor (or resistor) in between can cause this effect. Someone on SER said a non-linear load could explain the shape of that trace and my initial reaction was that sounded quite plausible. However, on reflection I think if that *were* the case, then the knee would span 600-700mV (when the semis start conducting) and that isn't what we see here. The obvious thing to do next is whip off the output plugs from the PSU one by one and see if that clears the problem and if so, which sub- circuit is responsible for the overload as it may be nothing to do with the PSU at all. -- This message may be freely reproduced without limit or charge only via the Usenet protocol. Reproduction in whole or part through other protocols, whether for profit or not, is conditional upon a charge of GBP10.00 per reproduction. Publication in this manner via non-Usenet protocols constitutes acceptance of this condition. |
#8
Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair
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Recognise this trace?
Cursitor Doom wrote:
Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ Cause: stored charge in the rectifiers. |
#9
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Recognise this trace?
On Mon, 10 Jul 2017 01:10:46 +1000, Cursitor Doom
wrote: Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ a soft diode in the bridge rectifier? -- Using Opera's mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ |
#10
Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.repair
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Recognise this trace?
"David Eather" wrote in message newsp.y24qvzulwei6gd@fx-6300... On Mon, 10 Jul 2017 01:10:46 +1000, Cursitor Doom wrote: Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ a soft diode in the bridge rectifier? -- It is showing two half cycles at 50 Hz and they are the same. Most likely not a diode issue. Most likely a bad capacitor with high ESR. Or you got the replacement capacitor in the wrong holes on the pc board. Can you remove the new cap and get a photo of the top side of the board? |
#11
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Recognise this trace?
Foxs Mercantile wrote:
If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" Not sure what's causing it, but it's indicative of a non- linear load. The "knee" is where the load transitions from one value to a smaller value. ** The "knee" or bump on the saw tooth is caused by electro cap ESR. If you add a say a 1 ohm resistor in series, the bump will get much larger. The bump is visible, along with ripple, on most unregulated DC supplies. ..... Phil |
#12
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Recognise this trace?
On 9.7.17 23:44, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 12:34:51 -0700, mike wrote: You might get this when you have two caps separated by an inductor. First cap usually gets more peak charge current than the second one and develops high ESR first. Even if both caps are good, the inductor (or resistor) in between can cause this effect. Someone on SER said a non-linear load could explain the shape of that trace and my initial reaction was that sounded quite plausible. However, on reflection I think if that *were* the case, then the knee would span 600-700mV (when the semis start conducting) and that isn't what we see here. The obvious thing to do next is whip off the output plugs from the PSU one by one and see if that clears the problem and if so, which sub- circuit is responsible for the overload as it may be nothing to do with the PSU at all. The peak is definitely from the charge pulse from the rectifier. A capacitor-input PSU charges only 5 to 10 % of the half-cycle time, depending on the resistances and inductances in the charge path. -- -TV |
#13
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Recognise this trace?
Tauno Voipio wrote:
---------------------------------- The peak is definitely from the charge pulse from the rectifier. A capacitor-input PSU charges only 5 to 10 % of the half-cycle time, depending on the resistances and inductances in the charge path. ** Wrong on both claims. The charging current pulse has the same duration as the rising part of the voltage waveform - about 15 to 30% of the half cycle period. The bump is due to resistance in series with the capacitance - use a film cap and it disappears. ..... Phil |
#14
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Recognise this trace?
On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 19:37:39 -0400, tom wrote:
- It is showing two half cycles at 50 Hz and they are the same. Most likely not a diode issue. Most likely a bad capacitor with high ESR. Or you got the replacement capacitor in the wrong holes on the pc board. Can you remove the new cap and get a photo of the top side of the board? When I tested this psu out-of-circuit with a dummy load I got less than 5mV of ripple on that rail. Now I may have too lightly-loaded the output, I can't say for sure, but that does tend to indicate to me I should check for shorted components down the line from the psu before I do anything else. |
#15
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Recognise this trace?
On 09/07/17 16:10, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ It took me 5 minutes to do a spice simulation sufficient to generate such a picture. The components were an ideal ac voltage source, a diode, an ideal capacitor for smoothing, an ideal resistor for the load, and an ideal resistor in series with the smoothing capacitor representing the smoothing cap's ESR. |
#16
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Recognise this trace?
Tom Gardner wrote:
----------------------- https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ It took me 5 minutes to do a spice simulation sufficient to generate such a picture. The components were an ideal ac voltage source, a diode, an ideal capacitor for smoothing, an ideal resistor for the load, and an ideal resistor in series with the smoothing capacitor representing the smoothing cap's ESR. ** The REAL AC supply is not an good sine wave, it is normally somewhat flat topped. Take a look on a scope using a 10:1 probe. Transformers have significant resistance in their windings, so you need to add some on the AC side of the simulation. The rising part of the saw tooth wave should not be too short, as it will be with zero source impedance. If you wish to see reality, forget trying to sim it. In this case grab any unregulated transformer wall wart, put a resistor across the output and scope the voltage across it. Takes only seconds and leaves no room for doubt. ..... Phil |
#17
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Recognise this trace?
On Mon, 10 Jul 2017 19:06:55 +0100, Tom Gardner wrote:
It took me 5 minutes to do a spice simulation sufficient to generate such a picture. The components were an ideal ac voltage source, a diode, an ideal capacitor for smoothing, an ideal resistor for the load, and an ideal resistor in series with the smoothing capacitor representing the smoothing cap's ESR. You achieved full-wave rectification using just the above parts? May we see this remarkable circuit, please? |
#18
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Recognise this trace?
On 11/07/17 19:55, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jul 2017 19:06:55 +0100, Tom Gardner wrote: It took me 5 minutes to do a spice simulation sufficient to generate such a picture. The components were an ideal ac voltage source, a diode, an ideal capacitor for smoothing, an ideal resistor for the load, and an ideal resistor in series with the smoothing capacitor representing the smoothing cap's ESR. You achieved full-wave rectification using just the above parts? May we see this remarkable circuit, please? Half wave rectification is sufficient to show your waveform. Why do you think full-wave rectification is important? Which *significant* aspect of your waveform would it change? |
#19
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Recognise this trace?
On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 21:11:46 +0100, Tom Gardner wrote:
Half wave rectification is sufficient to show your waveform. Why do you think full-wave rectification is important? Which *significant* aspect of your waveform would it change? I'd KF'd you previously due to your politics, but it seems your electronics is no better. *PLONK!* |
#20
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Recognise this trace?
"Cursitor Doom" wrote in message
news On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 21:11:46 +0100, Tom Gardner wrote: Half wave rectification is sufficient to show your waveform. Why do you think full-wave rectification is important? Which *significant* aspect of your waveform would it change? I'd KF'd you previously due to your politics, but it seems your electronics is no better. *PLONK!* For the record, you didn't answer his question. I'm genuinely curious now, too. Tim -- Seven Transistor Labs, LLC Electrical Engineering Consultation and Contract Design Website: http://seventransistorlabs.com |
#21
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Recognise this trace?
On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 18:53:06 -0500, Tim Williams wrote:
For the record, you didn't answer his question. I'm genuinely curious now, too. Tim If I answered you, I'd be answering that ****ing troll too. And for free. That isn't going to happen. -- This message may be freely reproduced without limit or charge only via the Usenet protocol. Reproduction in whole or part through other protocols, whether for profit or not, is conditional upon a charge of GBP10.00 per reproduction. Publication in this manner via non-Usenet protocols constitutes acceptance of this condition. |
#22
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Recognise this trace?
On 12/07/17 22:51, Cursitor Doom wrote:
On Tue, 11 Jul 2017 18:53:06 -0500, Tim Williams wrote: For the record, you didn't answer his question. I'm genuinely curious now, too. Tim If I answered you, I'd be answering that ****ing troll too. And for free. That isn't going to happen. QED. That's a revealing response. Why am I, and probably others, not surprised. |
#23
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Recognise this trace?
On 7/9/2017 10:10 AM, Cursitor Doom wrote:
Gentlemen, The link below shows a scope trace of the output of a linear PSU (voltage 4.7VDC) with about 300mV of 100Hz ripple riding on it. This PSU is in- circuit under load from the boards it supplies. Normally I would assume a filter capacitor to be at fault here, but they all check out fine so something else is causing this ripple. Note there is a characteristic 'knee' on the high peaks and I'm thinking this must be indicative of *something* trouble is, I don't know what. If anyone recognises this waveshape and knows what causes it, that'd be "awesome" - as our American friends describe everything. Check it out: https://www.flickr.com/photos/128859...in/dateposted- public/ Kind of looks like the outline of my ex-wife. |
#24
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Recognise this trace?
On Sun, 09 Jul 2017 13:24:04 -0500, Tim Williams wrote:
If it's your signal generator thing, yes, it's very possible / likely to have dried out caps (excess ESR). Yes, the nippley appearance is likely ESR. But, if you say it's okay, then it must be okay. Right? Do I detect a note of scepticism here, Tim? I've checked all the electrolytics with my ESR/Capacitance tester which is claimed to be able to test for ESR in-circuit so I didn't remove any of the caps in order to test them. I'm relying on the meter manufacturer's claims that it's not necessary to do so and in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, I don't see what more I can do. |
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