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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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![]() "Eric R Snow" wrote in message ... On Thu, 16 Jun 2005 22:23:58 GMT, "Pete C." wrote: Eric R Snow wrote: On 16 Jun 2005 13:33:14 -0700, " wrote: I don't know what DC voltage a mag chuck needs. So you might need a transformer in addition to the lamp dimmer and rectifier. Dan Oh. The mag chuck needs 100 vdc. Part of the reason for the dimmer is to limit the voltage to the chuck. But I suppose a transformer would be OK. I just want to know if a rectifier connected to something that expects a resistive load will ruin the device. The lamp dimmers use phase control dimming with triacs. They turn on the triac part way into the half cycle of the AC, so they do not in any way limit the peak voltage. They actually eliminate the first part of the waveform rising (or falling) from the zero crossing point, generating quite a switching transient which is what causes filament buzz. Try a variac (variable autotransformer), they will actually reduce the voltage supplied to your rectifier. Pete C. So the dimmers keep more and more of the waveform on either side of the peak as the power is increased? And they always reach peak voltage? I thought that they started conducting at zero and used more and more of the voltage until peak voltage is reached. But after reading your post that doesn't make sense to me. Eric Nope -- the triac turns on some time after the zero-crossing. That time is usually simply determined by a simple RC circuit that delays the trigger (lags). You may not always get the peak -- if it is turned way down, it may actually turn on sometime after the peak, but it does not turn off until the next zero crossing. There are different circuits used for things like heater control that do switch on at the zero crossing to minimize spikes etc, but they work on a "burst" of cycles as it were. They may use a 1 hz "cycle time" and vary how many cycles during that 1 second period are actually turned on but the typical light dimmer/speed control works with a delayed phase angle firing of a triac - makes them electrically "noisy". They work well for lights because you are varying the "average power" under the portion of the curve (sine wave) that it is turned on - works well with lights. Not so well for a rectified supply because until you delay past 90 degrees, you are still getting the peak (and high current pulses when it turns on). mikey |