<div id="RTEContent">No it does not. I'm using the standard "PowerOne" type supply...<br> if it gets an overcurrent, it shuts down the output and remains latched<br> off until power is reset.<br> <br> If you power off, then on again quickly, it will start because the caps<br> are not 'all the way' discharged and the current spike is less...<br> <br> that is still ugly...<br> <br> H^) harry<br><br><b><i>Seb Francis <seb@burnit.co.uk></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> surely having a current limiting PSU (e.g. with an LM 723) would just <br>bring the voltage up as the caps charged?<br><br>seb<br><br><br>Harry Bissell Jr wrote:<br><br>> Just for the record (and noobs)<br>><br>> another solution is to either<br>><br>> Power one half the rack, then after a time delay<br>> of a second or so... power the other half using a relay.<br>><br>>
~or~<br>><br>> Power the whole system through some series resistors that limit the<br>> inrush current, then short across those resistors after a one second<br>> delay.<br>><br>> This is how I did my system... but the 'brute force' larger supply is <br>> a valid option<br>> too. Its more size and weight, less complexity.<br>><br>> Engineering... ~make the choice~<br>><br>> H^) harry<br>><br>> */Tim Daugard <daugard @sprintmail.com="">/* wrote:<br>><br>> From: "harrybissell"<br>> .<br>> ><br>> What price failure ? More time is wasted by NOT using sufficient<br>> bypass caps than is saved by not designing them in (in small<br>> production runs). It is really hard to OVERDO the caps, unless the<br>> power supply is unable to start because of the peak current :^P<br>> ><br>><br>> Which happens, my system reached the point where the power supply was<br>> ad!
equete
for steady stae use, but couldn't power up the system. I had<br>> to unplug one row of modules from the power chain until the system<br>> powered up. When all the other modules had charge their caps, the last<br>> chain got pluged in. I finally solved that problem by putting in an<br>> upgraded power supply - two modules wide with 3X the current<br>> capability.<br>><br>> Tim Daugard<br>> AG4GZ 30.4078N 86.6227W Alt: 12 feet above MSL<br>> http://home.sprintmail.com/~daugard/synth.htm<br>><br>><br>><br>><br><br></daugard></blockquote><br></div>