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Well let's see, the size of the supply has nothing to do with the
problem I am experiencing! The reason I am using an Astron 50 is because it also runs the HF rig, and all the otehr 13.8 volt equipment in the shact with much reserve current. When I bought the supply (New) from AES to go with a brand new TS-450S, I figured you only want to di this once, so I bought all I thought I'd ever need. Terry On Fri, 11 Jul 2003 12:09:56 -0700, "Bob" wrote: If the Astron overshoots, you can verify it with an oscilloscope. If indeed it does that, you can modify the circuit to reduce that. Why are you using a 35 Ampere power supply for such a small load? It would be better to use a lower current rated unit. I use a 20 Ampere unit and have no such problem. Looking at the diagram, you can put in a capacitor across the reference voltage at the IC to reduce the turn on speed. On the other hand, it's possible the problem arises due to too slow a turn on of the supply. You can do things to improve that also. Also, the supply may be oscillating. Try connecting a dummy load of, say, a few amperes across the output. An automobile headlamp can work for that. Best to verify the actual cause with an oscilloscope before starting to make modifications. 73, Bob K6DDX |
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