Login | Register

User Profile for electrone
Name: electrone
Avatar: No Avatar
Join Date: 01/03/2006
Member Title: Power-User
Last Visit: 11/22/2009 9:00 PM
Last Post Date: 11/22/2009 9:24 AM
Home Page: http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/switchmode/
Total Posts: 310
Good Answers:

2

Most recent "good answers":
  • Forum Thread: How to lower gas prices
  • Forum Thread: Darwin or the Devil?
  • Find: Posts and comments by electrone
    Find: Threads and blog entries by electrone
    Find: Tags by electrone
    Biography

    Hello, welcome to finding out about what I consider the DIY solution to power
    supply design. I began the basic USMPS, the first Universal Switch Mode Power
    Supply, design c. 8/2002. It has since progressed to the ZVS USMPS. See my non-commercial
    group dating back to early 2003.

    http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/switchmode/

    I use one of the many different forms of the USMPS for almost all of my power
    supply projects. Versions of it can be used for needs ranging from single
    MOSFET voltage buck/boosters to fully isolated fairly high power bridge
    circuits.

    The advantage of the USMPS approach is that once you learn the basic principle,
    it can be modified to do almost anything needed because of its very simple
    signal path. For example, the idea of the ZVS USMPS can be used to synchronize
    multiple USMPSs. Thus, I am designing a motor controller/battery charger for
    an electric bicycle which uses the same transformer for both motor control and
    battery charging. It also should be able to use synchronous rectification, all
    based on relatively simple ZVS (zero voltage switching) circuitry.

    I believe the USMPS technique provides the simplest method available having
    the best balance between discrete and integrated circuit (IC) components.


    Here is the group's description:

    Universal switching power supply. Low, high power switchmode circuitry. Ideas:
    Pulse width modulation (PWM), zero voltage switching (ZVS), zero current
    switching (ZCS), regulated, unregulated, overload protection, impedance-
    derived power limiting, high efficiency, electromagnetic interference (EMI).

    Joseph Meisenhelder