zappedagain
Electrical
- Jul 19, 2005
- 1,074
I have an application where I'm considering using 10 switching power supplies, each rated to 50W. I have various voltages that I need to supply, and it turns out I can stack 10 supplies in a smaller volume than multiple output power supplies require (about 2/3 the volume by first estimates).
While the total power dissipation is 500W, the in rush current of each switcher is spec'd at 37A (at 230VAC), so I'd have a 370A surge for one cycle of the mains. At 50Hz, that gives an A2t of over 2700, and that is more than a slow-blow 15A fuse can handle. At 115VAC I only need a 6A fuse, so these two demands are diverging rapidly.
I suspect that mains with standard 15A wiring wouldn't give me a 370A surge... would the in rush current then last multiple cycles? I suspect that would cause the brown out circuitry in other equipment on the same main to trigger.
Is this fairly typical and thus a reason not to use multiple switchers, or should I keep looking at other fuse manufacturers or maybe circuit breakers?
Thanks,
Z
While the total power dissipation is 500W, the in rush current of each switcher is spec'd at 37A (at 230VAC), so I'd have a 370A surge for one cycle of the mains. At 50Hz, that gives an A2t of over 2700, and that is more than a slow-blow 15A fuse can handle. At 115VAC I only need a 6A fuse, so these two demands are diverging rapidly.
I suspect that mains with standard 15A wiring wouldn't give me a 370A surge... would the in rush current then last multiple cycles? I suspect that would cause the brown out circuitry in other equipment on the same main to trigger.
Is this fairly typical and thus a reason not to use multiple switchers, or should I keep looking at other fuse manufacturers or maybe circuit breakers?
Thanks,
Z