regarding the green wire

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regarding the green wire

roncasa
I think we have missed the point. Any line powered device that has a
conductive enclosure should have that enclosure bonded to the 'green
wire'. It is a personnel safety issue. The KPA500 is line powered and
has a metal enclosure.

REPLY:
Thus my point, the power supply for any radio is powered by AC and
should be wired accordingly as suggested with the "green" wire.




   the KPA500 does *not* use a separate power supply. It has a built-in
power supply and so plugs directly into the mains outlet.

REPLY:
Thank you. I stand corrected that the unit power is directly supplied by
AC thus the need for "green" wire.




A power supply transformer can't be considered to be totally isolating
for safety purposes unless there is a shield between the primary and the
secondary that is grounded to the primary.


REPLY:
I am aware of transformer supplies. I was referencing to switch-mode
supplies (transformer less). I believe they have isolation between
primary and secondary.
Radios using this type of supply should not need the "green" wire to
radio. It should go to the power supply itself as explained above.


72
Ron, wb1hga





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Re: regarding the green wire

Mark Bayern
>>"I am aware of transformer supplies. I was referencing to switch-mode
supplies (transformer less). I believe they have isolation between
primary and secondary.

Without a transformer? How are they getting any galvanic isolation? The
transformer-less switched mode power supplies I'm familiar are
most definitely _NOT_ isolated. I would like to see a design that was
isolate.

Mark  AD5SS





On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 4:15 PM, ron <[hidden email]> wrote:

> I think we have missed the point. Any line powered device that has a
> conductive enclosure should have that enclosure bonded to the 'green
> wire'. It is a personnel safety issue. The KPA500 is line powered and
> has a metal enclosure.
>
> REPLY:
> Thus my point, the power supply for any radio is powered by AC and
> should be wired accordingly as suggested with the "green" wire.
>
>
>
>
>   the KPA500 does *not* use a separate power supply. It has a built-in
> power supply and so plugs directly into the mains outlet.
>
> REPLY:
> Thank you. I stand corrected that the unit power is directly supplied by
> AC thus the need for "green" wire.
>
>
>
>
> A power supply transformer can't be considered to be totally isolating
> for safety purposes unless there is a shield between the primary and the
> secondary that is grounded to the primary.
>
>
> REPLY:
> I am aware of transformer supplies. I was referencing to switch-mode
> supplies (transformer less). I believe they have isolation between
> primary and secondary.
> Radios using this type of supply should not need the "green" wire to
> radio. It should go to the power supply itself as explained above.
>
>
> 72
> Ron, wb1hga
>
>
>
>
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Re: regarding the green wire

roncasa
On 09/04/2011 08:07 PM, Mark Bayern wrote:
>  >>"I am aware of transformer supplies. I was referencing to switch-mode
> supplies (transformer less). I believe they have isolation between
> primary and secondary.
>
> Without a transformer? How are they getting any galvanic isolation? The
> transformer-less switched mode power supplies I'm familiar are
> most definitely _NOT_ isolated. I would like to see a design that was
> isolate.


not a bulky heavy transformer you would think of,
The inverter stage converts DC, whether directly from the input or from
the rectifier stage  to AC by running it through a power oscillator,
whose output transformer is very small with few windings at a very high
frequency. (I understand the frequency is usually chosen to be above 20
kHz, to make it inaudible) The output voltage is OPTICALLY coupled to
the input. The switching is implemented (to achieve high gain) MOSFET
amplifier. MOSFETs are low on-resistance and a high current-handling
capacity.
Unless well designed, they can cause hash in AC line and be picked up by
our ham radios.

72
Ron, wb1hga
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Re: regarding the green wire

Mark Bayern
>>"whose output transformer is very small with few windings ...

But that is not a transformer-less SMPS. It does have a transformer.

I'm done with this discussion.

Mark



On Mon, Sep 5, 2011 at 10:05 AM, ron <[hidden email]> wrote:

> On 09/04/2011 08:07 PM, Mark Bayern wrote:
>
>>  >>"I am aware of transformer supplies. I was referencing to switch-mode
>> supplies (transformer less). I believe they have isolation between
>> primary and secondary.
>>
>> Without a transformer? How are they getting any galvanic isolation? The
>> transformer-less switched mode power supplies I'm familiar are
>> most definitely _NOT_ isolated. I would like to see a design that was
>> isolate.
>>
>
>
> not a bulky heavy transformer you would think of,
> The inverter stage converts DC, whether directly from the input or from the
> rectifier stage  to AC by running it through a power oscillator, whose
> output transformer is very small with few windings at a very high frequency.
> (I understand the frequency is usually chosen to be above 20 kHz, to make it
> inaudible) The output voltage is OPTICALLY coupled to the input. The
> switching is implemented (to achieve high gain) MOSFET amplifier. MOSFETs
> are low on-resistance and a high current-handling capacity.
> Unless well designed, they can cause hash in AC line and be picked up by
> our ham radios.
>
> 72
> Ron, wb1hga
>
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Re: regarding the green wire

k6dgw
On 9/5/2011 11:30 AM, Mark Bayern wrote:
>>> "whose output transformer is very small with few windings ...
>
> But that is not a transformer-less SMPS. It does have a transformer.

No magic here.  Aircraft AC power used to be 400 Hz, and may still be.
It was[is] pretty simple.  At 400 Hz, you need a lot less iron in
alternators, motors, and transformers so they weigh a lot less.  The
concept has been around a long time.  The turbine generators we used on
airborne missions in the mid-60's were 400 Hz, both for weight and
because turbines run at high RPM.  Two troops could easily carry a 10
KVA turbine generator at a jog.  Its diesel 50-60 Hz equivalent was
mounted on a trailer and weighed about 1,500 lbs.  The 400 Hz power
supplies for the KWM-2A's, replacing the 516-F's, weighed about 3-4 lbs,
including case.

Nothing magic about 400 Hz either, that's just what was "engineering-ly
convenient" in airplanes since it was generated by rotating machinery.
Use an electronic switch at 25 KHz to create a square wave and you can
use a transformer wound on a ferrite core ... even lighter ... but still
a transformer.

Good for us that power distribution stayed around 25-60 Hz.  25 KHz
would have radiated all over the place, and does from an SMPS -- right
into your receiver.  SAQ in Grimeton, Sweden was on 17.2 KHz and did
pretty well on the transatlantic circuit. :-)  If I ever make it to
Scandinavia, that alternator is on my "must see" list.

73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2011 Cal QSO Party 1-2 Oct 2011
- www.cqp.org

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