So if your system draws 204W, the PSU is really drawing 278.6W from the wall, but the power grid will think your pulling 309.1W.
...we have a pair of 16A parts on the 12v.
The original caps were a mixture of four 2200uF 16v Teapo on the 12v rail, a pair of 2200uF 10v Teapo caps on the 3.3 and 5v rails and a 1000uF (which was bulged) on the 5vsb rail.
Do those capactive loads apply for both the primary and secondary rectifiers? Just to be clear, as to my understanding the secondary side works a bit differently. And are Active PFC PSUs also highly capactive loads for the bridge rectifier?LongRunner wrote:The bridge (not mentioned), a GBU806, is rated for 8A at 100°C with a heatsink. But rectifiers can only deliver 80% of their nominal rating into a highly capacitive load (e.g. no-PFC and passive PFC PSUs) - the nominal rating assumes a resistive or inductive load.
Wester547 wrote:Do those capactive loads apply for both the primary and secondary rectifiers? Just to be clear, as to my understanding the secondary side works a bit differently.
And are Active PFC PSUs also highly capactive loads for the bridge rectifier?
Each phase to neutral gives 230V RMS, and between phases is 398V ( 230V * √3 ).
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