Wester547 wrote:I'm surprised the power supply still worked given the discoloration caused by the hot load resistor next to that tiny Teapo.... if the PCB is really darkened, Chicony must have not chosen an appropriately spec'd resistor for the -12V rail. They have done that before in some old 200W Dell Hipros as documented by momaka a few years back on badcaps.
It's not for the −12V – this unit has a 7912 for that, and the resistor isn't anywhere near the 7912 anyway. It's for the
+12V.
I also think the FYP1010DN is freewheeling for the +12V rail.
It's the other way around – the FYP1010DN handles the pulses from the transformer and the STPS20S100CT does freewheeling. With a typical (?) duty cycle of 33% (one third), it would indeed give 30A on the +12V.
Forward is also somewhat inefficient because the use of half-wave rectification on the output...
Actually, forward doesn't work that way. It's the isolated counterpart of the "buck" topology used in motherboard VRMs along with the +12V to +3.3V and +5V converters in current high-end PSUs.
The mag-amp in forward topology does the same thing as the coils in a motherboard VRM, albeit at a higher power level and lower frequency. Basically all you're changing from buck topology is inserting a transformer and (by necessity) another diode.
I would guess that in a forward converter outputting +12V, the pulses from the transformer would be somewhere from +24V to +40V. A higher duty cycle is better as it reduces conduction losses in the switcher(s) and the pulse voltage from the transformer (therefore allowing lower voltage diodes on the secondary).
c_hegge (in the review) wrote:The 5V rail uses two Fairchild MBRP3045N Schottky rectifiers rated at 30A, so it should be capable of up to 60A.
Actually, because of how they're connected in this unit – which doesn't equally split the current between the two parts – it's 54A if the duty cycle at full load is a third…
I'm not agreeing with Hardware Secrets on this one - I think you can unevenly load the two diodes in a single part as long as the total dissipation of the two is within the safe limit, because they're on the same chip and will therefore stay at about the same temperature. But if you use multiple physical parts, you
do need to be careful with the current split between them, as they can end up at very different temperatures. In this case, one diode out of the four is the pulse rectifier and the other three are freewheeling. With the one-third duty cycle:
(54*(1/3))+(18*(2/3)) = 30A average (the rectifier next to the transformer)
(18*(2/3))+(18*(2/3)) = 24A average (the rectifier on the other side of the heatsink, next to the mag-amp)
(18 being 54 / 3)
It's still 2.45x the label rating, though, and the one next to the transformer would have been more than enough all by itself.
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