-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 100
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
OVP PCB Inductor in DCP405 up in smoke #114
Comments
Could you please let me know what exactly you tried to do with battery. |
Battery voltage was about 26v and I connected it to the main output on the module (+ve to +ve, -ve to -ve), set the module output to 28v and 1A and then turned the output on. OVP tripped immediately. after a few seconds I noticed the smoke, and disconnected the battery. Just checked - Fuse 1 is fine, Fuse 2 is blown. |
Ok, replace F2 and check if you can get set voltage output. You did something that is not allowed and I have to add a notice about that in the User manual: Never change output enable to ON when battery is connected and HW OVP is enabled! |
That's fine, you can try to somehow bypass damaged PCB inductor. |
ok thanks. Yes as soon as it happened I realized I should have thought more carefully about what I was trying to do! What is the PCB inductor used for? Ie what's the effect of bypassing it? |
It is intended to limit max. current to preserve triac. We're talking here about a couple of hundreds of amps in microseconds. In most of the cases it should works just fine with inductor shorted. |
The following warning has been added to the User manual (Chapter 10.2): |
Remedy for this is suggested by @brianbienvenu in #255 that is actually similar to #9 which is changed now to P1 priority. |
Made the mistake of connecting a battery thinking I could charge it, noticed some smoke and disconnected everything.
Can't see any other damage. The module passes power on checks, but doesn't seem to provide any output - I tried a simple 10v 10ma into a multi-meter and it reads 10v 10uA but no the multi-meter shows no voltage.
Any tips on next steps? should I clean up the PCB Inductor traces and do a more thorough test of individual components?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: