ckramer
Electrical
- Nov 12, 2007
- 7
We use a couple different 24VDC power supplies to drive components in testing instrumentation we manufacture. Recently we've been told that using a supply with "Automatic" voltage inputs (120V/230V) puts our equipment at risk when used on a 230V circuit and one leg drops, causing an "under voltage" situation, blowing up critical components because the supply cannot switch down to 120V fast enough. We have never experienced this in the 7yrs I've been on the project and never had any of our international customers report this problem.
We work mainly with 24V/20A DC switching supplies, and some smaller 24V/1.3A, mostly Omron and Sola.
A few of our instruments are used in countries with less than perfect infrastructure (Indonesia) that experience frequent brown/black-outs, not one has lost a PS.
I am aware that power supply manufactures do make 120V or 240V input power supplies (seperate spec's), but I and cannot find any information pertaining to the above scenario.
Any help is appreciated.
Kramer
We work mainly with 24V/20A DC switching supplies, and some smaller 24V/1.3A, mostly Omron and Sola.
A few of our instruments are used in countries with less than perfect infrastructure (Indonesia) that experience frequent brown/black-outs, not one has lost a PS.
I am aware that power supply manufactures do make 120V or 240V input power supplies (seperate spec's), but I and cannot find any information pertaining to the above scenario.
Any help is appreciated.
Kramer