adastra
Aerospace
- Jun 5, 2007
- 8
We have a relatively old (ca. 1970s) design for a DC-DC converter which centers on a saturable core toroid transformer. A center tap feedback winding provides the signals to the bases of two complementary NPN transistors; these transistors nominally switch at around 5 kHz.
At room temp and above, the circuit starts up fine. At cold (below 0°C), the unit sometimes comes up screaming in the hundreds of kHz and stays that way - dissipating lots of power but doing nothing useful.
Total secondary load is around 0.75 watt.
Obviously a driven power supply is the way to go, but our customer still wants this groovy-man era item.
Has anyone had experience with this?
At room temp and above, the circuit starts up fine. At cold (below 0°C), the unit sometimes comes up screaming in the hundreds of kHz and stays that way - dissipating lots of power but doing nothing useful.
Total secondary load is around 0.75 watt.
Obviously a driven power supply is the way to go, but our customer still wants this groovy-man era item.
Has anyone had experience with this?