autonub
Electrical
- Feb 24, 2012
- 13
I'm used to working with closed loop diagrams from college and during my research. However, in practice it is very common for the main lines from the output of an AC/DC power supply to continue from one page or sheet to the next. At the bottom and top of each line it is necessary to state the voltage so other people can follow the schematic. I know for -Vs there are technically several "truths." However, I'm curious what the standard practice or convention is when tagging Vs- (the negative voltage source potential or node; the wire connected directly to the negative terminal of the DC output).
From my perspective, simply saying DC GND makes the most sense for -Vs. However, you could say, for a 24Vdc power supply as an example, -24Vdc, as -24Vdc would be the potential with respect to +24Vdc (essentially flipping the leads of your multimeter in this case). Or you could even say 0Vdc, since -Vs in this case is your reference or ground potential (even though it may not actually be 0V with respect to real ground). But what is the most widely recognized practice?
I checked IEEE 315A among other standards but didn't find a clear answer. Does a standardized method for describing -Vs exist? Maybe "-Vs" is the answer? Please provide source(s) with your answer. Although I'd be interested to read your personal preferences, what I'd really prefer is an established method by an organization such as IEEE.
Thanks!
From my perspective, simply saying DC GND makes the most sense for -Vs. However, you could say, for a 24Vdc power supply as an example, -24Vdc, as -24Vdc would be the potential with respect to +24Vdc (essentially flipping the leads of your multimeter in this case). Or you could even say 0Vdc, since -Vs in this case is your reference or ground potential (even though it may not actually be 0V with respect to real ground). But what is the most widely recognized practice?
I checked IEEE 315A among other standards but didn't find a clear answer. Does a standardized method for describing -Vs exist? Maybe "-Vs" is the answer? Please provide source(s) with your answer. Although I'd be interested to read your personal preferences, what I'd really prefer is an established method by an organization such as IEEE.
Thanks!