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goldenreference low voltage power supply


kevin gilmore

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  • 2 weeks later...

I've been able to use my RME ADI-2 PRO & RMAA 6.4.5 to measure GRLV power supply output noise. Kevin asked about using my setup with a DC block. It started with a 10uf film cap and 10k resistor then an audio transformer to isolate the RME from the power supply. I discovered a few sources of noise and removed them to get the GRLV output noise down to -120 dB. The first source of noise was 50 Hz and it's harmonics from 7 LED volt meter displays. The second was from not having ground connected from the RME to the power supply. The third was 60 Hz and it's harmonics because the GRLV circuit was too close to the power transformers. 1" was too close and 4" was much better. The pics in the previous post shows the progress over the last 10 days. The final 2 pics show the positive and negative voltage outputs on left and right channels. Then the final pic shows before and after the GRLV circuit.

Here is the DC block circuit used to measure the output noise.

I used one for each channel.

 

 

 

 

 

DC-BLOCK.jpg

grlv 28v.jpg

grlv28v in-out.jpg

Edited by dip16amp
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Even if you eliminate those causes, you can be plagued with RF and other breakthrough into wiring, scope probes etc.

I chased my tail with this in attempting to make sensitive measurements to an active crossover containing a whole bunch of opamps. There was what looked like oscillation in the high tens of kHz. I was using a compact Tektronix oscilloscope. After well over an hour, I turned the scope on its its edge instead of on its feet. The "oscillation" disappeared. It was interference from the oscilloscope switched mode supply.

When making high sensitivity measurements I have to turn the heating off - the microprocessor based controller shoves out a whole bunch of interference (Honewell). And the LED ceiling lights - similar garbage from the rubbish SMPS's.

There is a guy who installed LED lights in his radio shack - and got a massive level of garbage into his gear. He ended up making a linear supply for the lights, which sorted the problem.

This and the next page http://www.chavfreezone.me.uk/2018/LED-Driver-QRM.html

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@dip16ampthe test results are all relative (in dB). Are you sure the 0dB reference is calibrated to 1V rms when you interpret -120dB as -120dBV? Even the most advanced Audio Precision APX555B is “only” spec’d at -117dB of range plus 1uV. Besides, the limited bandwidth of the line matching transformer and the high-ish 10k resistor in combination with the input capacitance of the ADC probably make the test result look quite a bit better than it actually is.

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6 hours ago, simmconn said:

@dip16ampthe test results are all relative (in dB). Are you sure the 0dB reference is calibrated to 1V rms when you interpret -120dB as -120dBV? Even the most advanced Audio Precision APX555B is “only” spec’d at -117dB of range plus 1uV. Besides, the limited bandwidth of the line matching transformer and the high-ish 10k resistor in combination with the input capacitance of the ADC probably make the test result look quite a bit better than it actually is.

you're right in i have not calibrated it to 1v so i can't say 1uv, I'll strike that. from the post.

this does let me see noise on power supplies for comparison like this bk1735.

 

bk1735_28v.jpg

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So I built a set and they work! I am however not seeing any adjustment with the 100k trim pots. Same for two boards and the positive and negative side of each. I've checked my work (and orientation), and all seems ok. I could just leave them (they run stable at +/-20v as expected) but i'd like to understand why i'm not seeing any adjustment. Looking at the circuit it seems pretty simple... I know I am probably missing something obvious.

IMG_6713.jpg

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3 hours ago, audioguru1 said:

So I built a set and they work! I am however not seeing any adjustment with the 100k trim pots. Same for two boards and the positive and negative side of each. I've checked my work (and orientation), and all seems ok. I could just leave them (they run stable at +/-20v as expected) but i'd like to understand why i'm not seeing any adjustment. Looking at the circuit it seems pretty simple... I know I am probably missing something obvious.

 

The output voltage is set by two resistors R8/R7 and R10/R9 (see schematic below).

the trim pots make only very small adjustments - a few mV for those who want spot on voltages - there is a trade-off between adjustment range and temperature stability.

If you want more adjustment range decrease the value of R24,R23,R18,R17. 810K instead of 1M for each gives about + and - 20mV adjustment range.

If you want reasonably accurate voltages AND lower temperature drift you can use 0.1% resistors for R8,R7,R10 and R9 with low temperature coefficients (stock resistors are usually about 100ppm, 0.1% are usually around 25ppm) and omit the 1M ohm resistors and trim pot.

270177221_goldenreference6dLV.thumb.JPG.299bc511c0afe9745aa9c1743d6e9306.JPG

 

 

Edited by jamesmking
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4 hours ago, jamesmking said:

The output voltage is set by two resistors R8/R7 and R10/R9 (see schematic below).

the trim pots make only very small adjustments - a few mV for those who want spot on voltages - there is a trade-off between adjustment range and temperature stability.

If you want more adjustment range decrease the value of R24,R23,R18,R17. 810K instead of 1M for each gives about + and - 20mV adjustment range.

If you want reasonably accurate voltages AND lower temperature drift you can use 0.1% resistors for R8,R7,R10 and R9 with low temperature coefficients (stock resistors are usually about 100ppm, 0.1% are usually around 25ppm) and omit the 1M ohm resistors and trim pot.


 

I thought about making this value change (I did read every page of this thread- seems like one other person had the same issue, but just decided to live with it).
 

I’m not seeing any change in voltage at all even 1mv, which leads me to worry I have an actual issue. I am not measuring with a load, maybe that’s part of it? I’m at a loss - it’s a simple part of the circuit. Maybe there really isn’t enough range to see on my meter un loaded. 

Will do more testing, any suggestions appreciated.
 

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I used the bk1735 to replace the transformer as input to the grlv circuit.

here is the noise level before and after the grlv

then i tested an adjustable 0-48v 10a power supply i found on amazon for $40

DROK 48V Power Supply, AC 110V/220V to DC 0-48V 10A

and tested it before and after the grlv

 

 

bk1735-grlv.jpg

drok 48v 10a.jpg

drok-grlv.jpg

Edited by dip16amp
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i load tested the drok 48v 10a power supply and only got up to 27v at 10a

with a rigol dl3021a dc electronic load tester

here is the 1a steps

(edit: forgot to set the drok input voltage setting to 115 vice 230)

i was able to get 35 volts at 8 amps before reaching my load tester limit.

anps volts

1a 36v

2a 35v

3a 34v

4a 33v

5a 32.6v

6a 32v

7a 31v

8a 30v

9a 28v

10a 27v

then i connected a grlv with a 2k resistor to output 23.3v and load tested it

amps volts

1a 23.3v

2a 23.2v

3a 23.2v

4a 23.1v

5a 23.1v

6a 23.0v

7a 23.0v

8a 22.9v

9a 22.9v

10a 22.8v

 

Edited by dip16amp
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On 1/25/2023 at 1:12 PM, kevin gilmore said:

golden reference was designed for only 5 amps.

but the mjw21196 is rated for 16 amps

what could go wrong?

do you need to redesign the grlv for 10 amps?

do i have to modify something or is it good as is?

i know the load tester is only rated for 200w and it survived

i can get a 60v 8a adjustable power supply for $47.

maybe it can do 35v at 8a

only 8 amps tho

 

 

 

Edited by dip16amp
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i forgot to set the drok input voltage setting to 115 vice 230.

thought i was in the habit of checking that first before using.

now i can get 35 volts at 8 amps before reaching my load tester limit.

put a 3k resistor in my grlv to get 30 volts out.

now i get 30 volts at 8 amps out on a load test.

here is the noise level before and after the grlv regulator during the 8 amp load test.

 

grlv 30v 8a.jpg

grok35v0-8a.gif

Edited by dip16amp
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  • 2 weeks later...

***Edit 2: Seems that the BR was faulty, it works fine now.

Can someone suggest me where I can start troubleshooting?

I have a GRLV set for 30V that worked previously with a dual transformer. I got myself a center tapped transformer and adjusted the bridge rectifier accordingly - only one in the middle. Wiring in is correct for a center tap.

The GRLV blows a 1A fast blow fuse every time turned one. Left side +30V has time to reach +30V before the fuse trips while the right side -30V will not light up in time.

Transformer is 100VA 30V - 0 - 30V
The bridge rectifier is reused from the same board

**Edit
Here are my findings
If I connect only the center and right terminals, the whole board works fine. + and - 30V on the outputs
If I connect only the center and left terminals, the board reads wrong and the bridge rectifier heats up. I think the BR is toast from desoldering. I'll try taking it out and testing

330266109_1461002954427748_1100670882172091869_n.jpg

330436842_898313267982376_2666269551917126989_n.jpg

Edited by penmarker
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  • 2 months later...

Hi All, I am building the GRLV 2018 version.48 and I get a problem which I have no idea to tackle it. Before I soldering all the parts, I checked the position of ksp92 and ksp42 and confirmed they are put in the correct position. When I plug the 50VA transformer to provide double rails 25v to the GRLV, all the LED will light up but only the LED which near the zener on right side will dim soon.

I use the multimeter to check the output voltage and I found that the positive rail provide stable 20v but the negative rail will keep dropping the voltage every second from 20v.

Can anyone tell me why the negative rail keep dropping voltage? Do I mess up the polarity or put the component in a wrong place and thus lead to this problem?unnamed.thumb.jpg.a497fb49d23e3b01fa8c274e9cc3ee5f.jpg

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8 hours ago, arcanaking said:

Hi All, I am building the GRLV 2018 version.48 and I get a problem which I have no idea to tackle it. Before I soldering all the parts, I checked the position of ksp92 and ksp42 and confirmed they are put in the correct position. When I plug the 50VA transformer to provide double rails 25v to the GRLV, all the LED will light up but only the LED which near the zener on right side will dim soon.

I use the multimeter to check the output voltage and I found that the positive rail provide stable 20v but the negative rail will keep dropping the voltage every second from 20v.

Can anyone tell me why the negative rail keep dropping voltage? Do I mess up the polarity or put the component in a wrong place and thus lead to this problem?unnamed.thumb.jpg.a497fb49d23e3b01fa8c274e9cc3ee5f.jpg

1. check your transformer, you need a centre tapped secondary and make sure the centre tap is going to the CT terminal. If you wire the transformer to the grlv incorrectly you can can one rail working and the other not. 

2. measure the ac voltage going into the board (centre tap to one ACV input and then centre tap to the other) to make sure the AC voltage is about the same on both.

3. check the voltage references are outputting 10V

4. carefully check the underside for solder bridges and dry joints.

5. are all the transistors, opamps and voltage refs from reliable suppliers and not off ali express or ebay? - there are lots and lots of fake parts floating around...

here is a link to my build and troubleshooting guide:

https://www.head-case.org/forums/topic/12269-goldenreference-low-voltage-power-supply/page/27/

 

 

Edited by jamesmking
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