Thread: Which power supply to use
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11-04-2018 #4
Looking at the UC400ETH manual, and having examined my UC300ETH/5LPT closely, I'm going to suggest the following:-
Background info: The UC400ETH has a small DC-DC convertor to take the incoming supply and provide a regulated 5V for the output drivers (the smaller chips - 74HC14's). There's a secondary 3-pin linear regulator, likely 3.3V for the micro controller. The resistor networks (39k, 22k and 4k7s) are all geared up for adapting 5V signalling to the 3v3 levels for the micro controller. This design is common with the UC300ETH/5LPT.
Also, the manual does state that the incoming DC voltage should be between 12V 500mA, and 24V 250mA. This is pretty straightforward - and suggests that a 6W or 6VA supply is required for the UC400.
Summary of what you have:
You have a 48V PSU already for your stepper drivers. So we take that off the table.
You mention a supply "with" the VFD - which is 24V, 10A. You mention a cooler fan, that's burnt out?, it's unclear to me if this cooler fan is part of the VFD, PSU, or just within the enclosure? Please clarify - and what burnt it out? (there are not many failure modes for a fan - usually over voltage - which would make me want to verify the performance/operation of the supply before trying to re-use it).
The D100S1R5B is marked (from Aliexpress) as having a 220V single phase AC input (the marking of 8A output refers to the maximum drive current into the spindle motor) - so no PSU requirements for that, over than a direct 220V supply.
So, I think:-
You only need a supply for the UC400ETH, and any services (cooling fan, illumination, water cooling pumps etc?). The UC400ETH has onboard regulation which, given the requirements of the services that I mention, is unlikely to suffer significantly from any regulation or filtering issues, and I'd be cautiously satisfied that it could all run on a single supply. This then means you only have to determine the best, most appropriate voltage level for the services (for me, that's 12V, since I can then use PC-based water cooling kits, but it's horses for courses). Given this very basic requirement I'd budget (at 12V) for 500mA for the UC400ETH, similar for the fan, 800mA for the pump. So, 12V 2A would suit my needs and I'd be looking at something like http://cpc.farnell.com/mean-well/dr-...5?st=12V%20din (which, co-incidentally, I've just bought one of).
For preference, I'd keep the logic (the UC400) on a separate PSU to noisy things like fans and pumps - and therefore a separate PSU - but that's probably just me being cautious.
Regarding wiring the supply to this PSU in parallel with the supply to the VFD - why not?, even if you wired them separately back to two separate 13A plugs they'll still be effectively wired in parallel, but just in the building wiring rather than your enclosure. The exception to this rule is when you overload the incoming power capacity to the enclosure (for example, standard IEC connectors are only rated at 10A).Last edited by Doddy; 11-04-2018 at 04:55 PM. Reason: Replaced UC300 with UC400 when discussing onboard DC-DC convertor
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