W
w_tom
Guest
harmonics are the different frequencies. As those harmonics... its Fourier spectrum will ONLY contain the fundamental
frequency and harmonics.
That's correct and consistent with what I had posted. Those
increase magnitude (contain more energy), then the transformer
is confronted by other frequencies with more power. As noted
earlier, this can cause increased energy dissipation in the
transformer and elsewhere.
Meanwhile I did not even try to say where most energy is
lost. Why do criticize me for something that was not even
posted? To argue semantics?
An unloaded power supply must not be damaged by no load.
Any power supply that is damaged by a no load condition is
typical of something bought by a bean counter - the enemy of
innovators, responsible manufacturers, and those educated in
computer electronics. No load must not damage a properly
designed switching power supply.
So what? That is not what I said and is completelySomeone who's an expert at filter design could very well not
know the first thing about switcher design.
irrelevant to what I did say. A filter expert need not know
anything about switching power supplies. But a power supply
designer better damn well understand the principles of filter
design. Why does Joel read reverse logic into a post? Why
post what is both irrelevant and not even stated? Joel is
arguing semantics rather than trying to help or answer the
OP. Don't let him confuse you.
Joel Kolstad wrote:
Uh, no, it doesn't! If I give you a periodic signal of a certain frequency,
it doesn't matter WHAT it 'looks' like, its Fourier spectrum will ONLY contain
the fundamental frequency and harmonics. Changing what it 'looks' like (e.g.,
the duty cycle of a square wave) only changes the magnitudes of the harmonics.
This and other compromises are why the switching
power supply cannot have 100% efficiency.
Overall most switchers lose far more efficiency in the switches than they do
in the core.
Unloaded switching power supplies do not break.
Some do.Although you could convince me that such switchers are, by
definition, poorly designed.
Chokes permit energy at some frequency to be converted to
energy at other frequencies. Chokes permits the design to
intergrate filters with sharper cutoff frequencies. Chokes
are essential to better EMC solutions. Chokes can store
energy at certain key operational points.
Where do you get this stuff? Some generic "everything you wanted to know
about electronics" encyclopedia? A lot of what you say is factually correct,
just not at all relevant to the discussion at hand.
To better appreciate the value
and energy conservation of chokes, learn fundamentals of
filter design.
Someone who's an expert at filter design could very well not know the first
thing about switcher design. They're pretty disparate areas of design, and
really only start to overlap somewhat when you discuss output filtering,
resonant designs, etc.
---Joel Kolstad