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Old 11th February 2011, 04:29 PM   #1
Tarzan is offline Tarzan  Belgium
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Default Special 9V supply

Hi,
I've been looking around and I've seen thousands of datasheets.
But not a single one could help me out on the following problem.

Here is the situation.
I need a stable 9v DC supply. Power is around 7.5 Watt (800mA).
The input voltage can vary between 6 and 15 volts DC.
A max of 30 Volts DC would be great.
Power comes from a DC source so an AC adapter or transformer is not an option.

Now that's a challenge I can't resolve.
Maybe one of you can.

I was thinking of going up first to eg. 48V and then back down to 9V.
But that implies to build two supplies.
I rather like to have one supply and one source of EMI.

Thanks,
Tarzan
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Old 11th February 2011, 04:32 PM   #2
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much easier to go up first and then down. You would be best going upto 24V and then down as you want to keep the duty cycle about 0.5
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Old 11th February 2011, 04:37 PM   #3
Tarzan is offline Tarzan  Belgium
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Hello Kipman725,
I'm afraid that's the way to go.
Done that but at the cost of twice the number of parts.
But nevertheless maybe a genious will come with a brigth idea.

But it just crossed my mind;
Maybe an isolated supply can bring a sollution.
A bit more complicated to build but still worth thinking about...

Tarzan
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Old 11th February 2011, 04:41 PM   #4
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You need a buck-boost supply. I know Linear Technology makes them and I assume National and other also do.
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Old 11th February 2011, 04:43 PM   #5
Tarzan is offline Tarzan  Belgium
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Yes, they do.
But with an input voltage that can vary from below the output voltage to way above it; these circuits do not automatically switch over from buck to boost.
That's the challenge with one psu.
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Old 11th February 2011, 04:59 PM   #6
ratsept is offline ratsept  Estonia
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There are at least two ways to do it with just one supply. Either the older/simpler/lossy flyback converter or SEPIC. There are chips for both topologies available from manufacturers such as Maxim.
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Old 12th February 2011, 06:01 AM   #7
RJM1 is online now RJM1  United States
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From National Semiconductor Simple Switcher Web-bench.
9V-Reg 6 to 15V input.
9V-Reg2 6 to 30V input.
Attached Files
File Type: pdf 9V-Reg.pdf (140.5 KB, 45 views)
File Type: pdf 9V-Reg2.pdf (141.0 KB, 23 views)

Last edited by RJM1; 12th February 2011 at 06:17 AM.
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Old 12th February 2011, 08:07 AM   #8
Tarzan is offline Tarzan  Belgium
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Here we have a classic example (me, myself, I) of getting lost in the multitude of possible sollutions after unsuccesfull searching and looking for the wrong topology.
The more people the more sollutions.
I was definitly on a wrong track.
Thanks for the sollutions guys,
Tarzan
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Old 12th February 2011, 01:00 PM   #9
agdr is offline agdr  United States
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How about this boost-buck supply?

Adjustable Auto Boost Buck Regulator Power Supply DC-DC - eBay (item 260728941144 end time Feb-27-11 13:00:13 PST)

input: 3.5V - 28V DC
output: 1.5 - 26V DC
input and output current: 1A
peak current: 3A
rated power: 13W
load regulation: 1%

$4 plus shipping and a long wait from China.
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Old 12th February 2011, 01:54 PM   #10
agdr is offline agdr  United States
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I forgot to say... if your max of 30V is required, just put 3 1N5401's in series with the input to knock it down 2V.

Last edited by agdr; 12th February 2011 at 01:58 PM.
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