Try it and measure to ensure you get what you expect.
Make sure the mains fuse to both supplies is about the right size.
The problem occurs where the "ground" of the supply is connected to the Chassis enclosing the SMPS. That Chassis MUST be connected to PE. In this situation you CANNOT series connect the PSUs.
This applies to the SMPS that power desk top computers.
But where the PSU is double insulated to ClassII standards and has no PE to connect to, then you CAN series connect the PSUs. As many as you like, eg. four 19Vdc laptop supplies to give +-38Vdc to power an amplifier.
Make sure the mains fuse to both supplies is about the right size.
The problem occurs where the "ground" of the supply is connected to the Chassis enclosing the SMPS. That Chassis MUST be connected to PE. In this situation you CANNOT series connect the PSUs.
This applies to the SMPS that power desk top computers.
But where the PSU is double insulated to ClassII standards and has no PE to connect to, then you CAN series connect the PSUs. As many as you like, eg. four 19Vdc laptop supplies to give +-38Vdc to power an amplifier.
Hi Andrew,
Thanks for getting back to me. I think I follow you.
These are laptop power supplies (in plastic cases) so I think the double insulated should apply, but I'll check. If the AC wall plug has only two connectors, I should be OK? So I'm powering op-amp style projects so need the center power for that.
Thanks for getting back to me. I think I follow you.
These are laptop power supplies (in plastic cases) so I think the double insulated should apply, but I'll check. If the AC wall plug has only two connectors, I should be OK? So I'm powering op-amp style projects so need the center power for that.
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