Hey all, I have an ICEPower Module that will not turn on (sense) unless mains voltage is less than 110VAC. I have measured the mains here and I am around 122VAC.
I was troubleshooting the module and put it on a Variac. I noticed as soon as I got under 110VAC (min voltage for module is 85 VAC), the module ran perfectly. Also, once it is turned on, it ran fine on mains voltage of 122VAC.
I have put in a Current limiter (CL-90 - 120 ohm resistance), and didn't really help - I think it needs more Amps to get that ramp up in resistance / voltage to drop mains a bit.
Any other way?
By the way, this is an ICEPower 50ASX2 that has an internal SMPS onboard....
I was troubleshooting the module and put it on a Variac. I noticed as soon as I got under 110VAC (min voltage for module is 85 VAC), the module ran perfectly. Also, once it is turned on, it ran fine on mains voltage of 122VAC.
I have put in a Current limiter (CL-90 - 120 ohm resistance), and didn't really help - I think it needs more Amps to get that ramp up in resistance / voltage to drop mains a bit.
Any other way?
By the way, this is an ICEPower 50ASX2 that has an internal SMPS onboard....
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That looks interesting - I have a 120 / 12 tranny - may be a bit too big to fit in teh chassis tho...I will have to check.
The simplest and most effective way is to use a low voltage transformer wired as an autotransformer.Any other way?
In your case, a 120V/12V would do: since the regulation will work backwards, you'll get something like 116~118V with 122V input.
The power only needs to be the percentage of the voltage drop you need times the nominal power of your amplifier, ~10% in your case
If you only need to drop 12 volts I would think that the simplest way would be to make a voltage divider with a couple of resistors.
Voltage divider - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You wants your resistors to be lower then the equivalent resistance of the module but too low and they'll dissipate a lot of heat. How many watts is the ICEPower module?
Voltage divider - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
You wants your resistors to be lower then the equivalent resistance of the module but too low and they'll dissipate a lot of heat. How many watts is the ICEPower module?
Elvee almost has it. Use a 120 to 12 volt transformer, wire the primary across the input voltage, place the secondary in series with the voltage to your power module. if you connect the secondary one way it will add 12 volts, the other it will subtract it. You only need a transformer with a secondary current rating equal to the final draw.
You wants your resistors to be lower then the equivalent resistance of the module but too low and they'll dissipate a lot of heat. How many watts is the ICEPower module?
The Icepower amp is listed at 65 watts.
Agreed, autotransformer is the way to go. Only slight change I would suggest would be to wire 120V and 12V windings in series with same relative polarity, then connect your line voltage to the entire winding, which will now be rated for 132V. You are placing fewer volts/turn on the transformer, which will allow it to run at lower saturation given your 122V input. Output will be around 110V, taken across the 120V winding.
Quite weird that this should be a problem since the ICEpower SMPS is rated up to 132VAC (264VAC doubled). 122VAC should be well within range?
/U.
/U.
I would first contact ICE about the issue. It may be possible to easily adjust the over-voltage trip point of your modules to accept up to 125 volts without damage. That would be both the least costly and the most convienent solution of possible.
Yup. I agree. Works perfectly at 110vac. Like I said, once running from 110, I can raise to 122vac and no issues. Thats's why I was thinking of the CL-90.
I started out thinking it was a grounding issue (from other threads here on DIYAudio), but it repeatedly works perfectly with 110vac mains. I tried grounding both standoffs in corners (this is SE version), even tho the amp originally came with plastic isolated standoffs. Made no difference - it all came down to the mains.
I started out thinking it was a grounding issue (from other threads here on DIYAudio), but it repeatedly works perfectly with 110vac mains. I tried grounding both standoffs in corners (this is SE version), even tho the amp originally came with plastic isolated standoffs. Made no difference - it all came down to the mains.
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I would first contact ICE about the issue. It may be possible to easily adjust the over-voltage trip point of your modules to accept up to 125 volts without damage. That would be both the least costly and the most convienent solution of possible.
+1
(can you determine the PSU chip set used and possibly look up data sheet applications to see how any overvoltage condition is determined)
I don't remember seeing a pot or anything on the module....I don't think ICE would even bother replying to a DIY'er like me....
I would think the over voltage protection is kicking in too early. Try a Power Thermistor in series with the mains. Say 10A 22R cold and 1R hot. Might work ... I would reset the over voltage trip personally.
Yamaha Electronics used a Triac (light dimmer) as soft start ...?
Yamaha Electronics used a Triac (light dimmer) as soft start ...?
I have a CL-90 (120R 2A) in there now...but I think the current draw it too low ... not getting a real drop on the mains - how do you reset the overvoltage?
Series resistor (or thermistor) will lead you nowhere. Either you manage to alter the trip threshold in some way, or you change the input voltage in a fixed and reliable manner (not dependent on the current draw) and that's about it: every other solution will be a PITA in some wayI have a CL-90 (120R 2A) in there now...but I think the current draw it too low ... not getting a real drop on the mains - how do you reset the overvoltage?
Is a Capacitor Dropper possible?
UK Vintage Radio Repair and Restoration - Dropper Calculations
I just found this and playing with the spreadsheet calculator...
UK Vintage Radio Repair and Restoration - Dropper Calculations
I just found this and playing with the spreadsheet calculator...
Hi,
It is possible that you already checked it out. But did you check the AC input voltage selection jumper?
It is possible that you already checked it out. But did you check the AC input voltage selection jumper?
It is possible that you already checked it out. But did you check the AC input voltage selection jumper?
Yup...done. I even checked it with the 220v setting - no start at all...under-voltage limit is 170vac on 220vac setting...
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