Monday, December 27, 2010
High Current Regulated Supply
The high current regulator
below uses an additional winding or a separate transformer to supply
power for the LM317 regulator so that the pass transistors can operate
closer to saturation and improve efficiency. For good efficiency the
voltage at the collectors of the two parallel 2N3055 pass transistors
should be close to the output voltage. The LM317 requires a couple extra
volts on the input side, plus the emitter/base drop of the 3055s, plus
whatever is lost across the (0.1 ohm) equalizing resistors (1volt at 10
amps), so a separate transformer and rectifier/filter circuit is used
that is a few volts higher than the output voltage. The LM317 will
provide over 1 amp of current to drive the bases of the pass transistors
and assumings a gain of 10 the combination should deliver 15 amps or
more. The LM317 always operates with a voltage difference of 1.2 between
the output terminal and adjustment terminal and requires a minimum load
of 10mA, so a 75 ohm resistor was chosen which will draw (1.2/75 =
16mA). This same current flows through the emitter resistor of the
2N3904 which produces about a 1 volt drop across the 62 ohm resistor and
1.7 volts at the base. The output voltage is set with the voltage
divider (1K/560) so that 1.7 volts is applied to the 3904 base when the
output is 5 volts. For 13 volt operation, the 1K resistor could be
adjusted to around 3.6K. The regulator has no output short circuit
protection so the output probably should be fused.
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