
I'm confused about this salvaged PC power supply I hoped to use to bench test the rover. It says +12V 12A but -12V 1.0A. How is that? I measured POS 11.7 voltage at all the yellow (12V) wires vs black (GND). None read NEG. But when I connected it to the rover and closed the switch, it immediately shut down. The rover has a 12-16V >> 5V converter and running a Raspberry Pi 4B. No motors running. I doubt I could be exceeding 12A but clearly could exceed 1A. What's up with this? BTW the rover runs just fine on the 16V LiPo battery. RoverDoc -- James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
On Sep 6, 2024, at 1:41 PM, 'James H Phelan' via HomeBrew Robotics Club <hbrob...@googlegroups.com> wrote:<klf0tkS2hWOfrc4e.jpg>
I'm confused about this salvaged PC power supply I hoped to use to bench test the rover. It says +12V 12A but -12V 1.0A. How is that?
I measured POS 11.7 voltage at all the yellow (12V) wires vs black (GND). None read NEG.
But when I connected it to the rover and closed the switch, it immediately shut down.
The rover has a 12-16V >> 5V converter and running a Raspberry Pi 4B. No motors running. I doubt I could be exceeding 12A but clearly could exceed 1A. What's up with this? BTW the rover runs just fine on the 16V LiPo battery. RoverDoc -- James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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Chris et al.
The problem is misunderstood.
The question is -- why can't a supposedly 12V, 12A power supply handle a Raspberry Pi?
I have green-black shorted so the power supply stays on.
It's the ROVER's power switch, not the power supply's, I close that causes the power supply to shut down.
I'm measuring 11.7V on the 12V lines which is close enough.
What I don't understand is the current.
What does the label mean that +12V can deliver 12A but -12V only 1.0A???
There is NO -12V. Blue is not -12V but rather -10V.
Rest are all either +3.3V, +5V or +12V.
The 9000mAh LiPo battery can handle it.
A 16V 3A battery charger supply can
handle it (but not motor stalls!).
So why is this supposedly strong power supply choking on a puny Raspberry Pi?

James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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Curious! What would I need to do to
LOAD the 5V supply?
James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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Ah,
From the referenced https://www.instructables.com/A-Makers-Guide-to-ATX-Power-Supplies/
You should also know that a PSU (because it is a "Switched-Mode Power Supply", or SMPS) requires a minimum load in order to provide consistent voltage. Most people suggest taking one of the +5V (red) wires and wiring it to ground (black) through a 5 or 10 ohm, 10 watt resistor.
Don't have a 10W resistor, just 1/4W.
Looks like a bench supply might be a good investment!
RoverDoc
James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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On Sep 6, 2024, at 7:16 PM, 'James H Phelan' via HomeBrew Robotics Club <hbrob...@googlegroups.com> wrote:Chris et al.
The problem is misunderstood.
The question is -- why can't a supposedly 12V, 12A power supply handle a Raspberry Pi?
I have green-black shorted so the power supply stays on.
It's the ROVER's power switch, not the power supply's, I close that causes the power supply to shut down.
I'm measuring 11.7V on the 12V lines which is close enough.
What I don't understand is the current.
What does the label mean that +12V can deliver 12A but -12V only 1.0A???
There is NO -12V. Blue is not -12V but rather -10V.
Rest are all either +3.3V, +5V or +12V.
The 9000mAh LiPo battery can handle it.
A 16V 3A battery charger supply can handle it (but not motor stalls!).
So why is this supposedly strong power supply choking on a puny Raspberry Pi?
<8ethT0RQfr0Y7YuZ.jpg>
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Team,
Recommendations for a lab bench power supply?
The ones on Amazon have a lot of negative reviews for noise and accuracy.
RoverDoc
James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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----- Original Message -----Sent: Friday, September 06, 2024 7:16 PMSubject: Re: [HBRobotics] Power supply question
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On Sep 6, 2024, at 7:52 PM, 'James H Phelan' via HomeBrew Robotics Club <hbrob...@googlegroups.com> wrote:Team,
Recommendations for a lab bench power supply?
The ones on Amazon have a lot of negative reviews for noise and accuracy.
RoverDoc
James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" LeibnizOn 9/6/2024 9:46 PM, 'James H Phelan' via HomeBrew Robotics Club wrote:Ah,
From the referenced https://www.instructables.com/A-Makers-Guide-to-ATX-Power-Supplies/
You should also know that a PSU (because it is a "Switched-Mode Power Supply", or SMPS) requires a minimum load in order to provide consistent voltage. Most people suggest taking one of the +5V (red) wires and wiring it to ground (black) through a 5 or 10 ohm, 10 watt resistor.
Don't have a 10W resistor, just 1/4W.
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Appreciate the info!
I ordered the ATX adapter and a few 10W 10ohm resistors from Amazon.
I prefer not to support the Communist Chinese via Ali Express,
(not that everything isn't made in
China anyway!)
If my calcs are right that should
pull 0.5A at 5V = 2.5W.
Will report back when assembled.
RoverDoc
James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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On Sep 6, 2024, at 9:29 PM, 'Alex Sy' via HomeBrew Robotics Club <hbrob...@googlegroups.com> wrote:The short answer is usually about at least 3-5A on the 5V but it depends on the power supply and how much you want to draw from the 12V supplies. For testing you can use power resistors which are wasteful, or use it to power something else that can use 5V.Note that the -12V has a thinner winding so can only supply a low current. In practical usage, you would use the 5V to run any computer boards including the Raspberry PI. Then only use the +12V for motor drivers since they can work with the unregulated voltage. With the newer ATX power supplies (your label seem to have it), they may even supply 3.3V at very high current, it is often separately regulated, check with a multimeter to see if the voltage regulation is good for any of your 3.3V devices. The question I have is why run the robot from AC power in the first place, except on a test stand.
On Sep 7, 2024, at 12:49 PM, Chris Albertson <alberts...@gmail.com> wrote:
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The 20+4 pin breakout holds the 20 pin ATX supply plug. The 4 pin Molex connector should have COM, +3V3, +5V, and +12V1 according to the board. However, my 4 pin Molex connector has COM, COM, +12V, and +12V. I put a 10ohm 10W resistor across +5V and COM as suggested. The system still kicks off when challenged with the Raspberry Pi on +12V.
RoverDoc

James H Phelan "Nihil est sine ratione cur potius sit quam non sit" Leibniz
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