I did use a faster timebase, 10us, triggering on the negative edge of channel 
2, and it looked identical to this:

 

https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/primary-side-shutdown-detail-2.png

 

Admittedly the trace you see was taken on the slower timebase and then zoomed 
in, but there was no difference, the result was identical.

 

Regards

 

Rob

 

From: Mattis Lind <mattisl...@gmail.com> 
Sent: 09 April 2020 05:52
To: r...@jarratt.me.uk; General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts 
<cctalk@classiccmp.org>; Rob Jarratt <robert.jarr...@ntlworld.com>
Subject: VAXmate PSU

 



onsdag 8 april 2020 skrev Rob Jarratt <robert.jarr...@ntlworld.com 
<mailto:robert.jarr...@ntlworld.com> >:

I will look at all the suggestions, particularly of a failure on the secondary 
side. Something must have burned up, because there was a distinct burning smell 
after the initial failure, although I have never been able to see any physical 
damage to anything, despite looking many times.

 

Aha. Don’t think I seen you writing about that before, or did you? It might be 
very hard to find the source some times. Even just a small burn will give quite 
some smell. Check ALL semiconductors very carefully.  

 

But the thing that really puzzles me is that, after correcting the probes to 
include the D19 anode, there doesn’t seem to be anything that would cause D19 
to trigger. Am I reading the trace wrong?

 

It is very hard to tell from the traces what is going on since the resolution 
is too low.  Use a faster timebase. 5 or 10 microseconds. Find out if you can 
trigger on something that happen only when it stops. Like channel 2 negative 
slope. 

 

/Mattis

 

Thanks

 

Rob

 

From: Mattis Lind < <mailto:mattisl...@gmail.com> mattisl...@gmail.com> 
Sent: 08 April 2020 07:42
To:  <mailto:r...@jarratt.me.uk> r...@jarratt.me.uk; Rob Jarratt < 
<mailto:robert.jarr...@ntlworld.com> robert.jarr...@ntlworld.com>; General 
Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts < <mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
cctalk@classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: VAXmate PSU

 

 

 

Den ons 8 apr. 2020 kl 00:34 skrev Rob Jarratt via cctalk 
<cctalk@classiccmp.org <mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org> >:



> -----Original Message-----
> From: cctalk <cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org 
> <mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org> > On Behalf Of Brent Hilpert
via
> cctalk
> Sent: 06 April 2020 21:07
> To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
<cctalk@classiccmp.org <mailto:cctalk@classiccmp.org> >
> Subject: Re: VAXmate PSU
> 
> On 2020-Apr-05, at 11:12 PM, Rob Jarratt wrote:
> >>
> >>> I have obtained a scope trace as you suggest. R32 is still lifted so
> >>> the
> >>> UC3842 is powered by the bench PSU, but I am using the full 240VAC
> >>> (no variac). The channels are:
> >>> 1.        Ch1. 555 timer.
> >>> 2.        Ch2. D19 Anode
> >>> 3.        Ch3. D19 Gate.
> >>> 4.        Ch4. Q1 Source.
> >
> > Sorry, that looks like a cut and paste error, here is the link to the
> > scope picture
> > https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/h7270-primary-scr-trigger
> > .png
> >
> > I used a 100ms timebase for the capture and then "zoomed in" a bit
> 
> 
> You would need to zoom in far more to see what's going on when the SCR
> triggers, to cover just a few cycles around the trigger time.
> 
> Once an SCR has been triggerred, the gate becomes a voltage/current
supply, a
> diode drop above 0.
> You see this on your trace in that after triggerring the gate sits at
something +V
> above 0.
> The spike you see may just be an artifact of the internal SCR trigger
action.
> I presume you see some increased current draw from your bench supply for
the
> 3842 after the SCR triggers.
> 
> What's up with channel 2? Above you say it's D19 anode which is 3842 Vcc
but
> it shows on the trace as just noise around 0V.
> 
> I would still suggest that you scope the state of the secondary-side
crowbar -
> the gate of Q2, and base of Q4.
> Should be simple to do, before trying to remove or disconnect the main
> transformer.

Oh dear! After Brent's question about D19 anode, I realise that the probe
was connected to the cathode! I have now done it again with the probe
connected to the anode. I have taken two images of the same capture, one at
low resolution to show the overall behaviour

https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/primary-side-shutdown-1.png

And one zoomed in to show what happens when the SCR shuts down.

https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/primary-side-shutdown-detail-2. 
<https://rjarratt.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/primary-side-shutdown-detail-2.png>
 
png

The channels are the same as before, namely:
Ch1. 555 timer.
Ch2. D19 Anode (now corrected as it was previously the cathode!)
Ch3. D19 Gate.
Ch4. Q1 Source.

I got an earlier trace which showed the D19 anode at 9V, which is under the
Undervoltage Lockout threshold, but I have not been able to repeat it.

I don't fully understand the debate about using the variac. 

 

I am not going to debate this either since I know what I have been doing for 
years and it works perfectly well for me. I have fixed the bigger PSUs in a VAX 
11/750 (one broken switch transistor and multiple broken output rectifiers). 
PSU in NORD-10/S (most carbon composition resistors had gone out of spec). PSUs 
in many smaller machines as well.

 

I prefer to work in circuits where I can fiddle around without the danger of 
getting killed all the time. Regardless of use of HV differential probe it can 
be dangerous. Running it on 50VAC with a protection transformer do expose a lot 
of problems already and you can poke around safely in the PSU.

I have not yet seen a problem that wasn't seen at low voltage, but I expect 
there could be semiconductors that experience breakdown that occur at lower 
than specified voltage.

 

 

However, my
measurements appear to suggest that when I use the variac the SCR triggers
because of what appears to be a genuine overcurrent detected by R13. I think
this is because the duty cycle at low AC input voltages is 50% (rather than
about 10% or less as per the trace I have just taken), and I measured 2V
across R13, which does seem to be enough to trigger the SCR. When I use
220VAC, the voltage across R13 does rise to 6V, which should also trigger
the SCR I think, except that the peak last a lot less and so perhaps the
fact that the 6V last for a brief period is insufficient to trigger it?

 

 

On the issue of duty cycle. If we look at this from the start up perspective 
rather than the steady state perspective. At startup there are no stored energy 
in the output filter capacitors. The voltage on the output is thus 0. As soon 
as the PSU is doing its first switching pulse energy is transfered as the main 
switch transistor is cutting off. The energy is transfered into the capacitor 
and into the load. The voltage is starting to increase.

 

The duty cycle generated by the PWM circuitry is in pure relation to the 
voltage error, i.e. the difference between output voltage and reference 
voltage. In essence it is a P-regulator. 

 

When there are 0 Volt out the duty cycle will be at the maximum. Nothing 
strange about that. But what is maximum duty cycle? It depends on the circuitry 
used. The UC3842 can do up to almost 100% duty cycle. However it may be wise to 
limit duty cycle in a flyback design so that the transformer is not saturated. 
I am not sure if there is some kind of duty cycle limitation in this circuit 
though.

 

So if it can handle 50% duty cycle at startup it should be able to handle it at 
any time. Besides it would be incredible weird to design a circuit to use a 10% 
duty cycle at its standard operating point and detecting over current at 50%. 
Then you have much less head room for load and input variations.

 

I am more or less convinced that what you see on the primary side is a result 
of some kind of fault on the secondary side. 

A very common problem is short-circuit rectifier diodes on the secondary side 
(D12, D11, D21, D22, D23, D24). They can be difficult to measure correctly in 
circuit since the resistance of the secondaries of the transformer is so low. 
Depending on type you can either desolder them completely or just lift one end 
of them.

 

My experience is that electrolytic capacitors seldom short circuit. They 
probably boil and explode instead. Tantalum capacitors often short circuit. 
Some of them goes into fire other just stay short circuit. So check for 
tantalum capacitors and try to measure them for short circuit.

 

You have a crowbar on the secondary side. Are you sure that one hasn't 
triggered? If you still run on variac you can disable the crowbar circuit by 
removing the SCR and ramp up the voltage slowly to see if that makes any 
difference. 

 

Breaking the feed back loop:

 

R23 seems to be in the feedback path. If you lift it and insert a voltage from 
a lab supply here you could simulate the output voltage and study the behaviour 
of the UC3842 for different feed back voltages. You will see that it will stay 
on max duty cycle up until close to the nominal voltage and over a very small 
span change to almost no pulse out at all. This is due to the gain of the 
circuit.

 

/Mattis

  


I have seen the suggestions to study the waveforms at a much higher
resolution. What I am doing is setting the overall timebase in the 100ms
range so that I can trigger on when the 555 starts to oscillate and capture
the whole period of operation until the SCR triggers. I can then zoom in, as
can be seen from the trace provided in this email. I hope that is good
enough, or am I missing some problem with doing it this way?

I would like to follow Mattis's suggestions (and other people have said it
too) to break the feedback loop, but it does look difficult to know how best
to do it.

I also understand Brent's suggestion that the gate spike is just the result
of the SCR triggering, rather then the cause of the trigger. I had wondered
if that might be the case.

Regards

Rob

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