On 7 December 2015 at 03:25, Gene Heskett <[email protected]> wrote:
> About 3 or 4 of those, wired in parallel, would also serve as an inrush
> limiter when I turn on the power supply for my G0704 mill.

http://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/thermistors/2118030/

(And similar)

But finding one that is big enough might be harder.

When I built the PSU for my milling machine I put a 100W resistor on
the inlet line, with a relay to bypass it after a fixed time (using a
555 timer).

By a coincidence, I was building a PSU for my lathe this weekend, and
I have taken a different approach. The drives are Mesa 8i20, and these
report bus voltage back to HAL. So the new PSU has the internal relays
controlled by HAL.
One SSR turns the power on, then another will be closed by HAL when
the bus voltage has reached a threshold, and at that point the
...enable... pins will be toggled.
The same chunk of HAL will be set up so that the PSU can't be turned
on unless the bus voltage is <2V. This is to prevent arcing/welding of
the contacts of a third (mechanical) relay that connects a crowbar
resistor across the caps when the power goes off.

-- 
atp
If you can't fix it, you don't own it.
http://www.ifixit.com/Manifesto

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