DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 29, 2014 07:56PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 05:12AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 06:11AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 06:29AM |
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Oh yes, if it was just the heaters and the +12V connections to these were separated from the motor supply then any rectified mains around 12~14V RMS (i.e. car battery charger) would do. However, the "holy grail" for many of us is a single cheap, safe (i.e. pre-wired for mains connection) PSU that holds up well under load. The ATX supply is tantalizingly close to that but just leaves us a couple of volts shy of reaching the higher temperatures required for ABS.Quote
Mickyblueeyes
I haven't looked at the schematic for the power here but if it was just powering the heater then a simple transformer rectifier supply would suffice, the caps have no purpose in a heating circuit, a simple heatsink with a meaty rectifier would mean no fan requirement and high reliability.
Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 08:52AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 09:18AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 09:51AM |
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bobc
Why not use a second hand server PSU? 60 A @ 12V for £9.99 delivered? [www.ebay.co.uk]
It is by far the best value for money, and has safe mains wiring. It's very easy to jumper the control pins to turn it on. All that needs doing is soldering wires to 12V outputs, it's not worth trying to find a mating connector.
There are loads of 30A units (ESP113, PS-3381) which are easy to use as well, similar or cheaper prices.
Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 12:24PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 30, 2014 08:58PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 05:02AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 05:26AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 05:31AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 05:49AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 08:46AM |
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Quote
bobc
Lots of people in RepRap community use the Mk2 heatbed, most of them use 12V PSU, and many of them print ABS. There is lots of experience with this setup..
Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 09:57AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 10:10AM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 02:04PM |
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Quote
rayhicks
I also print solely ABS, using the shipped PSU (alpine I think). It is a little slow to get up to 100°C, but it seems quite adequate in my climate (UK "winter" with or without heating).
Ray
Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 02:11PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious January 31, 2014 02:50PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 06, 2014 01:18PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 06, 2014 01:30PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 06, 2014 01:33PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 07, 2014 08:04AM |
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dc42
I purchased a 12v 300W PSU for £21.80 from [www.ebay.co.uk] and this is also adjustable. I've printed a box to cover the live terminals and house the mains inlet connector/fuse/switch, neon, and outlet connector (all sourced from Maplins).
Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 07, 2014 11:20AM |
Registered: 11 years ago Posts: 2,472 |
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kwikius
To raise the temperature quicker why not add some device above the bed. Could be just another blanket of foam/corrugated cardboard or an active device with a heater in it? (You could then double up using another PSU while its heating)
regards
Andy
Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 08, 2014 06:00PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 08, 2014 06:40PM |
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Re: DIY 12V supply for the budget-conscious February 13, 2014 02:17PM |
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