Difference between revisions of "Equipment/Farnell TSV70"
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Broken (Not SO solid, then !). | Broken (Not SO solid, then !). | ||
− | Apparently blows mains fuses (and also has some damaged fuseholders). | + | Apparently blows mains fuses (and also has some damaged fuseholders). |
+ | *Actually, it doesn't. At least, not so far. | ||
+ | *Has been given a mains fuse holder (not yet fitted correctly) and mains plug | ||
+ | *Only one output fuseholder present - careful of the dangling wires | ||
+ | *With one output fuse fitted, output goes to maximum with no voltage control | ||
== ToDo == | == ToDo == |
Revision as of 09:49, 15 September 2014
Farnell Power Supply | |
---|---|
Model | TSV70 |
Sub-category | Test equipment |
Status | Faulty |
Accessories | no (needs leads) |
Training requirement | no |
ACnode | no |
Origin | Artag |
Location | Ground Floor, Electronics area |
Description
A solid linear british-made Farnell power supply for more demanding jobs. 30V 10A / 70V 5A
Status
Broken (Not SO solid, then !).
Apparently blows mains fuses (and also has some damaged fuseholders).
- Actually, it doesn't. At least, not so far.
- Has been given a mains fuse holder (not yet fitted correctly) and mains plug
- Only one output fuseholder present - careful of the dangling wires
- With one output fuse fitted, output goes to maximum with no voltage control
ToDo
- Make it safe and find out why it blows fuses. If the transformer is burnt, it's probably scrap.
- Replace fuseholders (Artag has some ready)
- Fix
- Make side panels (Laser cut acrylic would do nicely)
- Replace front and back panel screws
- Fit new mains lead
- Place in usable location (maybe under the solder oven, on a stand, with nice long thick DC leads added).