[NSRCA-discussion] Power Supplies

Ronald Van Putte vanputter at gmail.com
Wed Jul 3 05:55:23 AKDT 2013


Yeah, but does it have cool lights and a neat handle?

On the serious side, that's a great find.  Let's see 15 amps at 24 volts is 360 watts.  Charging two 5S packs at 4 amps at a nominal 20 volts per pack is only 160 watts, so the power supply should work for two 10S packs.  

BTW, I am using two Turnigy 10XC chargers in my charge box.

Ron Van Putte

On Jul 3, 2013, at 6:48 AM, Bob Kane wrote:

> I have picked up two of these from Amazon:
> 
> "Dc 24v 15a Switching Power Supply Transformer Regulated", they are around $25.  Working well so far. No modifications needed, but you do need to wire a power cord and charger leads.
> 
> I use the Turnigy 10XC charger and usually charge at 4 amps.  The charger draws 7 amps from the supply when charging a 10S pack so in theory I could run two chargers off this supply. 
> 
> I have also powered this setup from a cheapie 800 watt two-stroke generator a couple of times, no issues yet.
>  
> Bob Kane
> getterflash at yahoo.com
> From: Ronald Van Putte <vanputter at gmail.com>
> To: General pattern discussion <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org> 
> Sent: Monday, July 1, 2013 11:50 PM
> Subject: [NSRCA-discussion] Power Supplies
> 
> A lot of electric-power pilots are building or buying charge boxes.  Many of the charge boxes contain the HP DL380 G4 DPS-600PB 12V/575W power supply.  
> 
> Since they are so inexpensive to acquire and so simple to convert for our use, I'd like to provide some information about them.
> 
> These are so called "hot swap" power supplies.  They are really tough and were designed to be used in a computer server 24/7.  Their output is 47 amperes at about 12.5 volts.  You can use two in series to provide 47 amperes at about 25 volts.
> 
> You can buy them at places like eBay for about $15 delivered if you shop around, particularly if you look for lots of two or three.  These power supplies cost upwards of $300 when they were in active use, but the servers they were designed to work with have been retired, leaving a lot of these server power supplies as surplus.  Consequently, you can get them pretty cheap. 
> 
> I usually show pilots with any measure of soldering skills how to convert them for our use.  The conversion takes about 30 minutes.  The rest, who can't solder or can't follow simple directions, I do the conversion for them.
> 
> There is a great description how to do the conversion of the HP model DPS-600PB power supply here:  https://sites.google.com/site/tjinguytech/my-projects/HP47A
> 
> Any questions?  E-Mail me offline.
> 
> See you at the Nats.
> 
> Ron Van Putte
> 
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