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2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
Need some help from EEs or serious electrical/electronic hobbyists. A friend needs 36VDC @ ~1.3 amps for a project he's working on. I have a couple of 19VDC 2.6 amp laptop chargers. Can I wire the outputs of the laptop chargers in series to provide the desired voltage, without destroying the chargers? Or is there likely to be something in the charger output circuitry that would not be at all pleased if I did that? |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
No way of knowing with out trying, but you may find that you need something to "slow down" the load. Either a capacitor or PI filter on each one at the end further from the switcher might help. I'd do it with two separate filters, rather than one that spans both.
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Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
Shouldn't be a problem, assuming you keep the polarity straight.
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Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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Adding 2 of the same power supplies together in series will double the voltage. Adding them in parallel will double the amperage. |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
I'm far from an expert on these things, but isn't one of the legs referenced to ground or neutral or something? I didn't think most garden variety switchmode power supplies were isolated. So if they're not isolated, the common on supply A is going to be at a similar potential to common on B, with some sort of electrical path between them. So connecting + on A to - on B will be similar to a short. Or that's how it works in my head for non-isolated power supplies. I'll agree that you can treat an isolated power supply like a huge battery for voltage generating purposes.
I suppose you could check by checking voltage between - and ground and - and neutral on both supplies. If you get some sort of steady, not-floating value, then you'll want to be careful when you hook the two supplies together. |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
Ether, it can't hurt to ohm out the output wires to the input wires. Anything other than several kOhms or more means 'come back and let us know so we can figure this out for you'.
I assume these are switching supplies, and these run at several dozens of kHz, thus using a tiny high-frequency transformer, which provides isolation. I suppose one could build one with a shunting configuration, but there are common mode issues (noise) that often nixes that idea. |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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1) The 2-prong wall plug (hot & neutral) of Charger A has no connectivity between either output and either input. 2) The 3-prong wall plug (hot, neutral, ground) of Charger B has no connectivity between either output and the hot or neutral inputs, but it does have connectivity between either output and the ground input. 3) With both chargers plugged in, there is no measurable voltage between either output of Charger A and either output of Charger B. |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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I ask because some supplies may not engage their output until they've been connected to a device, through the use of a sense pin that identifies the device and charger to each other. This is the reason some laptops cannot (easily) use off the shelf third party chargers. Could you elaborate on what brand of chargers they are? Also, I am not what your friend's budget (if any) is, but perhaps I could recommend something like this? http://www.digikey.com/product-detai...P5P-ND/2920448 Matt |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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What I intended to convey was this: Chose either output wire (plus or minus) from Charger A, and chose either output wire (plus or minus) from Charger B. Then measure the voltage between the two chosen outputs. The voltage reading is zero regardless of choice. It's an interesting grammar question. Had I intended to convey what you said, I'd have written this: There is no measurable voltage between the outputs of Charger A or the outputs of Charger B. I don't know if that's the correct grammar or not. Anyway, the purpose of the test was to determine if there is a leakage path of some sort which might cause a problem when the outputs of the two chargers are wired in series. Quote:
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Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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For the record, I suspect two of your 3-prong output models might have been a problem, however. |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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1) These chargers are designed to source current, not sink it. 2) They're probably switching technology. 3) If one's switched "on" while the other's switched "off", then the "off" one sees the "on" one trying to push current through it. That's where I think Eric's earlier comment may come into play. Wish I knew more about this kind of stuff. Quote:
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Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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While this is true, a simple fix for parallel switchers is 'OR'ing diodes. This will cause the 2 supplies to droop share. Ether, Traditional switching supplies are isolated so running them in series is usually fine. Adding a steering diode should give you protection from reverse biasing the supply. I'd also suggest powering the downstream supply first (for the same reverse bias reason ... although it should not matter). |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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That's essentially what I said in my earlier post, except I expressed it in terms of Supply B being in the "off" switching state, rather than not having powered up yet. Can someone explain what aspect of the supply's output circuitry does not like having a voltage applied across it... said voltage being of opposite polarity so that said voltage is attempting to push current through the supply in the forward direction (as would be the case we are discussing with the two supplies in series)? |
Re: 2 19VDC laptop chargers in series
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Obtain a resistor, anything from 10 kOhm to 47 kOhm, 1/4 W or higher. Connect one end of the resistor to the positive of one of the chargers and the other end to a known Ground point (third prong on outlet). Use your meter to measure the voltage of the negative output relative to Ground. Then connect one end of the resistor to the negative of one of the chargers and the other end to a known Ground point (third prong on outlet). Measure the voltage of the positive output relative to Ground. if you get about 19 V in both cases, the output is one that floats relative to ground. If just one of them is floating, it should be Okay to connect them in series. If one of them is Ground referenced, you may have to consider the effect on the equipment that you are powering with this supply. If both are floating, then you can treat them like a battery. Quote:
True parallel systems typically have an isolating impedance (resistor or inductor) to allow each supply to put out slightly different voltages. Otherwise, they would all need to be controlled from a single controller that forces the paralleled supplies to all have the same output current. The inverters I work on at my day-job uses sharing inductors for all the higher powered models (518 to 1500 kVA). |
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