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bill  
#1 Posted : Sunday, March 24, 2019 3:02:22 AM(UTC)
bill

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I changed my active crossover and the new one needs more current than I get from a TP Placid HD bipolar. I think I need +/-15vdc and at least 1A. I have 2 Placid bipolar psus sitting idle and wonder if it's possible to wire them in parallel to double the current.

Any advice/comments are appreciated.
Jordo  
#2 Posted : Monday, March 25, 2019 11:22:43 PM(UTC)
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Hi Bill,

I had to power a WaveIO with a Placid HD. This requires 0,750- 0,800 A and it could be done with the Placid.
This is naar the ultimate load of the placid of what I understand. If you attach your heat sinks to the housing it will dissipate more heat.
That was the advise I got from TPA at the time.
So 1,5A seems to be out of the question with one single PSU.

Parallel could work in my opinion. You could experiment with that I guess. But please take a second opinion from one of the experts here.
The Centaur must be up for the job tough or do you really a need bipolar PSU?

Grt,

Jordo
bill  
#3 Posted : Tuesday, April 2, 2019 8:12:11 PM(UTC)
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Thanks Jordo.
I'm not sure about the Amps but 0.5A per side was not enough to power the crossover. For best sound I want plenty of headroom. I do need bipolar to power the balanced input boards.

I worry that joining the psus in parallel might be unstable, joining the 3 outputs together (plus, gnd, neg). Can anyone advise on this?

Cheers, Bill

Brian Donegan  
#4 Posted : Tuesday, April 2, 2019 8:22:36 PM(UTC)
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Don't run Placids in parallel.

You could just use a LCBPS. You can get up to 1.5A out of each side.
bill  
#5 Posted : Friday, April 5, 2019 10:53:28 PM(UTC)
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But then the common (ground) would not be common, right?
Brian Donegan  
#6 Posted : Friday, April 5, 2019 11:00:25 PM(UTC)
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I'm not sure you mean. It's a bipolar supply, so GND is GND.
bill  
#7 Posted : Thursday, April 11, 2019 11:27:53 PM(UTC)
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Sorry, I forgot it's a biploar supply.

What transformer do you recommend?
I thought the rule of thumb is to get something bigger than the desired output (30v x 1.5A = 45VA), so I need at least 50VA.
Do you have anything?
Brian Donegan  
#8 Posted : Friday, April 12, 2019 2:52:08 PM(UTC)
Brian Donegan

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Our 15V transformer is 50VA.

http://www.twistedpearau.../power/transformers.aspx

Edited by user Friday, April 12, 2019 2:52:55 PM(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

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