pagoda
Well-Known Member
Our boat has (had) a Sterling international Battery Charger. It's designed to cope with anything between about 80V and 300V input voltage.
It achieves that by having a voltage sensor at the front end. When the mains supply is as low as 80-110V - the device configures itself as a voltage doubler, to generate close to normal UK/EU mains power. That is then put through a switched mode power supply - with high voltage smoothing capacitors to get rid of ripple.
Fine and dandy for differing mains supplies? Yes and no....
Our yard power supply suffered a burned out mains contactor, with nasty intermittent loss of power to the consumers in the yard.
The boat power supply tried to compensate for the variation, but ultimately failed.
It had presumably had the mains drop really low - due to the faulty contactor, then come back up to 240V in milliseconds- and drop again. The net result is a blown battery charger. No major damage, no fuses blown, but 3 capacitors and a regulator bit the dust.
The device self protected by vapourizing two tiny bits of PCB track by flashing over. Which I can fix mind you.
Don't go opening switched mode power supplies yourselves, they can be really dangerous- due to big high voltage capacitors- and half the PCB running at mains volts or above..!
If an otherwise good charger quits? ask your neighbours first, and whoever is in charge of the yard..
I'm in communication with my yard...
Maybe a simpler charger would be a good idea!!
Graeme
It achieves that by having a voltage sensor at the front end. When the mains supply is as low as 80-110V - the device configures itself as a voltage doubler, to generate close to normal UK/EU mains power. That is then put through a switched mode power supply - with high voltage smoothing capacitors to get rid of ripple.
Fine and dandy for differing mains supplies? Yes and no....
Our yard power supply suffered a burned out mains contactor, with nasty intermittent loss of power to the consumers in the yard.
The boat power supply tried to compensate for the variation, but ultimately failed.
It had presumably had the mains drop really low - due to the faulty contactor, then come back up to 240V in milliseconds- and drop again. The net result is a blown battery charger. No major damage, no fuses blown, but 3 capacitors and a regulator bit the dust.
The device self protected by vapourizing two tiny bits of PCB track by flashing over. Which I can fix mind you.
Don't go opening switched mode power supplies yourselves, they can be really dangerous- due to big high voltage capacitors- and half the PCB running at mains volts or above..!
If an otherwise good charger quits? ask your neighbours first, and whoever is in charge of the yard..
I'm in communication with my yard...
Maybe a simpler charger would be a good idea!!
Graeme