Hold-up time (bridging time)
Hold-up time is a bridging time that describes the period during which the specified output power continues to be provided in the event of an input voltage failure. Even normal power supply units can bridge short-term power failures of up to a few seconds using appropriately dimensioned input storage electrolytic capacitors. The bridging time is extended and is 22 ms.
Inrush current (starting current or inrush current)
All power supply units generate a so-called inrush current, which often far exceeds their nominal current consumption. The causes are the charging of the different capacitances in the input circuit and in the EMC filters, the build-up of the magnetic field in the transformer core and even the charging of the capacitors in the output filter. This input current only drops back to normal values when the transformer is operating stably. The inrush currents are low.
Timings
The power supply supports alternative low-power modes.
- 1 - Introduction, overview and technical data
- 2 - Unboxing, cables and protective circuits
- 3 - Teardown: Topology, components, processing
- 4 - Load Regulation, Ripple Suppression
- 5 - Transient Response
- 6 - Hold-Up Time, Timings, Inrush-Current
- 7 - Average Efficiency and PF
- 8 - Noise and fan speed
- 9 - Summary and conclusion
16 Antworten
Kommentar
Lade neue Kommentare
Veteran
Neuling
Veteran
Veteran
Veteran
Mitglied
Veteran
Mitglied
Veteran
1
Urgestein
Veteran
Urgestein
Veteran
Neuling
Veteran
Alle Kommentare lesen unter igor´sLAB Community →