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I am, once again, making another charger, and I have an ungapped ETD34 core I'm using for the transformer. I was wondering if i should leave it ungapped or sand the middle legs down a bit to make a gap. I have read a few threads and I have gotten 2 different answers to this question. Some of them say to have a gap, and others say no gap is the best. I want to make the most efficient transformer I can, Because hopefully this will be my last attempt at this.
Well I decided to test it anyway last night, and just used tape to hold the cores together tightly. It worked well except for the horrible oscillating noise, it was really more of a squeal. Will it still work the way it should if all three legs have a gap?
Registered Member #152
Joined: Sun Feb 12 2006, 03:36PM
Location: Czech Rep.
Posts: 3384
Remember if you build the transformer in a low-leakage way (coils on top of each other), you will need some kind of current limiting, eg. an inductor or a capacitor on the output.
Registered Member #1134
Joined: Tue Nov 20 2007, 04:39PM
Location: Bonnie Scotland
Posts: 351
I always thought the air gap was there to prevent core saturation.
Edit: Just found this:
"The only difference is the value of the magnetizing inductor. While the series resonant converter has a magnetizing inductance much larger than the LC series resonant inductor (Lr), the magnetizing inductance in LLC resonant converter is just 3~8 times Lr, which is usually implemented by introducing an air gap in the transformer.
An LLC resonant converter has many advantages over a series resonant converter; it can regulate the output over wide line and load variations with a relatively small variation of switching frequency. It can achieve zero voltage switching (ZVS) over the entire operating range. All essential parasitic elements, including junction capacitances of all semi-conductor devices and the leakage inductance and magnetizing inductance of the transformer, are utilized to achieve soft-switching."
I used a piece of electrical tape to add a gap between all 3 legs, and it works just as it should, without the horrible oscillating noise. I don't know the top voltage this charger can achieve yet, but it charged a 4400uF cap to the point where the charger was starting to quiet down in about 5 seconds.
The regulator circuit, again, isn't working though, I can never get this circuit to work. I'm using Uzzors2k's 50W charger, and have tried this regulator circuit a few times, and fail to get it to work. While the gates are held low the red LED is lit, when I start charging it goes off and nothing happens from there. I mean it charges, but it doesn't stop like its suppose to. Not too sure what the problem is.
Registered Member #3114
Joined: Sat Aug 14 2010, 08:33AM
Location:
Posts: 608
currentkills91 wrote ...
The regulator circuit, again, isn't working though, I can never get this circuit to work. I'm using Uzzors2k's 50W charger, and have tried this regulator circuit a few times, and fail to get it to work. While the gates are held low the red LED is lit, when I start charging it goes off and nothing happens from there. I mean it charges, but it doesn't stop like its suppose to. Not too sure what the problem is.
I made an old thread about that, i had the same problem. What i did was build the regulator part without the led section, that's where my problem was. also everything is going to a common ground even the caps.
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