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4hv.org :: Forums :: General Science and Electronics
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schmitt trigger

Move Thread LAN_403
Dr. Slack
Thu Aug 27 2009, 10:32AM
Dr. Slack Registered Member #72 Joined: Thu Feb 09 2006, 08:29AM
Location: UK St. Albans
Posts: 1659
This is the benefit of experience that you bring to this discussion Steve. I was happily assuming that the shunt load, and the voltage sensor, would each be connected by their own seperate wires to the DC bus capacitor, a sort of "4 terminal measurement" if you will, or implementation of a "star" ground at the capacitor 0v, which goes a long way to isolating the two functions. As I daily isolate connected high power and low noise systems for work, I wouldn't do it any other way (though I may yet fall foul of the capacitor's unavoidable self inductance). However, I'll bet that the way a noob to switching (no offense to anyone) would wire it would be to use one circuit from the capacitor to the "shunt box", which both carries the shunt current *and* does the voltage sensing. The inductance of this wire (and the corresponding ground wire that completes the circuit, don't forget "ground bounce"), subject to the many amps per microsecond that fast switching would cause, would certainly cause the instability you describe.

You might like to elaborate for others' benefit what "strategically in" means.
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