#342

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 июн 2020
  • We want DC power! For Neopixels, for example. Or for battery charging. Or for radio stations. Our power supply has to be strong and stable. Strong means in this case: More than 60 amperes at 12 volts or so. And, these days, it also has to be good for the environment. But it should cost less than 20 dollars. Including shipping. Unbelievable? That is what I thought, too. Till I discovered second-hand server PSUs
    I am a proud Patreon of GreatScott!, Electroboom, Electronoobs, EEVblog, and others
    Links:
    My HP HSTNS-PL18 750W PSU: ebay.to/2VklriY or ebay.to/2Bp5dhs or amzn.to/3ibw69j
    Connector for these PSUs: s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_dXy3yeu or ebay.to/3i999DA or ebay.to/2BIdJYS
    ESP-01 with relay: s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_dYbF4K4
    Tasmotize the ES=-01 relay: www.loxwiki.eu/display/LOX/ES...
    Near Field Probes: s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_dZi4CTm
    Good information about pins: colintd.blogspot.com/
    German video about PSU electrical noise and its removal: • Video
    The links above usually are affiliate links which support the channel (no additional cost for you).
    Supporting Material and Blog Page: www.sensorsiot.org
    Github: www.github.com/sensorsiot
    My Patreon Page: / andreasspiess
    Discord: / discord
    If you want to support the channel, please use the links below to start your shopping. No additional charges for you, but I get a commission (of your purchases the next 24 hours) to buy new stuff for the channel
    My Amazon.com shop: www.amazon.com/shop/andreassp...
    For Banggood bit.ly/2jAQEf4
    For AliExpress: bit.ly/2B0yTLL
    For Amazon.de: amzn.to/2r0ZCYI
    For Amazon UK: amzn.to/2mxBaJf
    For ebay.com: ebay.to/2DuYXBp
    profile.php?...
    / spiessa
    www.instructables.com/member/...
    Please do not try to Email me or invite me on LinkedIn. These communication channels are reserved for my primary job
    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @zapador
    @zapador 4 года назад +10

    Great tip! Just grabbed 4 of them on eBay shipped from the UK, total 48£ shipping included.

  • @d3vastat0r89
    @d3vastat0r89 4 года назад +233

    Lol this dude is a savage. "Film your endeavor"

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +58

      It was just a tip ;-)

    • @k1zmt
      @k1zmt 4 года назад +23

      He just has a good sense of humor.

    • @kalifack
      @kalifack 4 года назад +11

      Yeah laughed so hard. I love electroboom :D. I think he explodes more Capacitors than anyone in youtube :D.

    • @PeterMilanovski
      @PeterMilanovski 4 года назад +2

      Well if you are going to end it all, you might as well video it and eventually become a meme to be remembered for ever LoL.

    • @koma-k
      @koma-k 4 года назад +2

      @@kalifack in eighth grade I had "physics workshop" as an optional subject, and the teacher's top two favourite things to do were to blow up capacitors and to throw bits of sodium on the ice outside in winter. Electroboom will probably have to keep going for a few more years before he passes that teacher's capacitor kaboom count 😉

  • @getyerspn
    @getyerspn 4 года назад +44

    Good man ..I've been doing this for many years ...I have a 4 draw filing cabinet full of used Siemens/ Fujitsu/ dell/ hp and so on server psu's all 100% free.. most companies have to pay to have these disposed of as wee waste in the UK so are most happy for me to take them... I've gotten a bit of an obsession with collecting free psu's .

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +8

      Cool. It was new to me. In my profession I consume lots of CPU power, but did not think about what they do with the HW :-(

    • @Arek_R.
      @Arek_R. 4 года назад +2

      Where in UK you get these for free?

    • @getyerspn
      @getyerspn 4 года назад +9

      @@Arek_R. I'm an electrician I work in a lot of large factories all of them have a weee bin .. they're all happy for me to take parts as most weee waste management companies charge by weight and the psu's are quite heavy...I have loads and loads of them all of my large ws2811 projects use them ...much better than cheap unknown quanlity psu's from China... I've only ever had one ex server PSU die on me.

    • @Electronics-Rocks
      @Electronics-Rocks 4 года назад +3

      Problem is big IT companies have a policy of must to go to a scrap yard to be total dismantled and I have seen piles of them even offered to pay but was refused. I did have more luck while working at a factory and the IT company just used the wee skip onsite where I picked up screens and a printer. The PC's had HD removed.

    • @Arek_R.
      @Arek_R. 4 года назад +2

      @@getyerspn If I would have access to this bin I probably would end up with with few tonnes of these.
      Though even if would have no purprose for these myself then could sell them on ebay for some low price so other people can have these as well.

  • @crckdns
    @crckdns 4 года назад

    Was also about to say that my lipo charger for my drones is running from the server PSU for years :) also few other projects run from a second PSU ^^
    Good video! I'm glad that you've found this solution!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      Cool. It was new to me and it seems, it is new to many viewers. We learn every day...

  • @Sliceoflie
    @Sliceoflie 4 года назад +3

    Great video! I looked into doing something like this last year with a spare consumer PC PSU I had laying around. I also wanted to modify the voltage to be 13.8V for radio use and looked into tutorials on the process. However in nearly every one I found, making the modification either bypassed or otherwise removed almost all safety features such as under/over voltage and short circuit protection. That alone made me not want to make the modification, but then I took a closer look at some other parts in my particular PSU. Some had absolute maximum voltage ratings of as low as 14V, which I felt was way too close to 13.8V to have any safety margin. So instead it remains a 12V powerhouse for LEDs and charging other devices using buck/boost converters.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      You are right: They are made for 12 volts. But I found many examples where they were used on 13.8 volts. So I assume they are also safe to operate at this voltage. But I have no long term experience

  • @thebeststooge
    @thebeststooge 4 года назад +4

    You had me in stitches with this one. Well done.

  • @tonysshadow
    @tonysshadow 3 года назад

    Thank you!. A very good start for identifying pinout on all HP power supplies. I suspected the pins had to have similar functions to a normal ATX power supply....and they do.

  • @CanadairCL44
    @CanadairCL44 4 года назад

    Another great project. I especially like your digital pointer!

  • @Ownedyou
    @Ownedyou 4 года назад +10

    Upcycling! Really good use of the hardware, I approve.

  • @sincerelyyours7538
    @sincerelyyours7538 4 года назад +6

    I've had three HP 1200 watt 12V supplies for the past 5 years and use two in series to power my 24V Li-Ion battery charger. Note that if you put them in series, one must have its DC ground isolated while the other retains both its AC and DC grounds. Otherwise you'll get sparks if the metal cases come in contact with each other and possible internal damage as well. As these are SMPS supplies they can accept AC inputs anywhere from 100V to 240V, but you won't get maximum current out unless you power them with 240V.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +2

      True. I saw that people took away the cases to avoid sparks in serial combination. Maybe not a good idea... Better to use your proposal.

  • @ei23de
    @ei23de 4 года назад +2

    Thank you for sharing! You are a good man, Andreas!

  • @circuitdesolator
    @circuitdesolator 4 года назад

    It is my first time to know the technique on PCB traces to delay signal lines. So nice. Thanks for sharing ;)

  • @christopherj3367
    @christopherj3367 4 года назад +56

    great sense of humor, and the cats a bonus.

    • @ahothabeth
      @ahothabeth 4 года назад +1

      I do wonder about electro-static discharges with cats.

    • @kitecattestecke2303
      @kitecattestecke2303 4 года назад +2

      @@ahothabeth if you run hard on their fur you can use them as a high voltage powersource

    • @Vitaliuz
      @Vitaliuz 4 года назад +1

      Indeed!

  • @AjinkyaMahajan
    @AjinkyaMahajan 4 года назад +33

    Dishika is on power-saving mode 😁 and reboot can consume a lot of power.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +10

      :-)) She is quite easy to reboot if she is hungry ;-)

  • @MiloDarkStar
    @MiloDarkStar 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for the great tip, I just ordered one for £10 including delivery here in the UK!

  • @jameswyatt1304
    @jameswyatt1304 4 года назад

    Been using them for high-current 12V sources for a while and glad to see such solid technology avoid the ecycle path for a while. You can drive an ESP or RP0W off the standby voltage, providing WiFi network or BT. Then a GPIO pin can bring the high-power portion to life only when needed. Funny thing: the standby fan runs louder than the running fan for most of my uses... Thank you for your video!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Fortunately I had not a big issue with the fan. It did not run during my tests. But I only went to 50% for a relative short time.

  • @PHamster
    @PHamster 4 года назад +104

    **Waits for ElectroBoom**
    **EEVBlog walks in first**

    • @zvpunry1971
      @zvpunry1971 4 года назад +18

      And after Dave explodes a capacitor, Mehdi comes to tell you about the giant TV he found in his dumpster room.

    • @mullervolker9814
      @mullervolker9814 4 года назад

      EEVBlog has Nighttime now.

    • @raguaviva
      @raguaviva 4 года назад +2

      @@mullervolker9814 EEBLog is a nightmare, too much talking for me.

  • @mannhansen9337
    @mannhansen9337 4 года назад +6

    I can still remember the power supplies used in DEC VAX computers, they were 5V @200 A.
    This was around 1990.

    • @firstmkb
      @firstmkb 4 года назад

      Damn, I could use one of those for an electrolysis project!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I never investigated it when I sold them as a DEC Account Manager;-)

    • @luigimantuano9383
      @luigimantuano9383 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Ah! DEC!! Love of my life.. 19 years at DEC, Milano first then Melbourne, mainly Field Service and Sales Tech Support.. Were you in Geneva? Did a few trips there for FS Support meetings. I do have a number of these PSUs, started modding them a couple of years ago, taking hints from an RC website/forum. Also recently picked up a SUN/Oracle PSU with dual 12V 240A..! Pity haven't found any info on the small connector and its many tiny pins..!
      Love the stuff you're doing.
      Tschuss, lm

  • @andychow5509
    @andychow5509 4 года назад +2

    Wow. Great info. Didn't know about pin 37, it's a great trick to use it to drive logic to control switch of pins 33 -36.

  • @synco1985
    @synco1985 4 года назад +1

    really nice, I've done this for a 3d printer with the exact power supply that you have, but it was way to noisy. Great work by the way, I really like what you do and like your channel. Have a nice day!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      Did the fan always run?

    • @synco1985
      @synco1985 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess yes, I still have it but I don't use it for that anymore.

    • @stevetobias4890
      @stevetobias4890 4 года назад

      @@synco1985 why not put a new quiet brushless fan on it to reduce the noise

  • @willannison1300
    @willannison1300 4 года назад +5

    These are fantastic I use them for powering rc lipo battery chargers. I also have 2 of these connected in series for 24v 62A power!

    • @grindel80
      @grindel80 4 года назад +1

      is this possible without danger @Andreas Spiess

    • @Ferraday
      @Ferraday 4 года назад +2

      Frank Müller besides ground connection issues, they are totally fine

    • @kitecattestecke2303
      @kitecattestecke2303 4 года назад

      @@grindel80 no you have do disconnect the shell from the ground output because if the case touch each other they go bang..

    • @cheetahkid
      @cheetahkid 4 года назад

      @@kitecattestecke2303 Yep silly me, and a lick of flame came out of the case AND damaged the switch on the main household socket too.

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 4 года назад

      @@kitecattestecke2303 Of course when the output is not floating and cannot be made floating (check the PCB), it is not enough to disconnect the shell... they will still connect via the mains safety ground.
      When you want to so something like this you have to understand what you are doing.

  • @tbbw
    @tbbw 4 года назад +15

    The RC scene has been using these server psu's for years to power lipo chargers for their cars and such :)

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      True. As well as the bitcoin community. But I did not know it :-(

    • @NiHaoMike64
      @NiHaoMike64 4 года назад

      Also popular for use on the CR-10 3D printers.

  • @dazryan3463
    @dazryan3463 4 года назад

    Exactly the right topic at the right time for me. Just starting to use arduinos, esp32s and Raspberry PIs for a few project around the garden so having a quality PSU plugged in my shed is a problem solved. Thank you Andreas

  • @rfbase
    @rfbase 4 года назад

    Tell Dishka I said hello. Looks happy to be with you in the lab. Greta video. Thanks! I've also used ATX power supply for PCs. They include 12, 5, and 3.3 Volt. and usually around 500W. I also switch mine on and off with ESP8266 and 5 V relay. Switch on/off with html page hosted by the ESP.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      True. If you need lots of 5V and 3.3v it is probably the better choice.

  • @NautilusCL
    @NautilusCL 4 года назад +4

    I have a pair of these power supplies, i use one for my radios here on my shack, the HF transceiver drawn about 20A peak and the PSU dont even sweat, they are very good. I mounted one on a "aluminium" style suitcase, with space to carry my HF transceiver, so i use it for transportation and field power supply. They are very RFI quiet also, i have not detected RFI from it on the HF bands, only a little on VHF, but maybe a good ferrite on the AC input cable will filter it.

    • @TheEmbeddedHobbyist
      @TheEmbeddedHobbyist 4 года назад

      Just ordered one for my HF rig, once converted to 13.8V.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Here is the video to make them quiet (in German)

  • @shenqiangshou
    @shenqiangshou 4 года назад +3

    love the shout out to electroboom! haha!

  • @ravelkoff3549
    @ravelkoff3549 4 года назад

    Hi Andreas, I followed your description now - I bought one of these (they are cheaper than 20€ incl. delivery at the moment), I soldered a switch and the 12V connectors to it - and it's working perfectly!
    The special feature of the temperature sensor, which is making the fan turning in a proper speed is absolutely fantastic. It is quiet and strong. I love it :) Thank you so much for this video :)

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      Thanks for sharing your experience. Glad you like your purchase!

    • @ravelkoff3549
      @ravelkoff3549 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Yes, of course. I am a victim of the woodgas bug and need more experiences with electronics and sensors. So I found your channel so helpful and your style so excellent that I will follow you a long time in future. ;)
      Perhaps you can help me with a hint? I am looking for a sensor working with Arduino, which is able to detect a level in a 10cm circle from a distance of 50cm?
      Ultrasonic sensors don't fit the 10cm circle when measuring from 50cm distance and lasers are measuring only a point not 10cm. You have an idea?

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I only know these two methods :-(

    • @ravelkoff3549
      @ravelkoff3549 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Thank you for your quick response - that's sad. I hoped you know some more possibilities which I am not aware about. But thank you anyway. :)

  • @DaveHuntMaker
    @DaveHuntMaker 4 года назад

    Nice one, Andreas. I'm currently building more parts for next Christmas' display, and I've been using PC power Supplies, 650-1000W. I just picked up 2 additional 1000W server PSUs on Ebay for under €50, including shipping to Ireland.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Sounds you have a lot of light during Christmas time ;-)

  • @rhiantaylor3446
    @rhiantaylor3446 4 года назад +97

    Server PS will also have excellent power factor.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +25

      Thank you for the addition. I did not look at it.

    • @seanflanagan5674
      @seanflanagan5674 4 года назад +14

      @Arpad Toth, please elaborate: it is not clear to me what you mean by 'domestic use' and do not understand why it would result in higher cost.

    • @suromark
      @suromark 4 года назад +18

      @@seanflanagan5674 It should not increase cost. Depending on the meter being used, it may well reduce cost. Bad power factor means more current flowing back and forth along the AC line in relation to actually consumed power. Power factor close to 1 means "what flows is actually used". Classic counters ("ferraris" type) measure the power used. Modern digital counters measure absolute power flowing. So let's assume we use 200 W (from a 750 W power supply, but that doesn't really matter). At power factor 0.5, there's 400 W going back and forth. At power factor 1, 200 W are going back and forth. An analog counter will only see 200W no matter the power factor. A smart meter will be able to see either 200 W at PF 1 or 400 W at PF 0.5. Depending on the utilities contract, we might get billed for the absolute or used power.

    • @seanflanagan5674
      @seanflanagan5674 4 года назад +3

      @@suromark, thank you for the explanation, for which I'm grateful. But the enlightenment leaves me upset: in my area, the consumers were required to pay for the installation of new "smart meters"-which only the power company can analyze and control. And I don't know how they calculate usage though I suspect….

    • @vk3fbab
      @vk3fbab 4 года назад +2

      Yes some even have active PFC where the MCU controls the current draw to keep it in phase with voltage. Server PSUs have it all! Most good ones use MOSFETs for the bridge rectifier to save power. Great engineering in the brand names.

  • @RomanoPRODUCTION
    @RomanoPRODUCTION 4 года назад +5

    Thanks, now I can make a 12V oven for my 3D printer 😂

  • @xrpirate536
    @xrpirate536 4 года назад

    Education and Entertainment! I love it! Your videos are awesome!

  • @ON5XX
    @ON5XX 4 года назад

    Tnx Andreas. Nice video. I recently removed a couple of those power supplies from old servers. They are on my shelf waiting to be modified. I will keep it a bit simpeler ;-)

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      That is ok for me. I just wanted to spark the imagination...

  • @flos251
    @flos251 4 года назад +6

    Nice video.
    I have a question about the psu: what is the standby power consumption with no load?

    • @paulham
      @paulham 4 года назад +1

      Interested in this too

    • @Ferraday
      @Ferraday 4 года назад +1

      I’ve got a stack of four server PSUs and on standby they generally have a low power fan running and after about 10 minutes the air being blown out the fan can be like 90° (ofc it could just be heatsinks retaining huge amounts of heat

    • @cyber_guerilla
      @cyber_guerilla 4 года назад

      Philosophical Thoughts wow Your house must be very warm even in the coldest winter

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Mine uses 12 Watts

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Ah thanks, I asked that in another reply too.
      The one I tried was over 40 watts, I did not want to use that as a station supply that is (nearly) always on, now use one of the wellknown 13.8V/23A boxes.
      Ok no 60 A :-)

  • @ahaveland
    @ahaveland 4 года назад +3

    I already found these a couple of years ago and bought a few for charging my multi kWh lipo packs.
    Note the connector is heavily gold plated copper, so it's a pity to solder to it.
    Would be nice to be able to collect the gold first before soldering to the copper underneath!

    • @benbaselet2026
      @benbaselet2026 4 года назад

      The film is really thin though. You'd only get a fraction of a gram. Playing with junk channel guy harvests loads of these gold PCB parts and has a video about harvesting the gold.... can be worth it if you come across loads and loads of expensive stuff with a gold finish I guess.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      @Andy: I posted a link to a connector board.

    • @ahaveland
      @ahaveland 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess thanks Andreas, I had a look... it creates more problems with needing more 6x2 connectors!
      I would just need the edge connector itself then distribute a 10AWG cable to each of the main outputs and terminate with an XT90 or 6mm bullet connectors for series connection. No need of the other pins.
      I isolated one PSU to make 24V, and it worked for a year but now won't power up. There's probably a simple fix, but I don't fancy poking around inside it to try to find out why!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I ordered those: www.aliexpress.com/item/33029711948.html But I do not know if they will work.

    • @ahaveland
      @ahaveland 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Would really need to identify the type used in the server they came from. The connector on the breakout board is 64 way or 32 pairs.
      I ordered too... should make it easier to exchange psus if one fails, but tedious making a loom for it!

  • @villageidiot8718
    @villageidiot8718 4 года назад

    Thanks for the heads-up. I have a couple HP DPS-600PB supplies I've been using for several years.
    Don't currently have need of this one but grabbed one off eBay for $17 anyway.

  • @mcvertex850
    @mcvertex850 4 года назад +1

    Great Video! I immedeately ordered some of those beasts ;-)
    While wiring up i noticed that the bottom pin numbers shown at 6:12 in the video need to be flipped to be correct.
    In other words: the 'small' ground pin is the 3rd pin from the left side, that's how i noticed it...

    • @carlhoward5469
      @carlhoward5469 3 года назад

      Yep, good comment. Pin 27 is adjacent to the huge ground and pin 32 is on the edge.
      I'm surprised he mixed that up on the drawing considering how careful he usually is.

  • @Ferraday
    @Ferraday 4 года назад +38

    Damn it, every time someone spreads the word, I lose more and more $5 800W psu offers

    • @excitedbox5705
      @excitedbox5705 4 года назад +15

      That is the problem every time someone shares a great deal on youtube. soon after it isn´t a deal anymore. Right now so many servers are being consolidated though because of Epyc that there will be millions of these. You can replace 6 or more servers with one 32-64core epyc cpu and the energy savings pays for the upgrade within 2 years so it is a no brainer.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +6

      @Philosophical Thoughts: I hope you have already bought a few of them ;-)

    • @icghost2
      @icghost2 4 года назад +3

      LOL we're all a little late to the party on this one! These have been around for some years now on the used market - i bought 4 1100w units 6 months ago for 60.00 shipped only to discover years of mention on RUclips. These are even stackable through an inexpensive connector for 2200w 24v. They are available in droves and the frequency of units is increasing, I can only assume the designers anticipated a secondary market use and deserve a pat on the back!

    • @stewartrv
      @stewartrv 4 года назад +4

      Actually the RC guys have been doing it for years and use them to charge up lithium packs so if it was going to make a difference I'd say it has already. Also best source of mods on their forums.

    • @Ferraday
      @Ferraday 4 года назад +1

      Nojoke I just lost three offers I was gonna get for $3 psus in a single day after this lmao. Someone bought out an entire seller’s stock of like 60 on eBay

  • @rudyvk
    @rudyvk 4 года назад +3

    Done that a few years ago. The RC community also seems to like them. Great, robust PSUs. Only downside is that they do produce some RF noise, so not too great with radio transmitters.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      A German HAM did the investigation and remedy of the RF noise. I put the Link in other comments.

  • @ninline2000
    @ninline2000 4 года назад +1

    The link led me to a 2 pack for 28 dollars. They're on order now. Thanks!

  • @t1mmy13
    @t1mmy13 4 года назад

    Finally got around to ordering some of these. 12 volt with current to spare to do fun stuff like neopixel as you used as an example, great to have laying around in general and at 20 euro including shipping a piece there is nothing that beats them. Plus it's recycling! I've wanted to order some DIY PCB from china for a long time too this is a perfect simple project for that, I can 3d print a cover for it and it will be a proper safe to use DIY power supply. Thank you!

  • @ShaunakDe
    @ShaunakDe 4 года назад +4

    I need a "in HP we trust" tattoo.

  • @ganon4
    @ganon4 4 года назад +8

    Make a video "How to power up your Raspberry pi 4 cluster with cheap DC power" => Conquer RUclips.
    Thanks for the video :D

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      I am not too much interested in Pi clusters for the moment :-( My Pi4 is strong enough.

  • @muxallopeniot9194
    @muxallopeniot9194 4 года назад

    I also thought it was cool, I like your sense of humor and the summarized at the end. Great video!

  • @nutsnproud6932
    @nutsnproud6932 4 года назад

    Thanks for the video Andreas. I learned something new today.

  • @McTroyd
    @McTroyd 4 года назад +5

    "In HP We Trust." As an HP shareholder, I approve of this message. 😁

    • @luclu7_
      @luclu7_ 4 года назад +1

      HP or HPE? :P

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Good luck then in these unsecure times.

    • @McTroyd
      @McTroyd 4 года назад

      @@luclu7_ HPQ, fortunately. Though I'd admit I was tentative in that choice at first.

    • @McTroyd
      @McTroyd 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Thanks. Fortunately the half I'm vested in has a good balance sheet.

    • @steveweckel6279
      @steveweckel6279 4 года назад

      @@McTroyd I have one of HP's first multi-meters. Still working well.

  • @koma-k
    @koma-k 4 года назад +6

    Thanks for the warning about PSU capacitors... unfortunately you're about 30 years late 😉
    The one time I got a (close to) mains voltage shock was when I was troubleshooting a PSU for an Amiga 500... for a second I forgot about the cap and placed my thumb squarely across the solder points on the rear of the PCB 😂

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz 4 года назад

      Indeed too late. I think just about every reasonable PSU made today has a mandatory discharge resistor across the painful primary side caps. Because when you unplug a device, you are confronted with exposed power plug pins, and you could potentially touch them and have a bad time. One side of the capacitor would be effectively across both live/neutral pins and the other potentially on the ground pin. Of course depending on your amount of luck, precaution is still advised, because sometimes these discharge resistors could be missing or could delaminate from heat and become ineffective.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      @
      Siana Gearz: I thought this, too. But I can tell you: The depleting in mine is not very fast if you know what I mean ;-)

  • @prtcgv5105
    @prtcgv5105 4 года назад

    Thank you so much Andreas!!! I just got mine... this thing is a beast! I will try to adjust mine to put out 13.8 volts ;)

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Should be possible if you go the right one...

    • @zen11930B
      @zen11930B 3 года назад

      I have a Dell L1100A 12V 90A power supply that has remote volt sense terminals. It doesn't appear to have any internal volt sense. By connecting a 1k pot in series with 6k8 across the output and connecting the wiper to the remote volt sense input I get an adjustment range of 12V to 13.6V. By changing the 6k8 the output range can be altered, but protection circuits switch off the power supply as the output approaches 14V. This approach may work for other power suppliers.

  • @M0UAW_IO83
    @M0UAW_IO83 4 года назад +1

    Nice video, the edge connector is a 'standard' too so the tips should work for a lot of server PSUs, there is a way to increase the voltage without diving into the innards as well, look up DPS800

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      I just googled and saw You can change voltage from the outside with the DPS800. Less dangerous. Thanks!

  • @typxxilps
    @typxxilps 4 года назад +13

    SOLD OUT ... looks like you had sold his 340 units today I guess.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      I do not know how many you ordered. But it seems there is ample supply.

    • @typxxilps
      @typxxilps 4 года назад +2

      @@AndreasSpiess none, that's why I replied cause I'd been too late

    • @jort93z
      @jort93z 4 года назад +1

      There are so many on ebay.
      www.ebay.com/itm/392596821020
      www.ebay.com/itm/392596822386
      www.ebay.com/itm/333113936450
      www.ebay.com/itm/293280214686
      They have to dump their old psu's somewhere.

  • @download333
    @download333 4 года назад +23

    This seems like it would be ideal as a 3D printer power supply

    • @shadow7037932
      @shadow7037932 4 года назад +4

      Not quite. Most have switched over to 24V. 12V is still used in some printers but a vast majority of them are 24V now. Plus even with a high current PSU like this the 12V 3D printer main boards will be limited by the MOSFETs.

    • @AugustoZanellato
      @AugustoZanellato 4 года назад +3

      Isogen just connect two of them in series then. You’ll need to insulate 3 screw+stand-offs inside the psu

    • @milesmccoo
      @milesmccoo 4 года назад

      @@AugustoZanellato does that work with all switchers?

    • @mich29sm
      @mich29sm 4 года назад +2

      @@milesmccoo Unfortunately, not all. Some will do.
      There are some constraints and warnings when trying to connect two PSU in series:
      1. To do in-series connection you must ensure (at least one) power supply is floating (ideally both), i.e. none of the DC outputs are common to any of AC inputs PINs.
      2. There is a chance for non-equal rising time, especially when the PSU's are not the same, causing ramp-up to be non-linear, sometimes this may be a problem for connected devices (it may be sorted using additional circuitry).
      3. In case of short circuit (yeah ElectroBoom) effectively you have two PSU connected in reverse. Not very safe.

    • @scurvofpcp
      @scurvofpcp 4 года назад

      @@mich29sm I just decided to use dc to dc converters and a modest secondary battery bank rather than do a float.

  • @MartinPDanz
    @MartinPDanz 4 года назад

    Cool Idea and good sense of humor 😊

  • @hacKnosis
    @hacKnosis 4 года назад

    Instant suscribed! Great content man.

  • @Aemilindore
    @Aemilindore 4 года назад +3

    Thubs up this comment to demand an electronics video with Andreas's wife. Bring her in!! Bring her in!

    • @oniruddhoalam2039
      @oniruddhoalam2039 4 года назад

      Andreas probably got divorced from her.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I am happily married. Bu she does her thing and let me do mine ;-)

    • @Aemilindore
      @Aemilindore 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess haha no problem. Some other day then..

  • @dolandump
    @dolandump 4 года назад +3

    He wanted to be like ElectroBoom xD

  • @laurieinjapan
    @laurieinjapan 2 года назад

    Wow, fantastic idea. I just checked on some local sites and there are hundreds of these!

  • @visitslovenija
    @visitslovenija 2 года назад +1

    Hi Andreas,
    Having seen your video, I decided to get hold of a few of these supplies. Looked like really nice kit!
    I wanted to mod them for 13.8v to use on my radio gear, so followed the most popular route, shorting out a resistor on the trim pot. Worked fine....or at least it did until I tried to put a decent load on the supply (20A). This caused a loud buzzing and ripple on the output. It would work fine at 13.4v (well over 20A in fact), but going above 13.5v caused this instability. I have two of them that both behaved the same, so don't think this a fault on the supplies, but a design issue.
    My gut feeling was that it was due to an over-voltage protection tripping early, though without any schematics, hard to be sure. However, I tried tweaking other trim pots on the control board (marked their position first of course) one at a time and found one that influenced this behaviour. So with a slight adjustment on this pot, I now have 13.8v set and can go all the way to 30A. Nice.
    Ok, I'm working blind here with no diagrams, but it does make sense. My guess is that they are specified to pretty tight tolerances and so can see that over-voltage migth be set to say 14v or 15v, in which case 13.8v is getting kind of close.
    Anyhow, I know you were staying clear of advising details of this mod, but thought this might still be useful.
    Br,
    Ralph

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  2 года назад

      You are right. They have an overvoltage protection. In your case it was very low. Usually they kick-in at 14 volts.

  • @craiglarson2346
    @craiglarson2346 4 года назад +3

    Cute @2:48 "Please Subscribe!" Is it possible that you have viewers that have not YET subscribed - let alone set up a Patreon account? Hard to imagine what keeps people waiting - unless they are young students just discovering your quality/quantity.
    Electroboom @ 3:16 - good warning. I'm a big fan of Mehdi and yes, I fear for his survival but am simultaneously thrilled by his videos. Ever notice the carbon burn tracings on his project boards? Those sparks are real.
    Switching with an ESP-01. Perfect. I'm working on that right now using a 5V relay - Yes, 70 mA is what my 5V OMRON G2RL-14 uses. I supplied it with a 2N-3904 transistor and the base supply is GPIO00 off an ESP-01.
    I may flirt with the 13.8 V idea. A 12 V lead-acid off the grid lighting system would be a really application of these power supplies. Recharging the batteries without 'the grid' would be pretty fundamentally necessary. Maybe isolating the charging station to a box outside of the building would be the safest thing to do... just in case. Same is probably true for LiOn battery charging - I saw your warning about that and now practice supervised charging only ever since.
    Enough of my blather. Thanks for another fantastically timed video. I need to watch a few more times to absorb it all.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 4 года назад

      That switching on/off should be done with a transistor, not a relay, as the PSUs expect that.

  • @nayefhaidir
    @nayefhaidir 4 года назад +8

    *1 Week Later*
    Price Increased :D

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      Maybe already today. That is why it is good to be subscribed;-)

    • @ScottRipley
      @ScottRipley 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Been buying the platinum version for about 8mo for $12.50 shipped, and already $28 when I looked today.

  • @qwaqwa1960
    @qwaqwa1960 4 года назад

    Thanks for this. I got me a 1200 W version! :-) Can't believe the small size!

  • @avejst
    @avejst 4 года назад

    Great update video 👍
    Thanks for sharing 👍😀

  • @dennyfox3139
    @dennyfox3139 4 года назад

    Wow, what a great tip!

  • @PhG1961
    @PhG1961 4 года назад +2

    Really nice ! Especially since I have several of those PS's available... never thought of this solution.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      So you have a project for the next week ;-)

    • @PhG1961
      @PhG1961 4 года назад

      Andreas Spiess first finish the existing project.... I try to have some discipline and not to give in to start many things more or less at the same time and never finish anything.... Those days are (almost) over....

  • @5Komma5
    @5Komma5 2 года назад

    Always a good idea to have a System Administrator as a buddy.
    We have these types of power supplies by the truck load. The real high power supplies are in spinning drive storage arrays 😁😁😁

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  2 года назад

      True! But also without buddy, the prices are ok.

  • @AtomsLab
    @AtomsLab 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the tip! Got a 187A power supply for $30. No idea what I'll need almost 200 amps at 12V for, but damn it was cheap!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      Sounds like a plan! I am sure you will find a purpose!

    • @riccardoz2953
      @riccardoz2953 4 года назад

      from were?

    • @AtomsLab
      @AtomsLab 4 года назад

      @@riccardoz2953 ....From eBay.

  • @emrfixit
    @emrfixit 4 года назад

    Love your pointer!

  • @stewartrv
    @stewartrv 4 года назад

    I purchased a couple a while back one had no fan but was very clean and the 2nd was really dirty which was very surprising for the reasons you mentioned in your video. I had no luck finding any info for my specific models allowing me to increase the voltage but I have already purchased a 300w step up switch mode supply from China so that I can run my radio on 13.8 even from a deeply discharged battery (say 10v) so now I simply use the same step up for the radio if I need more than 12v from these supplies. This way has the advantage that I can create much higher voltages if I need (up to 50-60v). It costs about double this way, is a little less efficient but is more flexible too. Next time I'm going to pay attention to the specific model more closely to ensure I get one which I know is easy to mod...

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      True. It pays off to do the research upfront. Mine was easy to modify.

  • @peerappel2012
    @peerappel2012 4 года назад

    NO WAYY!!! I have the exact one you have laying around still LOL. I already ordered card edge connectors to someday make an adapter board to make interfacing/getting power from the psu easy

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      In the meantime I found ready-made connector boards. I posted a link in the description.

    • @peerappel2012
      @peerappel2012 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess Wow, thanks! Thats what I wanted as I was planning on using it as a power supply for a pc in which a normal ATX power supply does not fit

  • @icefire5555
    @icefire5555 4 года назад

    I never really thought about this. but the idea is genius!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      True. That is what I thought too when I saw it.

  • @tarikrachiahi3415
    @tarikrachiahi3415 4 года назад

    Thank you for this very useful video

  • @TheEmbeddedHobbyist
    @TheEmbeddedHobbyist 4 года назад

    Thanks for the heads up, never thought of looking at these power supplies. I have used a 12V computer power supply(linear) 15A which is very heavy but was built to last at full load.
    I expect theses are the same, built to provide 60A 24/7, Just got a 100W HF rig, so ordered one to free up the 30V 30A variable supply i'm currently using. Now to try and not do an electroboom and convert it to 13.8V

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I had less than 10 minutes for the 13.8 volts conversion. Pay attention. It can hurt ;-)

    • @TheEmbeddedHobbyist
      @TheEmbeddedHobbyist 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess I can see it's just a mater of finding the correct resistor in the feed back path to adjust the output. Might also be a mater of finding the overvoltage trip circuit to stop it tripping if 13.8V is too close.
      My linear supply had a trip that would trip at 13.9V and crowbar the output, before I found this out, the supply would trip once a day at 23:00hr when the heating turned off next door. increase the trip to 14V and it never tripped again. I hope these turn out to be as stable.
      A HF Rig that that I'm working on has 900V DC on the Anodes so I'm used to keeping one hand in a pocket when the PA screen in off :)

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      One hand in the pocket is very good advice!

    •  4 года назад +1

      I would be really cautious with switch-mode power supplies, even of server quality. For HF use, if you're unlucky and hit some harmonics and intermodulations, your signal can get pretty ugly.
      I wish you luck with your PA and HF endeavours. Hope you'll report back with the results! I subscribed to your channel.
      73 de OM2AGC.

  • @altus2
    @altus2 4 года назад +1

    Watched the video, bought the same PSU on Amazon Marketplace 5 minutes later for £15 :D Thanks, this is genius!

  • @cleberam
    @cleberam 4 года назад +1

    @Andreas. I chose to use a Dell for PowerEdge, it brings a 3.3V on Standby so I can have the ESP directly, it has ~320W, what is more than enough for most of us, but what o really like about it is that it has the ATX cable, not standard, but make life way easier overall. It requires the resistor and it did cost me $10 with shipping 😎 another great point, they have excellent ability to shut down on shortages 🤫

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Thanks for sharing. I also left a link to a PCB which has the edge and ATX connectors for the HP supply

  • @katelights
    @katelights 4 года назад

    you can also get premade breakout boards for these supplies, they handle the switch on and give you some nice screw terminals to hook up your loads.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      You are right. Another viewer told it to me and I added a link in the description.

  • @aldergas01
    @aldergas01 4 года назад +1

    I use server psu since always, very good stuff.

  • @sortofsmarter
    @sortofsmarter 4 года назад

    WOW...this was great...I just found 2 of them with dead fans only at my local second hand computer junk store. HP 750W, So I put a Noctua 40mm server fan in it. now its powerful and quiet and was only $4.00 plus the fan

  • @michaelkeller5008
    @michaelkeller5008 4 года назад

    cool idea! working on a LED-project that's currently on hold due to the lack of normalpriced but suitable PSU... Think it's on again :-) Dankää!!

  • @f_2476
    @f_2476 4 года назад

    Thanks for the video it was useful 👍👍

  • @cbrightly
    @cbrightly 4 года назад +1

    Also worth a mention: Regardless of how dust-free the fans are, please consider that server PSUs (and their very loud and exceptionally fast-running cooling fans) may have been running for many, many hours under heavy loads. Time to failure, and the type of failure that eventually befalls your unit, will likely vary greatly when using used server power supplies.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      Well possible. But thousands are used right now. This is not a new idea.

  • @IIoTBusinessDesigner
    @IIoTBusinessDesigner 4 года назад

    Grazie Spiess. Thank you 🇮🇹

  • @dtsdigitalden5023
    @dtsdigitalden5023 4 года назад +1

    Awesome idea. Could these be used for audio amplifier applications, such as for something like the Lepai / Lepy series of cheap 12V amps? I'm not sure how "noisy" these PSUs are.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад +1

      I would try to use linear PSUs for analog stuff.

  • @fritanke2318
    @fritanke2318 4 года назад

    Nice.👍 Unfortunayely shipping cost to me is more than the cost of each item. Well, maybe I can find some used in my scrap box. Thanks for the detailed explanations.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Shipping is always something we have to consider. Same here :-(

  • @cdc1138
    @cdc1138 3 года назад

    @Andreas Spiess, although I'm thinkering with mining rigs right now, this is a great video, many thanks. I know this video is getting 'old' but it's hard to find any tips on how to make those PSU's a bit quieter using the pots. Any tips??

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  3 года назад

      They are loud by construction if used at very high currents. And some supplies are even loud at low power. So you maybe can cover them in a case.

  • @opsahle2
    @opsahle2 4 года назад

    Great - a fantastic tip!

  • @billd01rfc
    @billd01rfc 3 года назад

    Great video, certainly a beast of a PSU . . . Any info on the PMBus I2C interfacing with Arduino? I cant find anything useful for HP PSus.
    Thnx
    Billd

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  3 года назад

      I never used at it because I assumed I do not need more info from the PS.

  • @bishalnaik2011
    @bishalnaik2011 4 года назад

    Thank you ,i was looking for a power supply for 150 dotstar projects

  • @SwitchingPower
    @SwitchingPower 4 года назад +1

    Instead of using the analog pin to get the output current you can use the pmbus to get all of the measurements out of the power supply like input and output voltage, current and power, fan speed temperature and a whole lot more.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      That is what I thought. But I did not find a readymade Arduino project.

  • @BadMax02_VR
    @BadMax02_VR 4 года назад +1

    You can also pretty easily isolate these supplies and put multiple of them in series. i did that for a Buck regulator put 5 of them in series to get 60v and than a buck modul which can do 50v at 20A and made my own Lab bench power supply works great.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      This is a powerful Bench supply! Cool.

    • @BadMax02_VR
      @BadMax02_VR 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess it also only was about 100€ with everything, the 5 psus and the buck modul (which was the most expensive part) it is a DPS5020 from RD Tech on Aliexpress these modules are very popular you can find a lot of videos about them
      i think you made a video about the cheaper version DPS5005 with only 5 amps

  • @dave_dennis
    @dave_dennis 4 года назад +2

    I am interested in the RF scope probe. Where can I procure one of these? Or did you make this?
    de N5BOC

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      You should find a link in the description. EEVBLOG ha a Video about a DIY Probe.

  • @nicoful86
    @nicoful86 4 года назад

    Thanks a lot for this video, I picked up one similar model as yours for ~€25 incl shipping.
    I just have one comment regarding changing output voltage on a live PSU:
    You say that it's too dangerous and I agree!
    But you could do a video where you modify the resistor values by injecting voltage to the DC-side safely using a 13.8V rated PSU/bench PSU.
    That would be a highly appreciated video!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      There are many different types around and all have to be modded differently. If somebody is capable to do the hack, he is also capable to find it, I think ;-)

    • @nicoful86
      @nicoful86 4 года назад

      @@AndreasSpiess I agree. Thought particular model of PSU could've been the subject for modding 👍

  • @beauregardslim1914
    @beauregardslim1914 4 года назад +1

    I've used PC power supplies in the past, but this is a great idea for higher quality supplies. Is there a cross-vendor standard connector/interface on these?
    As always, an interesting, informative and very useful video.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I do not know if it is cross-vendor. At least it seems to be a HP standard.

  • @Jimmyzb36
    @Jimmyzb36 4 года назад

    I just subscribed because of the pointer!

  • @anatolsam6715
    @anatolsam6715 Год назад

    Hi, Andreas. Thank you for detailed description. Is it possible to use this power supply as adjustable laboratory power supply? I mean to modify it to the regulated one from min to 12-14v? I tried to increase output voltage up to 13.8. For that purpose I shorted SMD resistor, but PSU lost their output voltage at all. I think that overvoltage protection save some data to the controller. Maybe you know how to reset it?

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  Год назад +1

      I Do not think it has a memory (other than if you killed something). 13.8 V works for me for more than a year. Maybe your change produces more than 14 V and the overvoltage protection kicks in all the time

  • @stefanu4359
    @stefanu4359 4 года назад

    Nice video!
    Can this PSU be used as a PWM output? Instead of relay to use a MOSFET and switch it at 100 Hz for example.

    • @Rob2
      @Rob2 4 года назад +4

      It certainly is not designed for that! The control input is for operate/standby of the server.

  • @pd8559
    @pd8559 3 года назад

    Recycle those laptop power supplies too to keep them out of landfills. I have a couple Toshiba laptop power supplies I cannot use as I don't have the old laptops anymore. They are or were at the time all made to output 19volts and about 4.7 or 5 amps. That will be about 18 amps at 5 volts or so and if you stick one of the Chinese digital buck converting power supplies on one you'll drive them to the buck converter current limit with plenty of room to spare in the laptop power supply. Mine are so old they are from another country but I have some power plug adapters for them kicking around. My Chinese digital buck converter has three separate inputs on the back and one of the three is a barrel connector that first the Toshiba laptop plug exactly. (yes I finally made it to your PC power supply video! \o/ yay)

  • @stavart13
    @stavart13 3 года назад

    Hello I have a resistor between pin 33 and 36. I want to put a 3 pin rocker switch(with led). Is it correct to put the resistor between the
    outside pins of the switch and the middle pin to a ground?

  • @GrandpasPlace
    @GrandpasPlace 4 года назад +2

    This looks like a great power supply for those lab bench top power supply display things you get from aliexpress. Would add adjustable voltage and amperage to the unit.

  • @rgmtb
    @rgmtb 4 года назад +1

    Can you do a video on how to convert this to a.bench power supply please. Thx!

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I would just add a buck converter. Nothing special, I think.

  • @peterbardos7396
    @peterbardos7396 4 года назад

    Guten Tag Herr Spiess, ich bin immer wieder von Ihren Videos begeistert. Ich hätte eine Frage zu der PSU die Sie in diesem Video vorgestellt haben. Wie warm wird die PSU, die Sie vorgestellt haben. Ich möchte die gleiche PSU verwenden - meine wird aber bei ca. 10 A am Ausgang ziemlich warm - man kann sie mit der Hand gerade noch anfassen. ist das normal oder muss ich mir Sorgen machen.

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      Ich habe sie nicht stundenlang getestet und deshalb kann ich nicht sagen wie warm sie werden soll. Vielleicht weiss es jemand anders?

  • @GOODNEWSGREENS
    @GOODNEWSGREENS 4 года назад

    Greetings Sir:
    (Amazing & excellent Electronic library so off topic)
    Question: As I understand LoRa Wan it’s a local large area networking Walki talki band. Node to node & nodes to mother gateway to the universe. Eye to eye.
    My question is why is there a tower on the top of the mountain with the carrier signal?

    • @AndreasSpiess
      @AndreasSpiess  4 года назад

      I made an LoRa introduction video and many orthers. Maybe you watch them?

  • @TomHermans
    @TomHermans 4 года назад +1

    Laughing out loud with the film your endeavour part 😁😁😁